Original Broadway (1987) Into the Woods opened on Broadway at the
Martin Beck Theatre on November 5, 1987, and closed on September 3, 1989, after 765 performances. It starred
Bernadette Peters as the Witch,
Joanna Gleason as the Baker's Wife,
Chip Zien as the Baker,
Robert Westenberg as the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince,
Tom Aldredge as the Narrator/Mysterious Man,
Kim Crosby as Cinderella,
Danielle Ferland as Little Red Ridinghood,
Ben Wright as Jack,
Chuck Wagner as Rapunzel's Prince,
Barbara Bryne as Jack's Mother,
Pamela Winslow as Rapunzel,
Merle Louise as Cinderella's Mother/Granny/Giantess,
Edmund Lyndeck as Cinderella's father,
Joy Franz as Cinderella's Stepmother, Philip Hoffman as the Steward, Lauren Mitchell as Lucinda, Kay McClelland as Florinda,
Jean Kelly as Snow White, and Maureen Davis as Sleeping Beauty. It was directed by Lapine, with musical staging by
Lar Lubovitch, sets by
Tony Straiges, lighting by
Richard Nelson, and costumes by
Ann Hould-Ward (based on original concepts by
Patricia Zipprodt and Ann Hould-Ward). The production won the 1988
New York Drama Critics' Circle Award and the
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Musical, and the
original cast recording won a
Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album at the
31st Annual Grammy Awards. The show was nominated for ten
Tony Awards at the
42nd Tony Awards, and won three:
Best Original Score (Sondheim),
Best Book (Lapine) and
Best Actress in a Musical (Gleason). Peters left the show after almost five months, and replacements for the Witch were
Betsy Joslyn;
Phylicia Rashad,
Nancy Dussault and
Ellen Foley. Other notable cast replacements included
Dick Cavett as the Narrator,
Edmund Lyndeck as the Mysterious Man,
Patricia Ben Peterson as Cinderella, LuAnne Ponce returning as Little Red,
Jeff Blumenkrantz as Jack,
Marin Mazzie as Rapunzel,
Dean Butler as Rapunzel's Prince,
Cindy Robinson as Snow White, and
Cynthia Sikes and
Mary Gordon Murray as the Baker's Wife. Tenth Anniversary benefit performances were held on November 9, 1997, at the
Broadway Theatre in New York, with most of the original cast. Wagner played the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince,
Jonathan Dokuchitz played Rapunzel's Prince, and Blumenkrantz played the Steward. This concert included the duet "Our Little World". On November 9, 2014, most of the original cast reunited for a reunion concert and discussion in
Costa Mesa, California.
Mo Rocca hosted and interviewed Sondheim, Lapine, and each cast member. Appearing were Peters, Gleason, Zien, Ferland, Wright and husband and wife Westenberg and Crosby. The same group presented another discussion/concert on June 21, 2015, at the
Brooklyn Academy of Music, New York City.
US tour (1988) A U.S. tour started performances on November 22, 1988. The cast included
Cleo Laine as the Witch,
Rex Robbins as the Narrator and Mysterious Man, Ray Gill and Mary Gordon Murray as the Baker and his wife,
Kathleen Rowe McAllen as Cinderella, Chuck Wagner as the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince,
Douglas Sills as Rapunzel's Prince,
Robert Duncan McNeill and
Charlotte Rae as Jack and his mother, Marcus Olson as the Steward, and Susan Gordon Clark reprising her role as Florinda from the Broadway production. The set was almost completely reconstructed, and there were certain changes to the script, changing certain story elements. Notable cast replacements included Joslyn as the Witch,
Peter Walker as the Narrator/Mysterious Man, Olson as the Baker,
Stuart Zagnit as the Steward, and
Patricia Ben Peterson as Cinderella. The tour ran at the
John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts from June to July 1989, where
The Washington Post review called the "lovely score – poised between melody and dissonance ... the perfect measure of our tenuous condition. The songs invariably follow the characters' thinking patterns, as they weigh their options and digest their experience. Needless to say, that doesn't make for traditional show-stoppers. But it does make for vivacity of another kind. And Sondheim's lyrics ... are brilliant. ... I think you'll find these cast members alert and engaging."
