Following the
Detroit tryout, Odets died and Gibson was hired to rework the script. This was a far cry from the musical comedies
Hello, Dolly! and
Funny Girl, both popular holdovers from the previous theatrical season. The
Broadway production, directed by
Arthur Penn and
choreographed by
Donald McKayle, opened on October 20, 1964 at the
Majestic Theatre, where it ran for 568 performances and twenty-five previews. In addition to Davis, the cast included
Billy Daniels as Eddie Satin,
Kenneth Tobey as Tom Moody,
Jaime Rogers as Lopez and Paula Wayne as Lorna Moon, with
Johnny Brown,
Lola Falana,
Louis Gossett, Al Kirk,
Baayork Lee, and
Theresa Merritt in supporting roles.
Nat Horne was a featured dancer in the production. An
original cast recording was released by
Capitol Records, which had invested $200,000 in the production. One song from the score, "This Is the Life", later became a hit in a cover version recorded by
Matt Monro.
Art Blakey recorded a
jazz version of the score in 1964 and
Quincy Jones'
Golden Boy (Mercury, 1964) featured three versions of the theme. Davis reprised his role for the 1968
West End production at the
London Palladium, the first
book musical ever to play in the theatre.
Porchlight Music Theatre presented
Golden Boy as a part of "Porchlight Revisits" in which they stage three forgotten musicals per year. It was in Chicago, Illinois in February 2014. It was directed by Chuck Smith, choreographed by Dina DiCostanzio, and music directed by Austin Cook. ==In other media==