The musical was formed from several taped workshop sessions with Broadway dancers, known as "gypsies," including eight who eventually appeared in the original cast. The sessions were originally hosted by dancers Michon Peacock and Tony Stevens. The first taped session occurred at the Nickolaus Exercise Center on January 26, 1974. They hoped that they would form a professional dance company to make workshops for Broadway dancers. Michael Bennett was invited to join the group primarily as an observer, but quickly took control of the proceedings. Although Bennett's involvement has been challenged, there has been no question about Kirkwood and Dante's authorship. In later years, Bennett's claim that
A Chorus Line had been his brainchild resulted not only in hard feelings but a number of lawsuits as well. During the workshop sessions, random characters would be chosen at the end for the chorus jobs based on their performance quality, resulting in a different "cast" being selected every run-through. However, several of the costumers objected to this ending, citing the stress of having to change random actors in time for the finale. This resulted in the ending being cut in exchange for the same set of characters being "cast." Marvin Hamlisch, who wrote
A Chorus Lines score, recalled how, during the first previews, audiences seemed put off by something in the story. This problem was solved when actress
Marsha Mason told Bennett that Cassie (
Donna McKechnie in the original production) should win the part in the end because she did everything right. Bennett changed it so that Cassie would always win the part.
Original production A Chorus Line opened
Off-Broadway at
The Public Theater on April 15, 1975. At the time, the Public did not have enough money to finance the production so it borrowed $1.6 million to produce the show. The show was directed by Bennett and co-choreographed by Bennett and Bob Avian. Advance word had created such a demand for tickets that the entire run sold out immediately. Producer
Joseph Papp moved the production to
Broadway, and on July 25, 1975, it opened at the
Shubert Theatre, where it ran for 6,137 performances until April 28, 1990. Additional Opening Night cast members Carole Schweid and John Mineo were understudies named "Barbara" and "Jarad", although they only went on covering other roles. The production was nominated for 12
Tony Awards, winning nine: Best Musical, Best Musical Book, Best Score (Hamlisch and Kleban), Best Director, and Best Choreography, Best Actress (McKechnie), Best Featured Actor (Sammy Williams), Best Featured Actress (Bishop), and Best Lighting Design. until its record was surpassed by
Cats in 1997. On September 29, 1983, Bennett and 332
A Chorus Line veterans gathered to celebrate the musical becoming the longest-running show in Broadway history. Up to February 19, 1990,
A Chorus Line had generated $146 million from its Broadway gross and $277 million in total U.S. grosses and had 6.5 million Broadway attendees. At the time, it was the second most profitable show in Broadway history after
Cats with profits of $50 million (including ancillary income). 75% of the profits went to Papp's New York Shakespeare Festival and 25% to Bennett's Plum Productions. The production ran for three years and won the
Laurence Olivier Award as Best Musical of the Year in 1976, the first year the awards were presented. The original British cast took over in 1977. It included
Jean-Pierre Cassel as Zach,
Diane Langton as Diana Morales,
Jeff Shankley as Al,
Michael Staniforth as Paul,
Stephen Tate as Greg (later replacing Cassel as Zach) and Geraldine Gardner (aka Trudi van Doorn of
The Benny Hill Show) as Sheila.
Elizabeth Seal was cast as Cassie but was replaced at the eleventh hour by her understudy Petra Siniawski who played the role for the entire British cast run. The original Australian production opened in Sydney at
Her Majesty's Theatre in May 1977 and moved to Melbourne's
Her Majesty's Theatre in January 1978. The cast featured
Peta Toppano as Diana,
David Atkins as Mike, and Ross Coleman as Paul. In 1980, under the direction of Roy Smith, the Teatro El Nacional of Buenos Aires produced a Spanish version of
A Chorus Line lasting 10 months (and then only to make way for an already scheduled subsequent production). In Spain, the show opened in December 1984 at Teatre Tívoli in Barcelona, directed by Roy Smith and translated into Spanish by Nacho Artime and Jaime Azpilicueta, before transferring to Teatro Monumental in Madrid. In July 1986,
A Chorus Line was produced in Italy for the first time. It premiered at the
Nervi Festival of Dance in
Genoa, followed by a five-week Italian tour. The choreography was adapted for the festival's performing space by
Baayork Lee who had played Connie in the original production and subsequently became a close collaborator of Michael Bennett, the original choreographer. The German-language version was again directed by Lee and first opened in 1987 in
Vienna, Austria, where it ran for one season followed by the German-language CD release produced by
Jimmy Bowien in 1988. The first—and as of 2016 only—professional Hungarian production of the musical opened its limited run on March 25, 1988, under the title ''
