The New York Times estimates that
Annie is performed 700 to 900 times, each year, in the United States.
Pre-Broadway tryout Annie had its world premiere on August 10, 1976, at the
Goodspeed Opera House in
East Haddam,
Connecticut, under the direction of
Michael P. Price.
Kristen Vigard was the first actress to play the title role. However, the producers soon decided that Vigard's genuinely sweet interpretation was not tough enough for the street-smart orphan. After a week of performances, Vigard was replaced by
Andrea McArdle, who had been playing one of the other orphans, Pepper. Vigard went on to become McArdle's
Broadway alternate. After the Goodspeed run ended, the role of Miss Hannigan was also recast, as original actor Maggie Task's performance was considered too mean. Producer
Mike Nichols suggested comedy actress
Dorothy Loudon to bring the humour out of the role; in rehearsals, Loudon reportedly improvised numerous elements, including the lines "Do I hear happiness in here?" and "Why any kid would want to be an orphan, I'll never know."
Broadway original ,
Reid Shelton and Sandy, 1977 The original Broadway production opened at the
Alvin Theatre on April 21, 1977, and starred Andrea McArdle as Annie,
Reid Shelton as
Warbucks,
Dorothy Loudon as Miss Hannigan, and
Sandy Faison as Grace Farrell, with
Danielle Brisebois as Molly, the youngest and smallest orphan. It was nominated for eleven
Tony Awards and won seven, including the
Best Musical,
Best Score, and
Best Book at the
31st Tony Awards. Replacements in the title role on Broadway included Shelley Bruce,
Sarah Jessica Parker,
Allison Smith and Alyson Kirk. Replacements in the role of Miss Hannigan included
Alice Ghostley,
Dolores Wilson,
Betty Hutton,
Marcia Lewis, and
June Havoc. Ann Ungar understudied and played for Dorothy Loudon in the role of Miss Hannigan. She also understudied Alice Ghostley and Dolores Wilson.
Annie was evicted from the Alvin Theatre, in September 1981, to make way for
Merrily We Roll Along, which began its months long journey to finding a new permanent home. On September 16, the show moved to ANTA (now the
August Wilson), knowing the production would need to move, again, due to contractual obligations to the new musical
Oh Brother! On October 29,
Annie moved to the
Eugene O'Neill Theatre, and finally moved to its final home at the Uris (now the
Gershwin) on December 12 to make room for a revised
Little Me. This move was made possible, partly because of the early closing of the revival of
My Fair Lady, had originally been scheduled to run through the end of that year.
United States national touring companies During the Broadway run of
Annie, there were four touring companies that were launched from the original production to tour to major North American cities: The first national touring company opened in Toronto in March 1978 with Kathy Jo Kelly as Annie, Norwood Smith as Daddy Warbucks,
Jane Connell,
Ruth Kobart as Miss Hannigan, and Gary Beach as Rooster. It played in
Miami from April 12 to May 13, 1978, then continued for a few more cities until it landed in
Chicago where it played for 32 weeks. In April 1979, it continued on the road in with Mary K. Lombardi now in the lead as Annie. In the fall of 1980, Theda Stemler took over the part and was replaced in
Boston when she grew too old. On May 15, 1981,
Louanne Sirota, who had played Annie in the long-running
Los Angeles production, took over the role for four months. In August 1981, Becky Snyder became the company's last Annie, closing the tour on September 6, 1981. The second national touring company (sometimes referred to as the West Coast or Los Angeles production) opened in
San Francisco on June 22, 1978, with
Patricia Ann Patts starring as Annie,
Jennifer Cihi as Pepper and the then-unknown
Molly Ringwald as one of the orphans. The show landed in Los Angeles on October 15, 1978, for an open-ended run at the
Shubert Theatre. Children's television host
Tom Hatten played
Franklin D. Roosevelt. On June 12, 1979, Sirota, just 9 years old (up until that time, all Annies had been 11 or older), took over the role from Patts. Marisa Morell took the role in December 1979, closing the Los Angeles run and continuing on tour with the show through December 1980. Kristi Coombs (who played the youngest orphan Molly in the first national touring company) then played Annie, until this touring company closed in Hawaii on August 22, 1982.
