1970: Carnegie Mellon University John-Michael Tebelak wrote the first version of
Godspell as his
master's thesis at Carnegie Mellon University. The Carnegie Mellon cast included (listed in speaking order): Andrew Rohrer, Mary Mazziotti, Martha Jacobs, Robin Lamont, Robert Miller,
Sonia Manzano, Stanley King, Randy Danson, James Stevens, and
David Haskell with original music by Duane Bolick.
Ted Danson has mentioned that he was cast in this original production on several occasions but had to leave the production due to a case of
Bell's palsy. This version was performed at Carnegie Mellon in 1970 by students from Carnegie Mellon's Theatre Department.
1971: La MaMa and off-Broadway The show was then brought to the attention of producers
Edgar Lansbury (brother of
Angela Lansbury),
Joseph Beruh, and Stuart Duncan by Carnegie Mellon alumnus and associate producer
Charles Haid, who wanted to transfer the show to off-Broadway. The show was first produced at La Mama as a play with original music for eight songs by Duane Bolick, Jeffrey Mylett, who added one of his songs ("The Raven and The Swan") and Peggy Gordon and Jay Hamburger, who added "By My Side". The producers then hired
Stephen Schwartz, another Carnegie Mellon alumnus, to re-score the show. Schwartz's score incorporated a variety of
musical genres, including
pop,
folk rock,
gospel, and
vaudeville. "By My Side", written by Carnegie Mellon students Jay Hamburger and Peggy Gordon, was kept from the original score. As in the original score, most of the lyrics not written by Schwartz were from the
Episcopal hymnal. The show opened as a musical at the
Cherry Lane Theatre on May 17, 1971. It transferred to the Promenade Theatre three months later, and closed on June 13, 1976, after 2,124 performances at the Promenade. This production was directed by Tebelak, and the original cast included
Lamar Alford, Peggy Gordon,
David Haskell, Joanne Jonas, Robin Lamont,
Sonia Manzano,
Gilmer McCormick,
Jeffrey Mylett, Stephen Nathan, and Herb Braha (Simon). The band included Jesse Cutler on guitar and bass, Richard LaBonte on bass, Stephen Reinhardt on keyboards, and
Ricky Shutter on drums and percussion. In late 1971, LaBonte was replaced by bassist Steve Manes when two of the original musicians, Shutter and LaBonte, went with the majority of the original cast to The Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles to open the show there. With the exception of LaBonte, they all returned to the Promenade in January 1972.
1971: London Godspell opened at
The Roundhouse theatre in
Chalk Farm,
London on November 17, 1971. This London production featured Jacquie-Ann Carr,
Julie Covington,
David Essex, Neil Fitzwiliam,
Jeremy Irons, Verity-Anne Meldrum, Deryk Parkin, Tom Saffery,
Gay Soper, and
Marti Webb. After a successful run at the Roundhouse Theatre, the production transferred to the
Wyndham's Theatre, also in London, on January 26, 1972. with
Barry Stokes.
1972: Washington, D.C. The
Washington, D.C. production of
Godspell, at
Ford's Theater, ran from 1972 into 1973. The cast consisted of
Bartley Braverman, Scotch Byerley, Baillie Gerstein, Tony Hoty, Maggie Hyatt,
Doris Jamin,
Irving Lee,
Dean Pitchford, John-Ann Washingson and
Lynne Thigpen.
1972: Chicago The 1972–1973
Chicago production played at the Studebaker Theatre, with a cast of Richard Gilliland (Jesus), Joe Mantegna (Judas), JoAnn Brown-El, Sammy Chester, Karla DeVito, Carol McGill, Jim Parks, Tricia Smith, Dan Stone, and Fran Uditsky.
1972: Toronto The 1972–1973
Toronto production opened at the
Royal Alexandra Theatre and was intended to be a run of a few dozen performances for a
subscription audience. The cast was drawn entirely from local performers, instead of a touring cast. After an enthusiastic response from the audience, the scheduled run at the Royal Alexandra ended and the show moved uptown to the Bayview Playhouse in
Leaside. The Bayview Playhouse production ran until August 1973, with a then-record run of 488 performances. The Toronto production launched the careers of many actors, including
Victor Garber,
Eugene Levy,
Andrea Martin,
Gilda Radner,
Dave Thomas,
Jayne Eastwood and
Martin Short, as well as the show's musical director,
Paul Shaffer.