(In Memory of Michael Bennett''). It was performed by Ódry Színpad (the company of the
Academy of Drama and Film in Budapest) translated into Hungarian by György Gebora, and directed by Imre Kerényi. The character Zach was renamed Michael and played by Kerényi. The 2006 Broadway revival opened at the
Gerald Schoenfeld Theater on October 5, 2006, following a run in San Francisco. The revival closed on August 17, 2008, after 759 performances and 18 previews. It cost $8 million to finance and recouped its investment in 19 weeks. The production was directed by
Bob Avian, with the choreography reconstructed by Baayork Lee, who had played Connie Wong in the original Broadway production. The opening night cast included
Paul McGill,
Michael Berresse,
Charlotte d'Amboise,
Mara Davi,
James T. Lane,
Tony Yazbeck,
Heather Parcells,
Alisan Porter,
Jason Tam,
Jessica Lee Goldyn,
Deidre Goodwin, and
Chryssie Whitehead. On April 15, 2008,
Mario Lopez joined the cast as the replacement for Zach. The production was the subject of the documentary film
Every Little Step. The production received two Tony Award nominations in 2007 for Featured Role (Charlotte d'Amboise) and Revival (Musical). The original contract for
A Chorus Line provided for sharing the revenue from the show with the directors and dancers that had attended the original workshop sessions. However, the contract did not specify revenue when the musical was revived in 2006. In February 2008, an agreement was reached between the dancers and Michael Bennett's estate. A 2008 U.S. touring production opened on May 4, 2008, at the
Denver Center for the Performing Arts and toured through June 2009. This production featured Michael Gruber as Zach,
Nikki Snelson as Cassie, Emily Fletcher as Sheila, and
Gabrielle Ruiz as Diana. In 2012, the musical toured Australia, gaining much critical acclaim.
Baayork Lee directed the production and it gained many nominations, including
Helpmann nominations for Best Actress in a Musical for West End star,
Anita Louise Combe playing Cassie, Best supporting Actress in a musical, Deborah Krizak and Best supporting Actor in a musical, Euan Doidge and it won best musical. The same production and cast then came to Singapore, playing at the
Marina Bay Sands, Sands Theater from May 4 to 27, 2012. The show returned to London for a
West End revival in February 2013 at the
London Palladium, running through August of that year. It was directed by original choreographer
Bob Avian, with
John Partridge,
Scarlett Strallen, and
Victoria Hamilton-Barritt starring.
James T. Lane is reprising his Broadway role and
Leigh Zimmerman won the
Laurence Olivier Award for Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a Musical for her portrayal of Sheila in this production. Producers announced on June 9, 2013, that the London revival cast would record a new cast album featuring never-before-heard songs which were written for the show but never made the final cut. In 2015, the Original Broadway cast of
Hamilton paid tribute to
A Chorus Line 40th anniversary and performed "What I Did For Love", with the original cast of
A Chorus Line joining them onstage. Reports surfaced in June 2016 that a second Broadway revival is planned for 2025, in honor of the show's 50th anniversary. For its annual fully staged musical event, the
Hollywood Bowl produced a limited run of A Chorus Line from July 29–31, 2016, directed and choreographed by
Baayork Lee. The cast included
Sabrina Bryan as Valerie Clark,
Robert Fairchild as Mike Costa, Spencer Liff as Larry,
Ross Lynch as Mark Anthony,
Mara Davi as Maggie Winslow, J. Elaine Marcos as Connie Wong,
Jason Tam as Paul San Marco,
Leigh Zimmerman as Sheila Bryant,
Mario Lopez as Zach, Sarah Bowden as Cassie Ferguson,
Krysta Rodriguez as Diana Morales, and Courtney Lopez as Kristine Ulrich. In 2016, approval was granted to director
Donna Feore to allow changes in choreography so the show could be performed for the first time on a
thrust stage, in the Festival Theatre at the
Stratford Festival of Canada. In 2018,
New York City Center presented
A Chorus Line as their annual gala presentation. The production was directed by
Bob Avian, co-choreographer of the original 1975 production, and choreographed by
Baayork Lee, Broadway's original Connie Wong. In 2019, a Spanish-language version of the musical premiered as part of the inaugural season of Teatro del Soho in Málaga, Spain, starring the theater's founder
Antonio Banderas as Zach. Banderas also co-directed the musical with Baayork Lee. On July 27, 2025, a one night
A Chorus Line Official 50th Anniversary Celebration was held at the Shubert Theatre. Original 1975 Broadway cast members Kelly Bishop, Wayne Cilento, Baayork Lee, Priscilla Lopez, and Donna McKechnie participated, and included special performances by Charlotte d’Amboise,
Ariana DeBose, and
Bebe Neuwirth, among others. The performance was directed by Baayork Lee and included original choreography by Michael Bennett and Bob Avian. The performance benefited the Entertainment Community Fund programs serving dancers. ==Awards and nominations==