Original Broadway production After tryouts in Washington, D.C., and
Philadelphia beginning in August 1957, the original Broadway production opened at the
Winter Garden Theatre on September 26, to positive reviews. The production was directed and choreographed by
Jerome Robbins, orchestrated by
Sid Ramin and
Irwin Kostal, and produced by Robert E. Griffith and
Harold Prince, with lighting designed by
Jean Rosenthal. The cast starred
Larry Kert as Tony,
Carol Lawrence as Maria,
Chita Rivera as Anita and
David Winters as Baby John. The other notable cast members in the original production were: Riff:
Michael Callan, A-Rab:
Tony Mordente, Big Deal:
Martin Charnin, Gee-Tar:
Tommy Abbott, Chino:
Jamie Sanchez, Rosalia:
Marilyn Cooper, Consuela:
Reri Grist, Doc:
Art Smith and Francisca:
Elizabeth Taylor. The production closed on June 27, 1959, after 732 performances.
UK productions A 1958 production at the
Manchester Opera House transferred to London, where it opened at
Her Majesty's Theatre in the
West End on December 12, and ran until June 1961 with a total of 1,039 performances. Robbins directed and choreographed, and it was co-choreographed by
Peter Gennaro, with scenery by Oliver Smith. Featured performers were
George Chakiris, who won an Academy Award as Bernardo in the 1961 film version, as Riff, Marlys Watters as Maria,
Don McKay as Tony, and Chita Rivera reprising her Broadway role as Anita.
David Holliday, who had been playing Gladhand since the London opening, took over as Tony. The refurbished
Shaftesbury Theatre reopened with a run of
West Side Story from December 19, 1974, to mid-1975. It was directed by
Bill Kenwright, choreographed by Roger Finch, and starred
Lionel Morton as Tony and Christiana Matthews as Maria. A London production originated at
Leicester Haymarket Theatre in early 1984 and transferred on May 16, to Her Majesty's Theatre. It closed on September 28, 1985. The 1980 Broadway production was recreated by Tom Abbott. The cast starred
Steven Pacey as Tony and Jan Hartley as Maria.
Maxine Gordon was Anybodys. A UK national tour started in 1997 and starred
David Habbin as Tony, Katie Knight Adams as Maria and
Anna-Jane Casey as Anita. The production transferred to London's West End opening at the
Prince Edward Theatre in October 1998, transferring to the
Prince of Wales Theatre where it closed in January 2000. The production subsequently toured the UK for a second time. A production at the
Curve Theatre, starring
Jamie Muscato as Tony and Adriana Ivelisse as Maria, ran from November 23, 2019, to January 11, 2020.
1980 Broadway revival A Broadway revival opened at the
Minskoff Theatre on February 14, 1980, and closed on November 30, after 333 performances. It was directed and choreographed by Robbins, with the book scenes co-directed by
Gerald Freedman; produced by
Gladys Nederlander and Tom Abbott;
Lee Theodore assisted in the choreography reproduction. The original scenic, lighting, and costume designs were used. It starred
Ken Marshall as Tony,
Josie de Guzman as Maria and
Debbie Allen as Anita. Both de Guzman and Allen received Tony Award nominations as Best Featured Actress in a Musical, and the musical was nominated as Best Reproduction (Play or Musical). Allen won the
Drama Desk Award as Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical. Other notable cast members included
Brent Barrett as Diesel,
Harolyn Blackwell as Francisca,
Stephen Bogardus as Mouth Piece and
Reed Jones as Big Deal.
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio was an understudy for Maria later in the run. The Minskoff production subsequently opened the
Nervi Festival in
Genoa, Italy, in July 1981 with Josie de Guzman as Maria and Brent Barrett as Tony.
2009 Broadway revival In 2007, Arthur Laurents stated: "I've come up with a way of doing [
West Side Story] that will make it absolutely contemporary without changing a word or a note". He directed a pre-Broadway production of
West Side Story at the
National Theatre in Washington, D.C., that ran from December 15, 2008, through January 17, 2009. The Broadway revival began previews at the
Palace Theatre on February 23, 2009, and opened on March 19. The production wove Spanish lyrics and dialogue into the English libretto. The translations are by Tony Award winner
Lin-Manuel Miranda. Laurents said: "The musical theatre and cultural conventions of 1957 made it next to impossible for the characters to have authenticity. Every member of both gangs was always a potential killer even then. Now they actually will be. Only Tony and Maria try to live in a different world". In August 2009, some of the lyrics for "A Boy Like That" ("Un Hombre Asi") and "I Feel Pretty" ("Me Siento Hermosa"), which were previously sung in Spanish in the revival, were changed back to the original English. The Spanish lyrics sung by the Sharks in the "Tonight" (Quintet) remained in Spanish. The cast featured
Matt Cavenaugh as Tony,
Josefina Scaglione as Maria, and
Karen Olivo as Anita. Olivo won the Tony Award for
Best Featured Actress, while Scaglione was nominated for the award for
Leading Actress.
Jeremy Jordan later was an alternate as Tony. The cast recording won the
Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album. In July 2010, the producers reduced the size of the orchestra, replacing five musicians with an off-stage synthesizer. The production closed on January 2, 2011, after 748 performances and 27 previews. The revival sold 1,074,462 tickets on Broadway over the course of nearly two years and was a financial success.
