Original London production on 31 March 2010 The premiere of the musical was planned at the
Tyne Theatre in
Newcastle upon Tyne, England, but this was abandoned due to financial problems of the Tyne Theatre's operator, and the production's growing budget. The musical premiered in the
West End at the
Victoria Palace Theatre, opening in previews on 31 March 2005 and officially on 11 May 2005. It closed on 9 April 2016, when the theatre closed for refurbishment, after 4,600 performances. The show reportedly cost £5.5 million to produce (the
original film version cost $5 million). The producers were
Working Title Films, Old Vic Productions Plc and
David Furnish. It was directed by
Stephen Daldry and choreographed by
Peter Darling, as was the original film.
Liam Mower,
James Lomas and
George Maguire were the original actors who alternated in the title role, and the supporting cast included
Haydn Gwynne as Mrs. Wilkinson,
Tim Healy as Billy's father, and
Stephanie Putson as Billy's mother. The sets were designed by
Ian MacNeil, the costumes by
Nicky Gillibrand, lighting was by
Rick Fisher, and sound by
Paul Arditti. in London, 2007 The musical received favourable reviews:
The Daily Telegraphs
Charles Spencer called it "the greatest British musical I have ever seen". It won four
Laurence Olivier Awards in
2006:
Best New Musical,
Best Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical (awarded jointly to James Lomas, George Maguire and Liam Mower, the boys who played Billy),
Best Theatre Choreographer and
Best Sound Design. It also won the
Evening Standard Theatre Award, the
Critics' Circle Theatre Award, and the
Theatregoers' Choice Award, all for Best Musical. The
original cast album was released on 10 January 2006. On 12 May 2006, the three original Billys appeared together in a performance of the musical to celebrate its first anniversary. The three rotated the role during the performance and were joined at the end by
Elton John. At the
2013 Laurence Olivier Awards, the show won another Olivier Award, the
BBC Radio 2 Audience Award for Most Popular Show (voted for by theatre goers), after many years of being finalists for the award. After
Margaret Thatcher died in 2013, according to director Stephen Daldry, the audience were given the choice to decide whether the song "Merry Christmas, Maggie Thatcher" would be included in the performance that day, since the lyrics include the sentence: "We all celebrate today 'cause it's one day closer to your death". As only three audience members voted against it, the performance went ahead as usual. On 3 July 2015, 12-year-old Nat Sweeney from
Birmingham became the 41st actor to play the role of Billy in London, making him the 100th to play the role worldwide. Elton John appeared on stage at the final West End performance in April 2016. ====
Billy Elliot the Musical Live==== In June 2014, it was announced that the musical would be screened and broadcast live to cinemas around the UK and the world. On 28 September, the matinee of the musical was broadcast as it was being filmed at the Victoria Palace Theatre to cinemas around the UK and other countries, with further encore screenings of that same performance on other dates. Billy was played by Elliott Hanna. Liam Mower, one of the three actors who originated the title role, returned to play the role of Older Billy. In addition, 25 past and present actors to have played the title role on the West End performed a specially-choreographed dance number at the finale. The live broadcast topped the UK and Ireland box office the weekend it was broadcast, a first for an event cinema release, beating
The Equalizer with £1.9m. This performance was released on DVD and Blu-ray on 24 November 2014 in the United Kingdom. This cast includes Elliott Hanna in the title role with
Ruthie Henshall as Mrs. Wilkinson, Deka Walmsley as Billy's dad, Chris Grahamson as Tony and
Ann Emery as Grandma. Further cast included Claudia Bradley as Dead Mam, Howard Crossley as George, David Muscatt as Mr. Braithwaite,
Alan Mehdizadeh as Big Davey, Liam Mower as Older Billy and David Stoller as Posh Dad.
Billy Youth Theatre Billy Youth Theatre was a countrywide scheme as part of which participating schools and youth groups were given the opportunity to stage their own production of the musical.