Original West End (1990) The original West End production opened on September 25, 1990, at the
Phoenix Theatre and closed on February 23, 1991, after 197 performances. It was directed by
Richard Jones and produced by
David Mirvish, with set design by
Richard Hudson, choreography by
Anthony Van Laast, costumes by
Sue Blane, and
orchestrations by
Jonathan Tunick. The cast featured
Julia McKenzie as the Witch,
Ian Bartholomew as the Baker,
Imelda Staunton as the Baker's Wife and
Clive Carter as the Wolf/Cinderella's prince. The show was nominated for seven
Olivier Awards in 1991, winning Best Actress in a Musical (Staunton) and Best Director of a Musical (Jones). The song "Our Little World" was added. A duet for the Witch and Rapunzel, it gives further insight into the Witch's care for her self-proclaimed daughter and the desire Rapunzel has to see the world outside her tower. The show's overall feel was darker than that of the original Broadway production. Critic
Michael Billington wrote: "But the evening's triumph belongs also to director Richard Jones, set designer Richard Hudson and costume designer Sue Blane]who evoke exactly the right mood of haunted theatricality. Old-fashioned footlights give the faces a sinister glow. The woods themselves are a semi-circular, black-and-silver screen punctuated with nine doors and a crazy clock: they achieve exactly the 'agreeable terror' of
Gustave Doré's children's illustrations. And the effects are terrific: doors open to reveal the rotating magnified eyeball or the admonitory finger of the predatory giant."
Off West End London revivals (1998, 2007, 2010 and 2025) An intimate production of the show opened at the
Donmar Warehouse on November 16, 1998, closing on February 13, 1999. It was directed by
John Crowley and designed by his brother,
Bob Crowley. The cast included
Clare Burt as the Witch, Nick Holder as the Baker,
Sophie Thompson as the Baker's Wife,
Jenna Russell as Cinderella,
Sheridan Smith as Little Red,
Damian Lewis as the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince, and
Frank Middlemass as the Narrator. Thompson won the
1999 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Musical; the production was nominated for
Outstanding Musical Production. A revival at the
Royal Opera House's Linbury Studio in
Covent Garden ran from June 14 to 30, 2007, followed by a short stint at
The Lowry theatre,
Salford Quays,
Manchester on July 4–7. The production mixed opera singers, musical theatre actors, and film and television actors, including
Anne Reid (Jack's mother) and
Gary Waldhorn (the narrator),
Suzie Toase (Little Red),
Peter Caulfield (Jack), Beverley Klein (Witch),
Anna Francolini (Baker's Wife),
Clive Rowe (Baker),
Nicholas Garrett (Wolf/Cinderella's Prince), and
Lara Pulver (Lucinda). This was the second Sondheim musical to be staged by the Opera House, following 2003's
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.. Directed by
Will Tuckett, it received mixed reviews, although there were clear standout performances. A production at
Regent's Park Open Air Theatre in London, directed by
Timothy Sheader and choreographed by Liam Steel, ran from 6 August to 11 September 2010. The cast included
Hannah Waddingham as the Witch,
Mark Hadfield as the Baker,
Jenna Russell as the Baker's Wife,
Helen Dallimore as Cinderella,
Michael Xavier as the Wolf/Cinderella's prince, and Judi Dench as the recorded voice of the Giantess.
Gareth Valentine was the musical director. The musical was performed outdoors in a wooded area. While the book remained mostly unchanged, the subtext of the plot was dramatically altered by casting the role of the Narrator as a young school boy lost in the woods following a family argument – a device used to further illustrate the musical's themes of
parenting and adolescence. The production opened to positive reviews, with much of the press commenting on the effectiveness of the open-air setting.
The Daily Telegraph reviewer, for example, wrote: "It is an inspired idea to stage this show in the magical, sylvan surroundings of
Regent's Park, and designer
Soutra Gilmour has come up with a marvellously rickety, adventure playground of a set, all ladders, stairs and elevated walkways, with Rapunzel discovered high up in a tree."
The New York Times reviewer commented: "The natural environment makes for something genuinely haunting and mysterious as night falls on the audience". The production won the
Laurence Olivier Award for Best Musical Revival at the
2011 Laurence Olivier Awards. It was captured by live by
Digital Theatre+. A production directed by Jordan Fein, with set and costume designs by
Tom Scutt and lighting design by Aideen Malone, played at London's
Bridge Theatre; previews began on December 2 with an official opening on December 11. The production is scheduled to close on May 30. The production starrs
Jamie Parker as the Baker,
Katie Brayben as the Baker's Wife,
Kate Fleetwood as the Witch,
Michael Gould as the Narrator/Mysterious Man,
Gracie McGonigal as Little Red Ridinghood,
Chumisa Dornford-May as Cinderella, and
Oliver Savile as the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince and
Jo Foster as Jack. Critical reaction was favorable. winning two, including for Best Musical Revival.
