Cats has been translated into over 15 languages and produced professionally in more than 30 countries.
West End Cats premiered in the West End at the
New London Theatre on 11 May 1981. The musical was produced by Mackintosh and Lloyd Webber's
Really Useful Group, with direction by Nunn, choreography by Lynne (who also served as the associate director), set and costume design by Napier, lighting design by
David Hersey, sound design by
Abe Jacob and music direction by
Harry Rabinowitz. It played a total of 8,949 performances before closing on its 21st anniversary, 11 May 2002. The final performance was broadcast live on a large outdoor screen in
Covent Garden for fans who could not acquire a ticket.
Cats held the record as London's longest-running musical from 1989, when it surpassed
Jesus Christ Superstar, until 8 October 2006, when it was surpassed by
Les Misérables. The musical returned to the West End in 2014 for a planned 12-week limited run at the
London Palladium. Beginning on 6 December, the revival starred
Nicole Scherzinger as Grizabella, and featured the original creative team, with direction from Nunn, choreography by Lynne and design by Napier. The run was later extended through April 2015 and an additional 100,000 tickets were released, with
Kerry Ellis replacing Scherzinger as Grizabella. The musical returned once again to the London Palladium for another limited run lasting from 23 October 2015 to 2 January 2016, starring
Beverley Knight as Grizabella. In summer 2026,
Regent's Park Open Air Theatre will present a new revival from 25 July to 12 September 2026, directed and choreographed by its Artistic Director, Drew McOnie. Following the run, the production will tour the UK and Ireland from October 2026 until 2027..
Broadway Cats debuted on Broadway on 7 October 1982 at the
Winter Garden Theatre with a record-breaking $6.2 million in ticket pre-sales. The musical was co-produced by the original London production team, along with
David Geffen and
The Shubert Organization. Most of the original creative team remained, with
Martin Levan replacing Jacob as the sound designer and
Stanley Lebowsky replacing Rabinowitz as music director. It was the most expensive Broadway show ever mounted at the time with a production cost of $5.5 million, though it recouped its investment in less than 10 months. The show closed on 10 September 2000 after a total of 15 previews and 7,485 performances. Encouraged by the reception to the first West End revival, producers began looking to bring
Cats back to Broadway in early 2015. The Broadway revival opened on 31 July 2016 at the
Neil Simon Theatre. Scherzinger, who played Grizabella in the 2014 West End revival, had originally agreed to reprise the role on Broadway but later withdrew.
Leona Lewis was cast as Grizabella instead, and was succeeded by Mamie Parris three months later in October 2016. The Broadway revival closed on 30 December 2017 after 16 previews and 593 performances. On August 13, 2025, Andrew Lloyd Webber confirmed that the Off-Broadway production titled
Cats: The Jellicle Ball would transfer to Broadway in spring 2026, with dates and a theatre to be announced at a later date. The transfer would be the first production for Lloyd Webber's
LW Entertainment following the company's rebranding in the summer of 2025. It was announced on October 9, 2025 that the production would open at the
Broadhurst Theatre on April 7, 2026, with much of the off-Broadway cast reprising their roles.
Off-Broadway The show, under the title
Cats: The Jellicle Ball, made its
Off-Broadway debut at the
Perelman Performing Arts Center in June 2024 and was extended twice, closing in September. The show, directed by Zhailon Levingston and
Bill Rauch and choreographed by Arturo Lyons and Omari Wiles, was a radical reimagining of the musical taking inspiration from
ballroom culture. Josephine Kearns served as
dramaturg and gender consultant.
André De Shields starred as Old Deuteronomy, with other cast members including Jonathan Burke as Mungojerrie, Sydney James Harcourt as Rum Tum Tugger,
Antwayn Hopper as Macavity,
Junior LaBeija (the emcee featured in the Ballroom documentary
Paris Is Burning) as Gus, "Tempress" Chasity Moore as Grizabella, and Nora Schell as Bustopher Jones. This was the show's first major production to depart stylistically from the original.