Billy Elliot writer
Lee Hall, together with
Martin Koch (musical supervision and orchestrations), adapted their original script and orchestrations to produce a shortened version of the show exclusively for groups staging local productions as part of Billy Youth Theatre.
Australian tours Original Australian tour The musical opened at
Sydney's
Capitol Theatre on 13 November 2007, directed by Daldry in association with Julian Webber, and choreographed by Darling. Rhys Kosakowski, Lochlan Denholm,
Rarmian Newton, and Nick Twiney alternated in the title role. The production earned good notices, and in January 2008 it won Best Musical at the 2008
Sydney Theatre Awards. The show also won seven
Helpmann Awards, including the awards for
Best Musical,
Best Direction,
Best Choreography,
Best Female Actor (
Genevieve Lemon as Mrs. Wilkinson) and
Best Male Actor, awarded jointly to the four boys who played Billy Elliot at the
8th Helpmann Awards. The production concluded in Sydney on 9 November 2008 with all eight Sydney Billys in the finale. The Sydney production transferred to
Melbourne's
Her Majesty's Theatre, opening on 13 December 2008. The Melbourne production closed on 14 June 2009 after a successful run.
10th anniversary Australian tour (2019) On 10 April 2017 it was announced that
Billy Elliot would open at Sydney's
Lyric Theatre in October 2019. The production transferred to
Adelaide, followed by Melbourne where it was scheduled to close in April 2020. The adult cast featured
Kelley Abbey as Mrs. Wilkinson,
Justin Smith as Billy's dad, Vivien Davis as Grandma and Drew Livingston as Troy. Mid-way through the run, Abbey withdrew from the show and was replaced by her understudy Lisa Sontag as Mrs. Wilkinson. On 28 November, Elton John watched the show from a private box and surprised the cast and audience by participating in the final bows. The show closed just over a month early in Melbourne, on 16 March 2020, due to audience restrictions due to the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Original Broadway production The
Broadway production opened at the
Imperial Theatre on 1 October 2008 in previews, and officially on 13 November 2008. The London production's creative team directed and designed the Broadway production. The supporting cast included Haydn Gwynne, reprising her role of Mrs. Wilkinson from the London production, and
Gregory Jbara as Billy's father. The production received rave reviews:
Time called it a "triumph"; critic
Liz Smith termed it "breathtakingly brilliant" and "absolutely, unequivocally awesome"; the
Daily News said it was "so exhilarating that at times you feel like leaping"; the
New York Post said it was "almost like being in love" and termed it "amusing, perfect and passionate" and "the best show you will ever see"; and the
Los Angeles Times called it a "global theatrical phenomenon". It has also been very financially successful, with $20 million taken in advance ticket sales. The Broadway production closed on 8 January 2012 following 40 previews and 1,312 regular performances.
Original Mexican production The first Spanish language production opened on 14 February 2017 at Centro Cultural Teatro 2 in
Mexico City. The role of Billy was played by Mauricio Arriaga, Demián Ferráez, Ian González and Aaron Márquez. The role of Mrs. Wilkinson was played by Anahí Allué. The cast also included Hernán Mendoza, Carlos Fonseca, first actress
Norma Lazareno and Concepción Márquez as Billy's father, Tony and Billy's grandmother respectively. Tony Award winner David Alvarez, from the original Broadway production, reprised his character in its adult version for this production.
Billy Elliot closed on 30 December 2017 and from January through August 2018 it embarked on a national tour.
Original Spanish production The second Spanish language production began previews on 22 September 2017 at the Nuevo Teatro Alcalá in
Madrid, and officially opened on 5 October 2017. The role of Billy was originally played by Pablo Bravo, Pau Gimeno, Cristian López, Miguel Millán, Oscar Pérez, and Diego Rey, with
Carlos Hipólito as Billy's father and
Natalia Millán as Mrs. Wilkinson.