2020 Broadway revival during the 2020 Broadway revival A Broadway revival of
West Side Story began previews on December 10, 2019, and officially opened on February 20, 2020, at the
Broadway Theatre. It was directed by
Ivo van Hove, with choreography by
Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker and was produced by
Scott Rudin,
Barry Diller and
David Geffen. The cast included Shereen Pimentel as Maria,
Isaac Cole Powell as Tony,
Amar Ramasar as Bernardo,
Thomas Jay Ryan as Lt. Schrank and Yesenia Ayala as Anita. Scenic and lighting design were by
Jan Versweyveld, with costumes by An d'Huys. The setting was "loosely updated to the present", and direction was "determined to snuff out any lightness that might temper the full-blown tragedy to come". The original balletic, finger snapping choreography was replaced by swaggering, hip-hop and Latin-influenced dancing. The set consisted mostly of large screens featuring video, several cast members carried
iPhones, and the Jets were not all white. Some theatergoers felt that the set turned the theatre into a cinema, but critic
Charles McNulty argued that it wove technology into a multimedia "performance work that defies our usual vocabulary". Van Hove's casting of African American Jets, "dangerously, shifts our focus away from the enduring problem of white supremacist violence". While praising the cast, except for Ramasar, Alexandra Schwartz, writing in
The New Yorker, felt that the use of the videos "dwarfs the actors with their own gigantic images... the technique is banal", while the mixed casting of the Jets creates "a bitter, unintended irony in the context of African-American history". The production did not reopen, and so its total run was 78 previews and 24 performances.
Other notable US productions and tours The
New York City Center Light Opera Company production played for a limited engagement of 31 performances from April 8 to May 3, 1964. The cast featured Don McKay (Tony),
Julia Migenes (Maria) and
Luba Lisa (Anita). It was staged by
Gerald Freedman with choreography re-mounted by Tom Abbott. The Musical Theater of
Lincoln Center and
Richard Rodgers production opened at the
New York State Theater, Lincoln Center, in June 1968 and closed in September after 89 performances. Direction and choreography were reproduced by Lee Theodore, and scenery was by Oliver Smith. Tony was played by Kurt Peterson, with
Victoria Mallory as Maria. A 1987 US tour starred
Jack Wagner as Tony, with
Valarie Pettiford as Anita and was directed by
Alan Johnson. A national tour, directed by Alan Johnson, was produced in 2002. A national tour of the 2009 Broadway revival began in October 2010 at the
Fisher Theatre in Detroit, Michigan, and toured for two seasons. The cast featured
Kyle Harris as Tony and
Ali Ewoldt as Maria.
Chicago Lyric Opera staged the musical in 2019 and again in 2023, directed by
Francesca Zambello and choreographed by
Joshua Bergasse;
Ryan McCartan starred as Tony in 2023. At the
Washington National Opera in 2026, McCartan reprised his role. The musical has also been adapted to be performed as
Deaf Side Story using both English and
American Sign Language, with deaf Sharks and hearing Jets.
International productions The first Australian production opened in October 1960 at the
Princess Theatre in Melbourne, before touring to the
Tivoli Theatre in Sydney in February 1961. Subsequent Australian tours have been staged in 1983, 1994, 2010 and twice in 2019. It returned to
Handa Opera on
Sydney Harbour in 2024.
Staatstheater Nürnberg staged the first German production in 1972 in a German translation by
Marcel Prawy which had been used for the first Austrian staging in 1968 at the
Vienna Volksoper with
Julia Migenes and
Adolf Dallapozza, conducted by
Lawrence Leonard. The first
East German production took place in Leipzig in 1984 with
Dagmar Schellenberger and Stephan Spiewok and the
Gewandhaus Orchestra. Canada's
Stratford Shakespeare Festival performed
West Side Story in 1999, starring
Tyley Ross as Tony and
Ma-Anne Dionisio as Maria, and again in 2009, The Austrian
Bregenz Festival presented the musical in the German translation by Prawy in 2003 and 2004, directed by
Francesca Zambello, followed by a German tour. An international tour (2005–2010), directed and choreographed by Joey McKneely played in Tokyo, Paris, Austria, Switzerland, Germany, Singapore, São Paulo, France, Taiwan, China, Italy, Rotterdam and Spain.
Novosibirsk Globus Theatre staged the musical in Russia in 2007 with conductor
Keith Clark, a former pupil of Bernstein's, who also conducted the 2010 Moscow production. A French language adaptation, translated by Philippe Gobeille, opened in
Montreal, Quebec, in March 2008. A Philippine version played in 2008 at the
Meralco Theater. It featured
Christian Bautista as Tony,
Karylle and Joanna Ampil as Maria. In 2011, a Lima production was produced by "Preludio Asociación Cultural" with
Marco Zunino as Tony,
Rossana Fernández-Maldonado as Maria,
Jesús Neyra as Bernardo,
Tati Alcántara as Anita and
Joaquín de Orbegoso as Riff. A Japanese production was scheduled to run from November 2019 to January 2020, at the IHI Stage Around Tokyo, featuring a double cast with
Mamoru Miyano and
Shouta Aoi as Tony, and
Kii Kitano and Rena Sasamoto as Maria, with
Suzuko Mimori as Anita,
Ryuji Kamiyama as Riff, and
Masataka Nakagauchi as Bernardo. A South Korean production was set to run from November 2022 to February 2023 at the Chungmu Art Center in Seoul.
Kim Junsu,
Ko Eun-sung, and Park Kanghyun are cast as Tony, with Lee Jisoo and Han Jae-ah as Maria and
Jung Taekwoon as Riff. ==Critical reaction==