North America Following its Broadway debut,
Cats has been staged extensively across North America. The first US national tour, Cats National I, launched at the
Shubert Theatre in Boston in December 1983 and closed in November 1987. The opening night cast included
Laurie Beechman playing Grizabella and
Charlotte d'Amboise playing Cassandra; later replacements included
Victoria Clark and
Jessica Molaskey both playing Jellylorum/Griddlebone. This production was a "slow tour" that had lengthy engagements lasting for several months in each of the nine cities it visited. Cats National II, a separate sit-down production at the
Los Angeles Shubert Theatre, ran from January 1985 to November 1986, and starred
Kim Criswell and
George de la Peña in the roles of Grizabella and Mistoffelees respectively. A third US touring company, Cats National III, ran for two years from September 1986 to September 1988. Notable performers in the third tour included
Jonathan Cerullo as Skimbleshanks (1986) and
Bill Nolte as Old Deuteronomy (1987). The fourth national company, Cats National IV, toured the United States for 13 years from March 1987 to December 1999. By June 1997, the North American touring companies had grossed over $400 million. After a try-out at
Harrah's Atlantic City in July 2001, the production toured North America for 11 years from August 2001 to June 2012. Performers in the non-Equity tour included
Julie Garnyé as Jennyanydots (2001),
Dee Roscioli as Grizabella (2002), and Jonathan Burke as Mungojerrie (2004). In January 2019, a new North American Equity tour based on the 2016 Broadway revival opened at the
Providence Performing Arts Center in
Rhode Island, and was originally scheduled to run through June 2020. However, due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, performances of this tour were suspended on 13 March 2020. The tour re-launched as a non-Equity production on 21 September 2021. Meanwhile, the first Canadian national production premiered in March 1985 at the
Elgin and Winter Garden Theatres in
Toronto,
Ontario. It moved to
Montreal two years later and then toured other parts of Canada. By the time the production closed in August 1989, it had become the most successful Canadian stage production of all time with a box office of $78 million from nearly 2 million tickets. A second All-Canadian company began at Toronto's former
Panasonic Theatre in May 2013 and ran for four months & 128 performances, 28 years after the original production. The musical first played in Mexico from April 1991 to November 1992;
Manuel Landeta as Munkustrap,
Susana Zabaleta as Jellylorum,
Maru Dueñas as Sillabub and
Ariel López Padilla as Macavity. A revival premiered at the Teatro San Rafael in May 2013, with an opening night cast that included
Filippa Giordano as Grizabella, Landeta, and Maru Dueñas. After a total of 350 performances, the show closed at the Teatro San Rafael in June 2014, and then toured over 36 cities in Mexico until December 2014. Other performers who later joined the production included
Lisset,
Rocío Banquells,
Lila Deneken and
Myriam Montemayor Cruz, all of whom played Grizabella. Another Mexican revival was launched at the Coyoacán Centennial Theater in October 2018, with
Yuri as Grizabella and Landeta as Old Deuteronomy. The revival marked its 200th performance in May 2019.
United Kingdom The first UK and Ireland tour opened in May 1989 at the
Opera House Theatre in
Blackpool. The cast for this tour included
Marti Webb as Grizabella,
Rosemarie Ford as Bombalurina and
John Partridge as Alonzo. Following a six-month engagement in Blackpool that broke the theatre's box office record and was seen by around 450,000 people, the production moved to the
Edinburgh Playhouse for three months, before closing in May 1990 after another two months at the
Point Theatre in
Dublin. featuring Rosemarie Ford as Grizabella,
Robin Cousins as Munkustrap,
Simon Rice as Mistoffelees and
Tony Monopoly as Old Deuteronomy. The tour closed at the
Manchester Opera House in December 1995. Following the closure of the original West End production, a nationwide tour embarked in 2003 with
Chrissie Hammond starring as Grizabella, until
Dianne Pilkington took over the role in 2006. Hammond reprised the role on tour again from 2007 to 2008. A UK and Ireland tour of
Cats launched in February 2013 at the Edinburgh Playhouse with
Joanna Ampil as Grizabella.
Susan McFadden took over the role from Ampil during the tour's three-week stop in Dublin. The production ran through 2014 before transferring to the West End. In between its limited West End runs, the musical returned to the Blackpool Opera House Theatre in 2015, this time starring
Jane McDonald as Grizabella. After the second West End revival, the production toured the UK in 2016 with
Anita Louise Combe as Grizabella and
Marcquelle Ward as Rum Tum Tugger.