Billy Elliot closed in Madrid on 10 March 2020, when performances were suspended due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. The production reopened on 9 October 2021 at the
Teatre Victòria in
Barcelona, where it ran until 22 May 2022. With 1,166 performances played, this is the 3rd longest running production of
Billy Elliot worldwide, only after London and Broadway.
Stratford Festival production The
Stratford Festival in
Stratford, Ontario announced that
Billy Elliot would be part of its 2019 season. Previews began on 16 April 2019, and the official opening performance was held on 28 May. The production was scheduled to run until 3 November, but was extended due to popular demand until 24 November. There were a total of 119 performances throughout the season. The production was staged in the
Festival Theatre, making this the first time the show has been performed on a
thrust stage. Because the audience would be seated on 3 sides of the stage, the blocking and staging needed to be designed so that all members of the audience could see the performance. The production was directed and choreographed by
Donna Feore, with set design by Michael Gianfrancesco, costuming by Dana Osborne, and music direction by Franklin Brasz. Nolen Dubuc was announced for the lead role of Billy. While there was an understudy, Dubuc ended up performing in all 119 performances. The rest of the cast included Emerson Gamble as Michael,
Blythe Wilson as Mrs. Wilkinson, and
Dan Chameroy as Dad.
Original German-language production The first German-language production of
Billy Elliot premiered in November 2024 at the Maag Music Hall in
Zurich. The title role of Billy was played by Moritz Fischli (alternated with Leo Lemmerich, Nevio Reymond). The main cast also included
Pasquale Aleardi as the father (alternating with Frank Logemann), Isabelle Flachsmann (alternating with Gabriela Ryffel) as Mrs. Wilkinson, Sabine Martin (alternating with Kaatje Dierks) as the grandmother and Justin Périer (alternating with Elias Meier, Charlie Bänziger) as Michael. Roman Riklin (lyrics) and Eric Hättenschwiler (dialogues) were responsible for the German-language adaptation.
North American touring productions First North American tour Although considered the first US tour, the show did not tour as a usual touring production would, with longer engagements in
Chicago and
Toronto.
Chicago (2010) in a scene from the
Chicago production. The musical opened in Chicago on 18 March 2010 in previews, officially on 11 April, at the
Ford Center for the Performing Arts Oriental Theatre for an extended run. This is the start of the North American multi-city tour. According to producer
Eric Fellner, however, the musical "will be here until such time as Chicago says 'go away'. ... We can only do one production at once," and other North American cities will have to wait until the Chicago production runs its course.
Emily Skinner played Mrs. Wilkinson, and the cast featured
Tommy Batchelor,
Giuseppe Bausilio,
Cesar Corrales and J.P. Viernes alternating as Billy, with Armand Schultz as Billy's Dad,
Cynthia Darlow as Grandma, Patrick Mulvey as Tony and
Jim Ortlieb as George. The production closed early on 28 November 2010 and transferred to Toronto. The show ran for 37 weeks and 288 performances. The production had been slated to run through July 2010 but was extended to the middle of January 2011, by popular demand. By September, however, ticket sales were growing bleak. According to the
Chicago Tribune, "Weekday attendance had been especially poor in recent weeks, despite heavily discounted tickets. Audience members at the Oriental Theatre in the Loop had reported an almost-empty balcony at some shows, and weekday attendance had been as low as 900 or so people. December sales are typically strong, so the decision to close then indicated that things were not expected to pick up." The show closed "early" in November 2010.
Toronto (2011) The Canadian premiere of the show opened on 1 February 2011 at the
Canon Theatre in Toronto. The cast included:
Kate Hennig as Mrs. Wilkinson; Cesar Corrales, J.P. Viernes, Marcus Pei and Myles Erlick as Billy; Armand Schultz as Billy's dad; Cynthia Darlow as Grandma; Patrick Mulvey as Tony; Jim Ortlieb as George; and cast members from the Chicago company. It was originally scheduled for 28 January 2011. The show received mostly glowing reviews. The most critical review was one published in the
National Post: "The signal achievement of
Billy Elliot the Musical is to be even phonier than the movie it's based on." The show was extended, due to packed audiences for an additional three months.