Alyssa Milano played orphan Kate in 1981. The third national touring company opened in
Dallas on October 3, 1979, with
Rosanne Sorrentino (who would later go on to portray Pepper in the 1982 film version) in the title role. This company toured to 23 cities playing mostly shorter runs of a month or less. On March 27, 1981, Bridget Walsh took over as Annie. Becky Snyder (who had closed the first national tour) joined this company in the summer of 1982 and stayed with it until it closed in September of that year. The fourth national touring company opened on September 11, 1981, with Mollie Hall playing Annie. This production was a "bus and truck" tour, with a slightly reduced cast, that traveled the country and often played in two cities a week. This company was still touring when the original Broadway production closed in January 1983, making Kathleen Sisk the final performer to play Annie from the original production team. This tour closed in late March 1983.
West End original The musical premiered in the
West End at the
Victoria Palace Theatre on May 3, 1978. Andrea McArdle, the original Broadway Annie, played the title role for 40 performances. British 12-year-old Ann Marie Gwatkin was also cast in the title role and appeared on the original London cast recording. The opening night cast and the original cast album recording of children were Claire Hood, Jane Collins, Dawn Napier, Annette Mason, Helen Stephenson, Jackie Ekers and Linda Brewis. Ann Marie Gwatkin alternated with Christine Hyland, and four other Annies were cast at this point: Anne O'Rourke, Jacinta Whyte, Helen Thorne, Tracy Taylor, who were to play the role over the next year. Suzie Kemeys from
South Wales also performed two shows in 1980/81. The first was as July and the second was Annie.
ITV Wales commissioned two documentaries about this young Welsh girl and her rise from obscurity to a West End leading lady. Following this, Ann Marie Gwatkin and Jackie Ekers shared the title role, followed by many other casts of Annie. Miss Hannigan was originally played by
Sheila Hancock, and later by
Maria Charles and
Stella Moray; Warbucks was played by
Stratford Johns and later by
Charles West, with Deborah Clarke playing Pepper in the first year and
Melanie Grant playing Molly.
Annie closed on November 28, 1981, after 1,485 performances.
UK tour The musical transferred to the
Bristol Hippodrome for a special
Christmas season before touring
Britain. Because of strict British employment laws for juvenile actors, a succession of actresses took on the lead role every four months. One of the last girls to perform the role at the Victoria Palace before the show went on tour was 10-year-old Claudia Bradley from
Leeds, who was featured on a 1981
BBC program called
Fame. She went on to perform on the tour as well.
Broadway revival (1997) A 20th anniversary Broadway
revival, which played at the
Martin Beck Theatre (now called the
Al Hirschfeld Theatre) in 1997, entitled
Annie, the 20th Anniversary, starred
Nell Carter as Miss Hannigan, but controversy surrounded the casting of the titular character. The original actress cast in the role,
Joanna Pacitti, was fired and replaced by Brittny Kissinger (who had been playing orphan July) just two weeks before her Broadway debut, while battling bronchitis in Boston. The pre-Broadway tour was playing the
Colonial Theatre, when Joanna became sick with bronchitis and missed a few performances. Alexandra Kiesman, the swing orphan and Annie understudy went on the first night Pacitti was out and then the production decided to test Brittny Kissinger in the role, as she'd been rehearsing as a second understudy. The tour then moved on to
Hershey, Pennsylvania, where Kissinger (now listed in the Playbill as a second understudy for Annie) performed again in the lead role while Pacitti was out sick. The Hershey tour stop proved to be Pacitti's last performance in the show on February 23, 1997. The next tour stop was
Oakdale in Connecticut where an insert was placed in the pre-printed programs displaying Pacitti as Annie that read "The role of Annie is now being played by Brittny Kissinger.” Public sentiment seemed to side with Pacitti as she was the winner of a highly publicized contest to find a new Annie, sponsored by the department store