Japan , Tokyo (2008) The Japanese-language production of
Cats by the
Shiki Theatre Company has been playing continuously since it premiered in
Shinjuku, Tokyo, in November 1983. This production is a "slow tour" with engagements lasting for several years in each of the nine cities it has visited. An initial investment of ¥800 million (US$3.4 million in 1983) was required to bring
Cats to Japan, including ¥300 million for the construction of a purpose-built theatre tailored to the needs of the musical. This was a big financial risk for the Shiki Theatre Company as it meant that a long run was needed to turn a profit; however, stage productions in Japan ran on a monthly basis at the time and open-ended runs were unheard of. The resulting success of this production led to what the local media termed a "musical boom" in the 1980s, with other Broadway musicals quickly following suit and opening in Japan. , the show is performed at the purpose-built CATS Theatre in Tokyo. The production has played over 10,000 performances to over 10 million audience members. Similar to the original London staging, the set of the 1,200-capacity CATS Theatre is built on a revolving stage floor such that during the overture, the stage and sections of the stalls revolve approximately 180 degrees into place. In 1998, the Japanese production underwent major revisions to the choreography, staging and costume designs. Following further revisions in 2018, the current incarnation features 27 named cats, including both Jemima and Sillabub (who have evolved into two separate characters), and an original character named Gilbert. There have been numerous notable performers in the Japanese production, including
Shintarō Sonooka as Munkustrap (original 1983 cast),
Masachika Ichimura, and
Mayo Kawasaki.
Vienna Under the direction of
Peter Weck, the first German-language production of
Cats in
Michael Kunze's translation opened in September 1983 at the
Theater an der Wien in
Vienna, Austria. In 1988, the show transferred to the newly renovated
Ronacher Theatre where it ran for another two years before closing on its seventh anniversary in September 1990. The original Viennese cast included
Ute Lemper who played Bombalurina,
Steve Barton who played Munkustrap, Robert Montano who played Pouncival, and who played Grizabella.
Pia Douwes was also a member of the cast from 1987 to 1989, covering several different characters including Grizabella. The Vienna production also performed limited runs at the
Komische Oper Berlin in
East Germany in 1987, and at the in the
Soviet Union in 1988. and closed in June 2022. The revival cast included who played Old Deuteronomy, who played Munkustrap, who played Gus/Growltiger and Bustopher Jones, and who played Grizabella.
Cats was the first stage production in the country to be mounted without public funding and was also the first to run for multiple years; its success established the medium as a profitable venture in Germany.
Cats redefined musical theatre in the German-speaking part of the world, turning an industry which consisted of
repertory theatre at the time towards privately funded commercial productions. The success of the Vienna and Hamburg productions sparked a "musical boom" in the region that saw numerous musicals being launched not just in Germany but also in
Switzerland. Germany has since grown to become the third largest musical market after the US and UK, with Hamburg as its "musical capital".
Stage Entertainment took over the production mid-2002 and moved the show to
Berlin (2002–2004) and later
Düsseldorf (2004–2005), before touring other cities until 2006. Mehr-Entertainment launched a separate tour of
Cats that ran from December 2010 to June 2013, performing in a travelling purpose-built tent theatre.
Europe Beyond the UK, Vienna, and Germany,
Cats is also produced frequently in the rest of Europe.
1980s and 1990s The first non-English production of
Cats premiered in March 1983 at the Madách Theatre in
Budapest, Hungary, with direction by Tamás Szirtes and choreography by
László Seregi. Since then, the Hungarian-language production has continued to be staged intermittently as part of the Madách Theatre's repertoire and, as of 2017, has been performed nearly 1,500 times. November 1985 saw the premiere of a Norwegian-language production at
Det Norske Teatret in
Oslo. It closed in January 1987 and included performers such as
Øivind Blunck,
Brit Elisabeth Haagensli and
Øystein Wiik.
Jorma Uotinen directed and choreographed a Finnish production at the
Helsinki City Theatre that ran for over two years from September 1986 to December 1988, and featured
Monica Aspelund as Grizabella,
Heikki Kinnunen as Gus, and
Kristiina Elstelä as Jennyanydots/Griddlebone. A Swedish version of the musical opened in 1987 at the
Chinateatern in
Stockholm. The production was seen by 326,000 audiences before it transferred to the
Scandinavium in
Gothenburg two years later. Meanwhile, the
Carré Theatre in
Amsterdam, Netherlands, staged the musical in 1987 (with
Ruth Jacott as Grizabella), 1988 and from 1992 to 1993.