Second US tour A second tour opened at the
Durham Performing Arts Center in
Durham, North Carolina, on 30 October 2010. Although this is the first production of the musical to tour the United States in a "touring" manner, this is still considered to be the second national tour. The title role was shared by Giuseppe Bausilio,
Michael Dameski, Kylend Hetherington, Lex Ishimoto, and
Daniel Patrick Russell. The cast also included
Faith Prince as Mrs. Wilkinson, Rich Hebert as Billy's father, Griffin Birney and Jacob Zelonky alternating the role of Michael, Patti Perkins as Grandma,
Jeff Kready as Tony, and
Joel Blum as George. The tour closed on 21 August 2011 at
San Francisco's
Orpheum Theatre. As a promotion for the tour, Daniel Patrick Russell and Griffin Birney performed a special showcase on the television game show
The Price Is Right.
Third North American tour A third tour opened on 31 October 2011 at the
Fox Theatre in
St. Louis under a new production company, Networks, and with previous cast members from the second tour as well as the Toronto cast. Notable cast replacement included
Ben Cook as Billy. The tour went on hiatus after playing its final performance in North America at
Hartford, Connecticut on 23 June 2013, before transferring to Brazil for a limited engagement at the
Credicard Hall in
São Paulo from 2 to 18 August 2013. It was the first time the tour played in a Latin American country and was the first musical to take its international tour to Brazil since
Cats in 2006. The tour played its final performance with Ty Forhan, Drew Minard and Mitchell Tobin as the last to share the title role.
2026 UK tour and 2027 West End revival In December 2025, the producers behind the original production announced their search for children to play the roles of Billy, Michael and Debbie in a forthcoming run of the musical. A UK tour was subsequently announced, including a run at the
Adelphi Theatre in London's West End from February to July 2027.
Other productions The first non-English language production of the musical opened in
Seoul on 10 August 2010 in previews and officially on 14 August at the
LG Arts Center. It originally starred Jin-Ho Jung, Ji-Myeong Lee, Sunu Lim, and Se-Yong Kim in the title role of Billy with Junhyung Kim later joining the cast in January 2011. Supporting cast included Young-joo Chung as Mrs. Wilkinson, Won-hee Cho as Billy's father, and Jae-hyung Lim as Tony. This production closed on 27 February 2011. The first US regional production of the show opened on 16 June 2014 at
The Muny in St. Louis, Missouri, for a week-long run. Included among the cast were Tade Biesinger as Billy, Emily Skinner as Mrs. Wilkinson,
Daniel Oreskes as Dad, and Patti Perkins as Grandma, all reprising their roles from the original Broadway production. On 25 October 2013, the
Ogunquit Playhouse announced that it would stage their own production which ran from 25 June through 26 July 2014. Included among the cast were
Anastasia Barzee as Mrs. Wilkinson, Sam Faulkner and Noah Parets as Billy, Armand Schultz as Billy's dad,
Dale Soules as Grandma, Anthony Festa as Tony and Joel Blum as George. Other regional productions have also been announced. In December 2013 the Norwegian production company SceneKvelder announced that it would stage their own production of the show at the
Folketeatret in
Oslo. This production opened on 18 September 2014 for a limited run and was the first international
non-replica production to open. Kevin Haugan played the title role with
Hilde Lyrån as Mrs. Wilkinson,
Nils Ole Oftebro as Billy's dad and
Benjamin Helstad as Tony. On 30 November 2014
Billy Elliot premiered in the Netherlands at the
AFAS Circustheater in
The Hague (
Scheveningen) after previews starting on 6 November. Billy was alternately played by Tydo Korver, Stijn van der Plas, Svenno van Kleij, Carlos Puts, Jillis Roshanali and Roan Pronk. Among the cast were Dutch musical actress
