1939 Broadway in the original Broadway production of
Du Barry Was a Lady (1939) The musical opened on Broadway at the
46th Street Theatre on December 6, 1939, transferred to the
Royale Theatre on October 21, 1940 and closed December 12, 1940, after 408 performances. It was directed by Edgar MacGregor, choreographed by
Robert Alton, with the orchestrations of
Robert Russell Bennett and
Ted Royal. The cast featured
Bert Lahr as Louis Blore,
Ethel Merman as May Daly,
Betty Grable as Alice Barton,
Benny Baker as Charley,
Ronald Graham as Alex Barton and
Charles Walters as Harry Norton.
Gypsy Rose Lee and Frances Williams later played the part of May Daly.
West End The show opened in the
West End at
Her Majesty's Theatre on 22 October 1942 and ran for 178 performances. It was directed by
Richard Bird. The cast featured
Arthur Riscoe as Louis Blore,
Frances Day as May Daly,
Frances Marsden as Alice Barton, Jacky Hunter as Charley, Bruce Trent as Alex Barton and Teddy Beaumont as Harry Norton.
Later productions The show has been produced in concert form in both the United States and the United Kingdom. The two London productions, in 1993 and 2001, were by the Discovering Lost Musicals Charitable Trust and featured
Louise Gold as May Daly with
Barry Cryer as Louis in 1993 and Desmond Barrit in 2001. The May 1993 production was at the
Barbican Centre. The November 2001 concert was (like the original London production) at Her Majesty's Theatre, recorded for radio by the BBC (it was broadcast on BBC Radio 3 during Christmas 2002). New York City Center
Encores! presented a staged concert in February 1996 with
Robert Morse (Louis) and
Faith Prince (May). New York's Musicals Tonight! presented a production March–April, 2017. The song "
Give Him the Ooh-La-La" was performed by
Carol Burnett in one of her earlier TV appearances in 1956 as part of the
Omnibus program
The American Musical Comedy. The show later appeared on the
BBC Radio with
Louise Gold and
Desmond Barrit singing the lead roles.
Du Barry Was a Lady received a fully staged production in May 2014 by San Francisco's
42nd Street Moon Company starring
Bruce Vilanch in the Bert Lahr role, directed and choreographed by Zack Thomas Wilde. == Casts ==