Cats made its French debut at the
Théâtre de Paris from February 1989 to April 1990, while a production by
Joop van den Ende and the
Royal Ballet of Flanders was staged at the Stadsschouwburg Antwerpen in Belgium in 1996. An English/German-language "Eurotour" production also toured the region from May 1994 to December 1995. This Danish production was translated by
Adam Price and was one of the largest theatrical productions ever mounted in the country at the time with 100 performers, musicians and stagehands. The first non-replica production of
Cats was approved for a Polish production at the Teatr Muzyczny Roma in
Warsaw. Set in an abandoned film studio instead of a junkyard, the Polish version opened in January 2004 and closed in 2010. The
Gothenburg opera house staged a production with a Swedish-language script by
Ingela Forsman; this version was reimagined to take place in an abandoned fairground and played from September 2006 to February 2007. Other productions were also staged at the Divadlo Milenium in
Prague from 2004 to 2005, The first Italian-language production began touring Italy in 2009. The Dutch live entertainment company
Stage Entertainment has been responsible for several European productions of
Cats. The company produced the musical at the Coliseum Theatre in
Madrid from December 2003 to January 2005, with a cast that included Víctor Ullate Roche as Mistoffelees. They then staged a Russian-language production at the Moscow Palace of Youth from 2005 to 2006, with a cast that included
Ivan Ozhogin as Munkustrap. A Dutch production under the same company toured the Netherlands and Belgium from 2006 to 2007, featuring several performers in the role of Grizabella including
Pia Douwes and
Anita Meyer. A Paris revival by Stage Entertainment ran at the
Théâtre Mogador from October 2015 to July 2016. This production was based on the 2014 London revival and also featured a new song written especially for the French show by Lloyd Webber. English-language touring companies have also toured the European region extensively. International tours in the early to late 2000s included stops in Sweden, Norway, Finland, Greece, Germany, and Italy. The 2013–2014 UK tour visited cities in Belgium, Greece, Italy, Monaco, and Portugal. These European tours have featured several notable performers in the role of Grizabella, including
Pernilla Wahlgren (Sweden; 2003),
Katarína Hasprová (Slovakia; 2016) and
Jenna Lee-James (Netherlands; 2018–2019).
Oceania The first Australian production ran from July 1985 to August 1987 at the
Theatre Royal in
Sydney. The original cast included
Debra Byrne as Grizabella,
John Wood as Old Deuteronomy,
Marina Prior as Jellylorum,
Jeff Phillips as Rum Tum Tugger,
David Atkins as Mistoffelees, and
Anita Louise Combe as Sillabub. The Sydney production cost $3 million to mount and grossed a record $28 million. It was credited with revitalising the then-stagnant musical genre in Australia. After closing in Sydney, an additional $1.8 million was spent transferring the production to
Melbourne, including $725,000 to refurbish the old
Her Majesty's Theatre. The Melbourne run played from October 1987 to December 1988, with an opening night cast that included
Megan Williams as Grizabella, Wood as Old Deuteronomy, Phillips as Rum Tum Tugger,
Linda Hartley-Clark as Demeter,
Femi Taylor as Bombalurina,
Rachael Beck as Rumpleteazer and
Seán Martin Hingston as Plato/Macavity. From 1989 to 1990, the company toured the
Festival Theatre in
Adelaide,
His Majesty's Theatre in
Perth,
Civic Theatre in
Newcastle,
Lyric Theatre in
Brisbane, and the
St. James Theatre in
Auckland. during which
Delia Hannah made her debut as Grizabella in 1994. A professional
circus adaptation of
Cats, titled
Cats Run Away to the Circus, had a national tent tour from 1999 to 2001, with Hannah once again starring as Grizabella. Hannah reprised her role for another production that toured Australia and Asia in 2009 and 2010. In July 2014, Australia's
Harvest Rain Theatre Company staged the biggest production of
Cats in the Southern Hemisphere with over 700 performers. Produced by
Tim O'Connor, the production was performed at the
Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre. Callum Mansfield directed and choreographed it, and its cast included Marina Prior as Grizabella and
Steven Tandy as Bustopher Jones and Gus. From October 2015 to May 2016, a revival toured Australia with stops in Sydney,
Hobart, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide, and Perth. The revival featured singer-songwriter
Delta Goodrem as Grizabella, before Delia Hannah took over the role during the Adelaide and Perth seasons. The show returned to Auckland in 1995 as part of a three-city New Zealand tour, and again in 2015 preceding the 2015/16 Australian tour. A New Zealand national tour played across 16 cities in 2019, with a reimagined setting in a derelict
Victorian theatre that was inspired by post-earthquake
Christchurch. A 2025 Australia production will return in June 2025.