Macy's. This incident, coupled with the mixed reviews the new staging garnered, doomed it to a short run, although it was followed by a successful national tour. Kissinger, then 8, became the youngest actress to ever play Annie on Broadway. More controversy surrounding the show involved Nell Carter. Carter reportedly was very upset when commercials promoting the show used a different actress, Marcia Lewis, a white actress, as Miss Hannigan. The producers claimed that the commercials, which were made during an earlier production, were too costly to reshoot. Carter felt that racism played a part in the decision. "Maybe they do not want audiences to know Nell Carter is black", she told the
New York Post. However, the ads did mention that Carter was in the show. "It hurts a lot", Carter told the Post, "I've asked them nicely to stop it — it's insulting to me as a black woman." Later reports stated that "Nell Carter of Broadway's
Annie denied Thursday that she called her show's producers racist because they chose to air commercials featuring a previous Miss Hannigan—who is white—instead of her." Her statement, released by the
Associated Press, read: "'Yes, it is true that I and my representatives have gone to management on more than one occasion about the commercial and were told that there was nothing they could do about it,' Carter said in a statement Thursday. 'Therefore, I have resigned myself to the fact that this is the way it is.' The statement also addressed the alleged charges of racism, first published in Thursday's
New York Post. Carter is black. 'I, Nell Carter, never, ever, ever accused my producers or anyone in the show of racism,' she said. Producers have said it is too expensive to film a new commercial." Carter was later replaced by another white actress,
Sally Struthers. The revival closed on October 19, 1997, after 14 previews and 239 performances.
West End revival (1998) The show was revived at the Victoria Palace Theatre, running from September 30, 1998, to February 28, 1999. It starred
Lesley Joseph and then
Lily Savage (the female alter ego of comedian
Paul O'Grady) as Miss Hannigan and Kevin Colson as Warbucks. The young girls who played Annie were Charlene Barton, Tasha-Jay Gold, Libby Gore and
Sophie McShera. Orphans included
Dominique Moore as documented on
Paddington Green.
1999–2000 United States tour Starting in August 1999, the post Broadway national tour continued with Meredith Anne Bull as Annie. In the spring of 2000, Ashley Wieronski, who had been playing Duffy, moved up to play Annie. In July 2000, Dana Benedict took over as Annie.
2000–2001 Australian tour In 2000/2001, a tour was staged in Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane.
Anthony Warlow starred as Warbucks with
Amanda Muggleton as Miss Hannigan. A new song, "Why Should I Change a Thing", was written for Warlow. Appearing as Annie in the Sydney production were
Rachel Marley and Jodie McGaw. A publicist noted that "each time the show moves to a new city, two casts of seven orphans plus two Annies have to be found to join the adult cast."
2001–2010 UK tours Further UK tours of the show were also staged, including a one-month run at
The Theatre Royal in Lincoln in 2001. Members of the original cast included Kate Winney and Jemma Carlisle as Annie,
Louise English (Grace),
Vicki Michelle (Miss Hannigan) and Simon Masterton-Smith (Warbucks). The show proved to be a success, and so for the first two tours and the Malaysian
Genting Highlands Production, the role of Annie was then shared by Faye Spittlehouse and a young
Lucy May Barker. Miss Hannigan was later performed by
Su Pollard and
Ruth Madoc and Daddy Warbucks by
Mark Wynter. This particular production toured from 2001 to 2007 and resumed in September 2008. The last tour of this production ended in 2011 with the role of Miss Hannigan still being played by Pollard,
David McAlister as Warbucks, Victoria Sian Lewis as Annie, and Simone Craddock as Grace Farrell.