Melanie La Barrie,
Rachel Tucker, and
John Owen-Jones joined the cast in April 2026 as the Witch, the Baker’s Wife, and the Narrator/Mysterious Man.
Broadway revival (2002) A revival opened at the
Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles, running from February 1 to March 24, 2002. It had the same director, choreographer, and principal cast that began performances on Broadway a month later. The 2002 Broadway revival, directed by Lapine and choreographed by
John Carrafa, began previews on April 13, 2002, and opened on April 30 at the
Broadhurst Theatre, closing on December 29 after a run of 18 previews and 279 regular performances. It starred
Vanessa Williams as the Witch,
John McMartin as the Narrator/Mysterious Man,
Stephen DeRosa as the Baker,
Kerry O'Malley as the Baker's Wife,
Gregg Edelman as the Wolf/Cinderella's prince,
Christopher Sieber as the Wolf/Rapunzel's prince,
Molly Ephraim as Little Red,
Adam Wylie as Jack, and
Laura Benanti as Cinderella.
Judi Dench provided the Giantess's pre-recorded voice. The production featured designs by Douglas W. Schmidt (sets),
Susan Hilferty (costumes),
Brian MacDevitt (lighting),
Dan Moses Schreier (sound) and
Elaine J. McCarthy (projection). The revival won Tonys for the
best revival and
lighting design at the
56th Tony Awards. Lapine revised the script slightly for this production, with a cameo appearance of the Three Little Pigs restored from the earlier San Diego production. There were also various small dialogue changes; a new song "Our Little World"; a second wolf who ogles the Three Little Pigs (portrayed by the same actor as Rapunzel's prince); Milky White was played by a live performer (
Chad Kimball) in an intricate costume; new lyrics for "Last Midnight", now a menacing lullaby sung by the Witch to the Baker's baby; and the ending also got new lyrics. The Witch starts aging again due to her losing the beans, and she sinks into the stage crying out: "Mother, here I come!", as opposed to the traditional "and the boom–crunch!"
Other U.S. productions (2012–2022) The 2007 Regent's Park London production transferred to the
Public Theater's 2012 free summer series,
Shakespeare in the Park, at the
Delacorte Theater in
Central Park, New York City, with an American cast and new designers. The cast included
Amy Adams as the Baker's Wife,
Donna Murphy as the Witch,
Denis O'Hare as the Baker, Chip Zien (the Baker in the 1987 Broadway cast) as the Mysterious Man/Cinderella's father, Ivan Hernandez as the Wolf/Cinderella's prince,
Jessie Mueller as Cinderella, Jack Broderick as the young Narrator,
Gideon Glick as Jack, Cooper Grodin as Rapunzel's Prince,
Sarah Stiles as Little Red, Josh Lamon as the Steward, and
Glenn Close as the voice of the Giantess. Sheader again directed, and Steel served as co-director and choreographer. Performances ran from July 24 until September 1. The set was a collaboration between Gilmour and
John Lee Beatty and rose "over 50 feet in the air, with a series of tree-covered catwalks and pathways". There were reports of a possible Broadway transfer, but scheduling conflicts prevented this. A
Roundabout Theatre Company production directed by Noah Brody and Ben Steinfeld first played in May 2013 at the
McCarter Theatre in
Princeton, New Jersey in association with the Fiasco Theater. It transferred to the
Laura Pels Theatre in New York with previews beginning December 18, 2014, an opening on January 22, 2015, and closed on March 22, 2015. The cast included
Jennifer Mudge as the Witch, Steinfeld as the Baker and Jessie Austrian as the Baker's Wife. For its annual fully staged musical, the
Hollywood Bowl produced
Into the Woods from July 26–28, 2019, directed and choreographed by
Robert Longbottom. The cast included
Skylar Astin as the Baker,
Sutton Foster as the Baker's Wife,
Patina Miller as the Witch,
Sierra Boggess as Cinderella,
Cheyenne Jackson as the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince,
Chris Carmack as Rapunzel's Prince,
Gaten Matarazzo as Jack,
Anthony Crivello as the Mysterious Man,
Edward Hibbert as the Narrator,
Shanice Williams as Little Red,
Hailey Kilgore as Rapunzel,
Rebecca Spencer as Jack's Mother, original Broadway cast member Gregory North as Cinderella's father, and
Whoopi Goldberg as the voice of the Giantess
New York City Center staged
Into the Woods as part of its
Encores! series from May 4–15, 2022, directed by Encores! artistic director Lear deBessonet. The cast starred
Heather Headley as the Witch,
Neil Patrick Harris as The Baker and
Sara Bareilles as the Baker's Wife, with
Denée Benton as Cinderella, Cole Thompson as Jack,
Ann Harada as Jack's Mother,
Julia Lester as Little Red, Shereen Pimentel as Rapunzel,
Gavin Creel as Cinderella's Prince/Wolf,
Jordan Donica as Rapunzel's Prince,
Annie Golden as Grandmother/Cinderella's Mother/Giant's Wife,
David Patrick Kelly as Narrator/Mysterious Man, Ta'nika Gibson as Lucinda, Lauren Mitchell (who played Lucinda in the 1987 Broadway production) as Cinderella's Stepmother, Albert Guerzon as Cinderella's Father, Brooke Ishibashi as Florinda, Kennedy Kanagawa as Milky White, Lauren Mitchell as Cinderella's Stepmother and David Turner as Steward Donica tested positive for
COVID-19, and so
Jason Forbach played Rapunzel's Prince for the first week of performances.