Asia Besides Japan,
Cats is also produced regularly in other parts of Asia. The region has hosted numerous English-language productions of the musical, beginning with a tour from 1993 to 1994 when it played in Singapore (with local actress
Jacintha Abisheganaden as Grizabella), Hong Kong and South Korea.
Cats returned to Asia from 2002 to 2004, when an international touring company performed in Malaysia,
Shanghai,
Taipei and
Beijing; the 2004 cast included
Slindile Nodangala in the role of Grizabella. A touring company visited Asia again between 2007 and 2010, including stops in the region of Taiwan, South Korea from 2007 to 2008; China in 2008; Singapore and Hong Kong in 2009 (with
Delia Hannah playing Grizabella); and
Manila in 2010 (with
Lea Salonga as Grizabella).
Cats toured Asia again from 2014 to 2015, making stops in South Korea, Singapore and Macau. Two years later, another Asian tour was launched and is scheduled to run through 2020, with visits to South Korea from 2017 to 2018, Hong Kong and Taiwan in 2018, China in 2018 (with
Joanna Ampil as Grizabella) and 2019,
Cats was China's highest-grossing musical in 2018, accounting for over 20% of the total grosses from all musicals staged in the country that year. The musical has also been translated and staged nationally in Asia. From September 2008 to May 2009, a Korean-language production toured South Korea, with
Shin Youngsook and
Ock Joo-hyun alternating as Grizabella,
Kim Jin-woo and
Daesung alternating as Rum Tum Tugger, and
Kim Bo-kyung as Rumpleteazer. This production was revived and toured South Korea from 2011 to 2012, with
Insooni and
Park Hae-mi taking turns to portray Grizabella. The first Chinese-language production began touring various cities in China in 2012.
Others Spanish and Portuguese-language productions of
Cats have been staged in
South America, with productions in Argentina in 1993 (with Mexican actress
Olivia Bucio as Grizabella), in Chile in 2006 (at the
Arena Santiago) and 2014, in Colombia in 2009, and in Brazil in 2010 (with
Paula Lima as Grizabella). Other countries that the musical has been performed in include South Africa (2001–2002) & (2025-2026), Lebanon (2002), Qatar (2003, 2017), Turkey (2013), Israel (2014), and the
United Arab Emirates (2017). A full-length production of
Cats has been performed regularly for guests aboard
Royal Caribbean International's cruise ship
Oasis of the Seas, starting in autumn 2014, with a cast rotating every nine months.
Regional and amateur , India (2014)
Cats has been produced by various professional regional theatre companies.
Broadway Sacramento staged the musical in 2003 and 2009 at the
Wells Fargo Pavilion. Both productions featured
Ken Page reprising his role as Old Deuteronomy from the original Broadway production, along with
Jacquelyn Piro Donovan as Grizabella and
Jeffry Denman as Munkustrap. A 2010
amphitheatre production at
The Muny starred Page as Old Deuteronomy,
Stephanie J. Block as Grizabella and
Lara Teeter as Munkustrap. The
La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts staged the musical in 2014, with a cast that included
Todrick Hall as Rum Tum Tugger.
Nick Winston directed and choreographed a production at the
Kilworth House Theatre in 2019 with a cast that included
Emma Hatton and
Helen Anker. Set in a dilapidated
London Underground station during
World War II, this production was given a 5-star review by
The Stage for its "radical" reimagining of
Cats. The musical is also available for school and amateur licensing through The Musical Company. On 24 March 2013, the largest-ever staging of
Cats was performed by 3,000 students from
Stagecoach Theatre Arts schools at the
National Indoor Arena in
Birmingham, UK. ==Film adaptations==