2005–2010 US national tours Opening in August 2005, a 30th anniversary traveling production of
Annie by NETworks Tours embarked on a multi-city tour. This production was directed by
Martin Charnin and choreographed by Liza Gennaro (daughter of the show's original choreographer,
Peter Gennaro). This all-new production with new set designs by
Ming Cho Lee, also featured the brand-new song "Why Should I Change A Thing?" (sung by Warbucks). For the first two years of the tour,
Conrad John Schuck played Warbucks, reprising the role he played in the original run of
Annie on Broadway, as well as the 15th Anniversary National Tour and 1997 Broadway revival. Chicago actress,
Alene Robertson was Miss Hannigan, Annie was played by Marissa O'Donnell, Scott Willis played Rooster Hannigan, Elizabeth Broadhurst was Grace Farrell and
Mackenzie Phillips performed the role of Lily St. Regis. In December 2006, the tour briefly returned to New York City to play
The Theater at Madison Square Garden for Christmas where it broke box office records during the five week stay.
Kathie Lee Gifford played Miss Hannigan. This original Equity tour closed on March 25, 2007, at the Hippodrome Theatre in
Baltimore, Maryland. The tour continued non-union for several more years and throughout the run of the show, there were replacements. The 2007-08 tour starred
Amanda Balon as Annie, who took over as Molly during the second year. The 2008-09 cast for the tour featured Tianna Stevens as Annie. Early in 2009, Amanda Balon returned temporarily to play the role of Annie until Madison Kerth was rehearsed to play the title role. Also returning were Barton, Andrews and Meisner. Other cast members included
Mackenzie Aladjem (Molly). In the 2009-10 tour, Kerth returned as Annie along with most of the previous year's cast, adding Jordan Boezem (from Spotlight Kids in
Sarasota, Florida) in the role of July.
Second Broadway revival (2012–2014) A 35th Anniversary production opened on Broadway in 2012. Thomas Meehan revised the musical, with
James Lapine directing.
Lilla Crawford starred as Annie with
Katie Finneran as Miss Hannigan, and
Anthony Warlow making his long-awaited Broadway debut as Warbucks. Featured cast included Brynn O'Malley, Clarke Thorell and J. Elaine Marcos as Grace Farrell, Rooster and Lily St. Regis, respectively. The revival started previews at the
Palace Theatre on October 3, 2012, and officially opened on November 8, 2012, receiving mixed reviews. On July 30, Taylor Richardson and
Sadie Sink both began alternating the role of Annie, replacing Crawford. This production closed on January 5, 2014, after 38 previews and 487 regular performances.
2014–2025 United States tours Starting in September 2014, a 40th anniversary traveling production of
Annie was launched by TROIKA Entertainment. Directed by Martin Charnin, the tour kicked off in
Detroit, Michigan. For the first year of the tour, Issie Swickle played the title character Annie with Faith Perez as her alternate, alongside Gilgamesh Taggett and Lynn Andrews as Warbucks and Miss Hannigan, respectively. There were many replacements throughout the tour, and by the end of it, Gilgamesh Taggett was the only remaining original member. For most of the second year of the tour, Heidi Gray played Annie. For the third and final year of the tour, Tori Bates played Annie and became the first biracial Annie in a professional production. The 40th Anniversary performance was celebrated in Baltimore, Maryland, on April 21, 2017, with Angelina Carballo as Annie. The tour came to a close in Boston, Massachusetts, on May 21, 2017, after 745 performances. Another tour directed by
Jenn Thompson, who played Pepper in the original Broadway production, began October 4, 2022, and ended June 11, 2023, with Ellie Rose Pulsifer as the title role. A second season of the tour began October 7, 2023, and ended May 19, 2024, with Rainier Trevino playing Annie. Afterwards, the tour moved on to
Macau, China, and opened there on August 2, 2024, with the same cast as the 23-24 US tour. Hazel Vogel plays Annie in the third season of this touring production from November 11, 2024 through May 18, 2025. Vogel starred alongside
Whoopi Goldberg who joined the cast as Miss Hannigan from December 11, 2024 - January 5, 2025 while at
Madison Square Garden.