Howard Shore played
saxophone for this production.
You Had To Be There: How the Toronto Godspell Ignited the Comedy Revolution, Spread Love & Overalls, and Created a Community That Changed the World (In a Canadian Kind of Way), a documentary film by
Nick Davis about the 1972 Toronto production, premiered at the
2025 Toronto International Film Festival.
1973: Maseru Godspell opened in
Maseru,
Lesotho in 1973 and ran for five months. When Des and Dawn Lindberg brought the show to the
University of the Witwatersrand (
Johannesburg), it was immediately banned on the grounds of
blasphemy. The ban was widely recognized as a political response to the depiction of
racial mixing, which presented a direct challenge to
apartheid in
South Africa. The Lindbergs challenged the ban in the Supreme Court and won their case. As a result,
Godspell toured South Africa for two years and opened doors to all races on both sides of the footlights. This production was both a theatrical triumph and a political and legal breakthrough.
1974: Spain A Spanish version debuted in 1974 in the Teatro Marquina, Madrid, produced by Manuel Collado. The libretto was translated by
José Luis Martín Descalzo and the lyrics by
José María Pemán. It was directed by John-Michael Tebelak himself.
1974: Tehran The Tehran production was staged at the
Iran-America Society by the Masquers theater group, under the direction of Pat Zich, with musical direction by Richard and Georgia Bassett. The cast, crew and musicians were drawn from American, British and Iranian students, teachers and expatriates. The production ran for 7 days in April 1974.
1976: Broadway The first Broadway production opened on June 22, 1976, at the
Broadhurst Theatre. It was directed by
John Michael Tebelak, with Steve Reinhardt as
musical director, costumes by
Susan Tsu, lighting by Spencer Mosse, and sound by Robert Minor. The opening cast featured
Lamar Alford, Laurie Faso,
Lois Foraker, Robin Lamont, Elizabeth Lathram, Bobby Lee, Tom Rolfing,
Don Scardino, Marley Sims, and Valerie Williams. Kerin Blair, Bob Garrett, Michael Hoit, and Kitty Rea were understudies. The band consisted of
Paul Shaffer (keyboards, conductor), Mark Zeray (guitar), Chris Warwin (bass), and Michael Redding (percussion). The show transferred to the
Plymouth Theatre, then to the
Ambassador Theatre, where it closed on September 4, 1977, after 5 previews and 527 performances.
1981: La MaMa revival Ten years after the original production of
Godspell and twenty years after the theater's founding, the musical was revived at
La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in Manhattan. Tebelak directed the 1981 production, with Robert Stecko as musical directed. The cast included
Lamar Alford, Kerin Blair, R. Bruce Connelly, Michael Hoit,
Paul Kreppel,
Sonia Manzano,
Melanie Mayron, Marilyn Pasekoff, Leslie Ann Ray, and Jeremy Sage, with
Danny Rutigliano as understudy. John Michael Tebelak then flew to Los Angeles where a west coast tenth anniversary reunion production was staged featuring original cast members Peggy Gordon, Stephen Nathan, Herb Braha, Jeffrey Mylett, Gilmer McCormick and David Haskell, with Marley Sims, Patti Mariano, Jeannie Lange, Bob Garrett and original musical director Stephen Reinhardt.
1988: Off-Broadway The
Lamb's Theatre revival ran from June 12 through December 31, 1988. It was directed by
Don Scardino, with
Steven M. Alper as musical director and
Doug Besterman as assistant musical director, and with new musical arrangements by
Steven M. Alper and
Doug Besterman. Costumes were by David C. Woolard, lighting was by Phil Monat, and sound was by T. Richard Fitzgerald. The cast included
Trini Alvarado,
Anne Bobby (credited as Anne Marie Bobby),
Bill Damaschke,
Laura Dean, Angel Jemmott,
Eddie Korbich,
Mia Korf,
Robert McNeill,
Harold Perrineau, (credited as Harold Perrineau Jr.), and
Jeffrey Steefel.