Broadway revival (2022) The Encores! production transferred to Broadway at the
St. James Theatre, with previews beginning June 28, opening on July 10, 2022, to universally positive reviews. While many of the Encores! cast transferred, changes included
Brian d'Arcy James as the Baker, Patina Miller as the Witch,
Phillipa Soo as Cinderella,
Joshua Henry as Rapunzel's Prince,
Nancy Opel as Cinderella's Stepmother, Aymee Garcia as Jack's Mother, and Alysia Velez as Rapunzel. A
cast recording was released on September 30, 2022, which won
Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album in
2023. The production was nominated for
six Tony Awards. Replacements included married couple
Stephanie J. Block and
Sebastian Arcelus as the Baker's Wife and the Baker,
Krysta Rodriguez as Cinderella, and
Jim Stanek as the Steward,
Montego Glover shared the role of the Witch,
Andy Karl was the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince and later Rapunzel's Prince, Harada as Jack's mother. Others were Cheyenne Jackson as the Wolf and Cinderella's Prince, Benton as Cinderella,
Joaquina Kalukango as the Witch, and Arcelus as the Baker. The production closed on January 8, 2023.
US tour (2023) The 2022 Broadway revival production toured the U.S. in 2023, starting on February 18. Glover, Arcelus, Block, Creel, Thompson, Geraghty, Kelly, Opel, Garcia (from Boston onward), Gibson, Ishibashi, Stanek, Velez, Kanagawa and Phelan all reprised their Broadway roles. Jason Forbach and Felicia Curry played Rapunzel's Prince and the Giantess/Cinderella's Mother/Granny, respectively. Rayanne Gonzales was Jack's Mother (in
Buffalo and
Washington, D.C. only), Josh Breckenridge was Cinderella's father/puppeteer. Replacements included Karl as Rapunzel's Prince, Forbach as the Baker, and Rodriguez as Cinderella. The tour visited ten cities.
Planned West End revival (2026) The 2025 Off-West End production at the
Bridge Theatre is set to transfer to the
Noël Coward Theatre in the
West End in September 2026 for a season scheduled to end in January 2027, with Fleetwood again as The Witch.
Other productions A production played in
Sydney from March 19 to June 5, 1993, at the Drama Theatre,
Sydney Opera House. It starred
Judi Connelli as the Witch,
Geraldine Turner as the Baker's Wife,
Tony Sheldon as the Baker,
Philip Quast as the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince,
Pippa Grandison as Cinderella,
Sharon Millerchip as Little Red, and D. J. Foster as Rapunzel's Prince.