UK and Ireland tours and West End revival (2015–2026) A new UK and Ireland tour opened at the
Theatre Royal, Newcastle in July 2015 starring
Craig Revel Horwood as Miss Hannigan, directed by
Nikolai Foster and produced by Michael Harrison and
David Ian, with new orchestrations by George Dyer. The production toured until 2016 with
Lesley Joseph appearing at some venues and performances as Miss Hannigan. The production opened in London's
West End at the
Piccadilly Theatre, opening on June 5, 2017 (previews beginning on May 23) for a limited run until January 6, 2018. This was
Miranda Hart's musical debut as Miss Hannigan (until September 17). The three girls who shared the main role were Madeleine Haynes (reprising her the role from the UK tour), Lola Moxom and Ruby Stokes. From September 19, for a limited 10 week run,
Craig Revel Horwood returned to the role of Miss Hannigan, reprising his role from the 2015-16 UK and Ireland tour. The production extended its limited run, with
Meera Syal as Miss Hannigan from November 27, through to the show's conclusion on February 18, 2018, when it closed to make way for the musical adaptation of
Strictly Ballroom. The production began another UK and Ireland tour in February 2019 at the
Manchester Opera House starring
Anita Dobson as Miss Hannigan, alternating venues with
Craig Revel Horwood and
Jodie Prenger. Another UK and Ireland tour began at the
Curve in
Leicester in February 2023 starring Zoe Akinyosade, Harlie Barthram, and Sharangi Gnanavarathan sharing the title role, with
Craig Revel Horwood,
Paul O'Grady,
Jodie Prenger and
Elaine C. Smith alternating venues as Miss Hannigan, after previously performing the role in previous tours and West End runs. After performing the role in
Newcastle-upon-Tyne and
Edinburgh, O'Grady died on March 28, 2023. A UK and Ireland tour of the production starring
La Voix as Miss Hannigan is set to open at the
New Wimbledon Theatre in May 2026.
Hollywood Bowl production (2018) For its annual fully staged musical event, the
Hollywood Bowl produced a limited run of
Annie from July 27–29, 2018, directed by
Michael Arden. The cast included Kaylin Hedges as the title role,
Roger Bart as Rooster,
Ana Gasteyer as Miss Hannigan,
David Alan Grier as Warbucks,
Megan Hilty as Lily St. Regis,
Lea Salonga as Grace,
Ali Stroker as "Star to Be", and
Steven Weber as Franklin D. Roosevelt.
International productions Annie has been produced professionally in
Canada (1978, Quebec (French adaptation): 2022, 2025),
Argentina (1982),
Australia (1978, 2000, 2011, 2012, 2025),
Denmark (1982),
Germany (1999),
Hungary (1998),
Ireland (2003, 2016),
Israel (2001, 2010, 2018, 2025),
Italy (1982, 2006),
Japan (1979, 1986–present),
United Kingdom (1978, 1983, 1998, tours from 2000 to 2010),
Venezuela (1979)
Mexico (1979, 1991, 2010, 2015),
Netherlands (1997–1999, 2005–2007, 2012–2013),
Norway (1991, 2004, 2013),
Philippines (1980, 1984, 1987, 1998, 2016),
Portugal (1982, 2010, 2023, 2024),
Spain (1982, 2000, 2010, 2019),
Sweden (1979 (
Stockholm), 1999 (Stockholm), 2005–2006 (
Malmö)),
Peru (1986, 1997, 2002),
Zimbabwe (2003),
Russia (2002–2009),
Colombia (2006),
South Korea (1984, 1996, 2006–2007, 2010–2011, 2018–2019, 2024),
Hong Kong (2012),
Belgium (1992, 2008–2009, 2012),
Poland (1989),
United Arab Emirates (2009),
Denmark (2011),
Puerto Rico (2012),
Singapore (2012),
Greece (1981–1982, 2005–2007, 2013–2015, 2019, 2025–2026 (
Athens), 2007–2008, 2014–2015 (
Thessaloniki)) and
Brazil (2018–2019). ==Stage sequels==