2000: Off-Broadway Godspell was revived off-Broadway at the
York Theatre from August 2 to October 7, 2000. Cast members included
Shoshana Bean, Tim Cain, Catherine Cox, Will Erat,
Barrett Foa, Lucia Giannetta,
Capathia Jenkins,
Chad Kimball,
Leslie Kritzer and Eliseo Roman.
2001: North American tour From September 29 to June 3, 2001, a production of
Godspell toured the United States and Canada. The production was directed by Stephen Schwartz's son Scott Schwartz, while the music was arranged by Alex Lacamoire. The cast included Todd Buonopane, Joseph J. Carney, Jessica Carter, Sharon Francis, Esteban Girón, Sarah Hubbard, Natalie Joy Johnson, Kevin Smith Kirkwood, Lauren Lebowitz, Sal Sabella, and Michael Yuen.
2007: UK tour On 24–29 September at
The Palace Theatre, Manchester, and then until 1 December 2007 touring UK, played a
Godspell production directed by Paul Kerryson and scored by
Stephen Schwartz. The cast included
Ryan Molloy, Katy-Jo Howman,
Stephen Gately, Tiffany Graves.
2011: Broadway revival The first Broadway revival opened for previews on October 13, 2011, at the
Circle in the Square Theatre, and officially opened on November 7, 2011, to mixed reviews. Theatre review aggregator
Curtain Critic gave the production a score of 63/100, based on the opinions of eighteen critics. The production featured
Hunter Parrish,
Wallace Smith,
Anna Maria Perez de Tagle, Celisse Henderson,
Telly Leung,
George Salazar,
Morgan James,
Uzo Aduba, Nick Blaemire, and
Lindsay Mendez, and was directed by Daniel Goldstein, choreographed by
Christopher Gattelli, and produced by
Ken Davenport. On April 17, 2012,
Corbin Bleu took over the role of Jesus. The 2011 cast recording was released digitally on December 20, 2011, and in stores on January 31, 2012. The production closed on June 24, 2012.
2016: São Paulo 2016 production of
Godspell in Brazil opened at
Teatro das Artes, directed by Dagoberto Feliz. It received great reviews such as from
O Estado de São Paulo: "Best Off-Broadway from 2016". This production featured
Leonardo Miggiorin, Beto Sargentelli, Gabriela Medvedovski, Matheus Severo, Artur Volpi, Juliana Peppi, Rafael Pucca, Nathália Borges, Mariana Nunes, Fernanda Cascardo, Pri Esteves, Pedro Navarro e Adler Henrique.
2020: Berkshire Theatre Group Godspell became the first live show to be approved by the
Actors' Equity Association during the
COVID-19 pandemic. This production, which was performed in a tent in the Berkshire Theatre Group's parking lot, featured Nicholas Edwards, Tim Jones, Alex Getlin, Michael Wartella, Zach Williams, Dan Rosales, Brandon Lee, Emily Koch, Isabel Jordan, Najah Hetsberger and Kimberly Emmanuel. Instead of the standard opening to the show, which features the song, "Tower of Babble," the actors of the show shared how their lives were uniquely impacted by the pandemic. The show, which had the audience sitting ten feet away from the actors on stage (who were socially distanced themselves) required that every audience member wear a facial covering for the duration of the performance. This production brought up the possibility of more socially distanced theatrical productions in the future. The show ran from August 6, 2020, until September 20, 2020.
2022: Spain In November 2022, Godspell returned to the Spanish stage with a new production directed by Emilio Aragón and produced by Antonio Banderas, in collaboration with Teatro del Soho CaixaBank and Estudio Caribe. The show opened on November 3, 2022, at the Teatro del Soho in Malaga and ran until January 8, 2023. In 2023 Concord Theatricals Recordings released a Spanish cast recording. The album is available on digital platforms and in physical format. == Adaptations ==