Melbourne Theatre Company played the musical from January 17 to February 21, 1998, at the Playhouse, Victorian Arts Centre. It starred
Rhonda Burchmore as the Witch,
John McTernan as the Baker,
Gina Riley as the Baker's Wife,
Lisa McCune as Cinderella,
Robert Grubb as the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince,
Peter Carroll as the Narrator/Mysterious Man, and
Tamsin Carroll as Little Red. In 2000, a U.S. regional production starred
Pat Harrington, Jr. as the Narrator, Brian d'Arcy James as the Baker, Leah Hocking as the Baker's Wife, Tracy Katz as Little Red, Liz McCartney as the Witch, and
Patricia Ben Peterson as Cinderella at the
Ordway Center for the Performing Arts in
Saint Paul, Minnesota. A 2005
Stratford Festival, production in Canada, directed by
Peter Hinton-Davis, starred
Peter Donaldson as the Narrator,
Bruce Dow as the Baker, and
Thom Allison as the Wolf. In 2009, a production was staged in
Sacramento, California, by the
Wells Fargo Pavilion. It starred
Yvette Cason as the Witch,
Jeffry Denman as the Baker,
Vicki Lewis as his wife, Tracy Katz reprising her role as Little Red from the first national tour, Jason Forbach as the Wolf/Rapunzel's Prince, Gordon Goodman as Cinderella's Prince, Kim Huber as Cinderella, Matthew Wolpe as Jack, and Michael G. Hawkins as the Narrator/Mysterious Man. A 25th-anniversary co-production in 2012 between
Baltimore, Maryland's
Center Stage and
Westport Country Playhouse, directed by
Mark Lamos, cast the original Little Red, Danielle Ferland, as the Baker's Wife. The cast also included
Erik Liberman as the Baker,
Lauren Kennedy as the Witch,
Jeffry Denman as the Narrator,
Nik Walker as the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince, Dana Steingold as Little Red, Justin Scott Brown as Jack, Jenny Latimer as Cinderella,
Cheryl Stern as Jack's Mother, Robert Lenzi as Rapunzel's Prince/Cinderella's father,
Alma Cuervo as Cinderella's Stepmother/Granny/Giantess,
Britney Coleman as Rapunzel/Cinderella's Mother, Nikka Lanzarone as Florinda, Eleni Delopoulos as Lucinda, and Jeremy Lawrence as the Mysterious Man. The first professional Spanish language production,
Dentro del Bosque, was produced by
University of Puerto Rico Repertory Theatre and premiered in
San Juan at Teatro de la Universidad (University Theatre) on March 14, 2013. The cast included
Víctor Santiago as the baker,
Ana Isabelle as the Baker's Wife and
Lourdes Robles as the Witch. In 2014, a production premiered in Paris, France, at the
Théâtre du Châtelet from April 1–12. It starred
Nicholas Garrett as the Baker,
Francesca Jackson as Little Red, Kimy McLaren as Cinderella, Christine Buffle as the Baker's Wife, Beverley Klein as the Witch, Pascal Charbonneau and
Rebecca de Pont Davies as Jack and his mother, Damian Thantrey as the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince, David Curry as the Wolf/Rapunzel's Prince,
Louise Alder as Rapunzel, and
Fanny Ardant as the voice of the Giantess. A production by the
Oregon Shakespeare Festival, directed by
Amanda Dehnert, ran in the festival's outdoor Elizabethan Theatre from June 4 through October 11, 2014. The cast included
Anthony Heald as Narrator and Mysterious Man, and
Catherine E. Coulson as Stepmother, Milky White and the Giant. In the festival's 2025 revival of the production, Heald reprised his roles and Coulson, who died in 2015, appeared again as the Giant in video projections. The
Roundabout Theatre production, directed by Noah Brody and Ben Steinfeld, began performances
off-Broadway at the
Laura Pels Theatre on December 19, 2014, in previews, opened on January 22, 2015, and closed on April 12, 2015. Like the original Broadway production, this production had a try-out run at the Old Globe Theatre in San Diego, California, from July 12 to August 17, 2014 with the opening night taking place on July 17. This version was minimalistically reimagined by the Fiasco Theater Company, featuring only ten actors playing multiple parts, and one piano accompanist. A national tour of the production began on November 29, 2016. The DreamCatcher Theatre production opened in January 2015 and played at the
Adrienne Arsht Center in
Miami, Florida.