Pia Douwes as Mrs. Wilkinson, Bas Heerkens as Billy's father, and Reinier Demeijer as Tony. This production was produced by the original English producers (
Universal Stage Productions, Working Title Films, Old Vic Productions) and by
Joop van den Ende Theaterproducties/
Stage Entertainment. On 22 January 2015
Billy Elliot premiered in Denmark at
Det Ny Teater in
Copenhagen. Billy was alternately played by Oscar Dietz,
Carl-Emil Lohmann and Nicolas Stefan Anker Markovic. The cast included actress Julie Steincke as Mrs. Wilkinson, Kristian Boland as Billy's father, and Sebastian Harris as Tony. In March 2015
Billy Elliot premiered in
Estonia,
Tallinn, at the Nordea Concert Hall. Among the cast were
Kaire Vilgats as Mrs. Wilkinson and Mait Malmsten as Billy's father. On 5 May 2015
Billy Elliot premiered in Italy at
Il Sistina in
Rome. Billy was alternately played by Alessandro Frola and Simone Romualdi. Among the cast were Sabrina Marciano as Mrs. Wilkinson, Christian Roberto as Michael, Luca Biagini as Billy's father, Cristina Noci as Grandma, Donato Altomare as Tony, Elisabetta Tulli as Mum, Jacopo Pelliccia as George and Maurizio Semeraro as Mr. Braithwaite.
Billy Elliot premiered in
Malmö, Sweden on 13 February 2016 at
Malmö Opera. Billy was alternately played by Grim Lohman, Oliver Lohk and Jacob Hermansson and Michael by David Fridholm, Carl Sjögren and Uno Elger. Among the cast were Åsa Fång as Mrs. Wilkinson, Lars Väringer as Dad, Rasmus Mononen as Tony,
Paul James Rooney and Robert Thomsen playing the role of Older Billy. The production moved to
Stockholm in March 2017. In May 2016, the
Grandstreet Theatre in
Helena, Montana, became the first American, non-professional theatre company to stage this musical. On 1 June 2016
Billy Elliot premiered in Israel at City Hall Theater in Cinema City Gelilot Complex. Billy was alternately played by Arnon Herring and Shon Granot-Zilbershtein. The main cast included Daphna Dekel as Mrs. Wilkinson,
Avi Kushnir as Billy's father,
Oshri Cohen as Tony and
Dina Doron as Billy's grandmother. The role of Michael was alternately played by Sahar Lev-Shomer, TimoTi Sannikov and Amit Brenner. The role of Debbie was alternately played by Naya Federman, Sasha Bezrukov and Maya Mintz. Eldar Groisman directed and choreographed the show, which was translated into Hebrew by Eli Bijaoui. The first Hungarian language production of the musical—a
non-replica staging—debuted on 29 July 2016 at the
Hungarian State Opera House in
Budapest, directed by Tamás Szirtes and choreographed by Ákos Tihanyi. The production was originally intended for the
Erkel Theatre which has more seats but was relocated after the ticket sales started. Hungarian translation is by István Puller and Ferenc Bárány. It was the first musical ever to be performed at the Opera House. The production was later moved to Erkel Theatre where it was originally intended. In this production, the role of Michael—the only identifiably homosexual character in the original—is significantly reduced, and his homosexuality is not made explicit. Despite this, on 1 June 2018, ahead of the production's third summer season, conservative Hungarian newspaper
Magyar Idők published an article calling the musical "gay propaganda", and accused it of corrupting children and turning them gay. Ticket sales fell in response to the article, and 15 performances had to be cancelled (29 other performances went ahead as planned). It was announced shortly after that the cancelled performances would be made up for during the final season of production in 2019. In July and August 2022 a completely new UK production was presented at the
Curve,
Leicester. The revival, by the theatre's artistic director
Nikolai Foster, was the first full-scale staging of
Billy Elliot in the UK since the original. It was a completely new staging, with a new set design by Michael Taylor and choreography by Lucy Hind. It was the biggest in-house production that the Curve Theatre has ever mounted. ==Social and cultural issues==