Tituss Burgess starred as the Witch, the first male actor to do so. The cast also included
Arielle Jacobs as the Baker's Wife, JJ Caruncho as the Baker, Justin John Moniz as the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince, Wayne LeGette as the Narrator/Mysterious Man, Annemarie Rosano as Cinderella, and Matthew Janisse as Rapunzel's Prince. The musical ran at
The Muny in
St. Louis, Missouri, from July 21–28, 2015. The cast included Heather Headley (Witch),
Erin Dilly (Baker's Wife),
Rob McClure (Baker),
Ken Page (Narrator),
Elena Shaddow (Cinderella), Andrew Samonsky (Wolf/Cinderella's Prince),
Samantha Massell (Rapunzel), and
Michael McCormick (Mysterious Man/Cinderella's father). The
Hart House Theatre production in
Toronto, Ontario, Canada, from January 15–30, 2016, and February 9–11, 2023. A production ran at the
West Yorkshire Playhouse in
Leeds in a collaboration with
Opera North from June 2–25, 2016. An Israeli production in Hebrew,
אל תוך היער (El Toch Ha-ya-ar), opened in
Tel Aviv in August 2016, produced by The Tramp Productions and Stuff Like That, starring Roi Dolev as the Witch, the second male actor to do so. In 2017, a Danish language production ran from May 19 to June 24 at Glassalen in
Tivoli,
Copenhagen, starring Flemming Enevold as the narrator. The production opened again on March 18, 2022, running until April 23, starring
Stig Rossen as the Narrator and
Ghita Nørby as the voice of the Giantess. In 2019, there was a production done at the
Patchogue Theatre in
Long Island, New York, starring
Constantine Maroulis as the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince,
Melissa Errico as the Baker's Wife,
Ali Ewoldt as Cinderella,
Alice Ripley as the Witch,
Jim Stanek as the Baker,
Alan Muraoka as the Narrator/Mysterious Man, and
Darren Ritchie as Rapunzel's Prince. Also in 2019,
Into the Woods was mounted by the
Barrington Stage Company in
Pittsfield, Massachusetts. It starred
Mykal Kilgore as the Witch,
Mara Davi as the Baker's Wife, Jonathan Raviv as the Baker, Pepe Nufrio as Rapunzel's Prince, Sarah Dacey Charles as Cinderella's Stepmother/Granny/Cinderella's Mother, Dorcas Leung as Little Red, Amanda Robles as Cinderella, Thom Sesma as the Narrator/Mysterious Man, Kevin Toniazzo-Naughton as the Wolf/Cinderella's Prince, Clay Singer as Jack, Zoë Aarts as Lucinda, Megan Orticelli as Florinda, and Leslie Becker as the Giantess/Jack's Mother. A 2022 production staged at
Arkansas Repertory Theatre featured the pre-recorded voice of former
first lady,
United States Secretary of State, and Presidential nominee
Hillary Clinton as the Giantess. A production by
Belvoir St Theatre in Sydney, Australia, ran from March 23 to April 30, 2023. A production played at the
Theatre Royal in
Bath, England, for 4 weeks starting on August 17, 2022. It was directed by
Terry Gilliam and Leah Hausman. The show was first booked for the
Old Vic Theatre in 2020 but was cancelled there due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The cast included
Julian Bleach as the Mysterious Man,
Nicola Hughes as the Witch,
Rhashan Stone as the Baker,
Alex Young as the Baker's Wife, Nathanael Campbell as the Wolf and Cinderella's Prince,
Audrey Brisson as Cinderella, Barney Wilkinson as Jack,
Gillian Bevan as Jack's Mother,
Charlotte Jaconelli as Florinda, Maria Conneeley as Rapunzel, and Lauren Conroy as Little Red. The music director was
Stephen Higgins;
Jon Bausor was in charge of the production design and Anthony McDonald of the costumes. The conceit of the production was that the characters were figures in a young girl's
Victorian toy theatre. The show opened to mostly positive reviews, with critics praising this "hallucinogenic take", with its "imaginative imagery" and "sheer spectacle" and Leah Hausman's "particularly crisp" choreography, Reviews generally praised the cast, particularly Prendergast. A 2025 Philippine production by Theatre Group Asia ran from August 7 to 31, 2025, at the Samsung Performing Arts Theater in
Circuit Makati. The cast included
Lea Salonga (the Witch),
Arielle Jacobs (Cinderella),
Eugene Domingo (Jack's Mother),
Josh Dela Cruz (Prince Charming/Wolf),
Nyoy Volante (the Baker), Mikkie Bradshaw-Volante (the Baker's Wife), Nic Chien (Jack), Joreen Bautista (Rapunzel/Cinderella's Mother/Sleeping Beauty),
Mark Bautista (Rapunzel's Prince), Teetin Villanueva (Little Red Riding Hood), Tex Ordoñez-de Leon (Cinderella's Stepmother),
Carla Guevara Laforteza (the Giant/Granny/Snow White), and
Rody Vera (the Narrator/Mysterious Man). Chari Arespacochaga directed, with
Clint Ramos as the creative director. It featured Philippine accents in the costumes, set design, and props. ==Principal casts==