Germany After World War II, the first stage performance in Berlin was a rough production of
The Threepenny Opera at the
Theater am Schiffbauerdamm.
Wolf Von Eckardt described the 1945 performance where audience members climbed over ruins and passed through a tunnel to reach the open-air auditorium deprived of its ceiling. In addition to the smell of dead bodies trapped beneath the rubble, Eckardt recollects the actors themselves were "haggard, starved, [and] in genuine rags. Many of the actors ... had only just been released from concentration camp. They sang not well, but free."
Barrie Kosky produced the work again at the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm in 2021. The production travelled to the
Ruhrfestspiele in 2022, the
Internationaal Theater Amsterdam,
Teatro Argentina, Rome, the
Edinburgh International Festival in 2023, to the 2024
Adelaide Festival and the
Brooklyn Academy of Music in 2025.
France The
Pabst film
The Threepenny Opera was shown in its French version in 1931. In 1937 there was a production by
Ernst Josef Aufricht at the
Théâtre de l'Étoile which failed, though Brecht himself had attended rehearsals. The work was not revived in France until after World War II.
United Kingdom In London,
West End and
Off-West End revivals include: •
Royal Court Theatre, 9 February to 20 March 1956 and
Aldwych Theatre, from 21 March 1956. Directed by
Sam Wanamaker. With
Bill Owen as Macheath,
Daphne Anderson as Polly. •
Prince of Wales Theatre and
Piccadilly Theatre, opening 10 February 1972. With
Vanessa Redgrave,
Diana Quick and
Barbara Windsor. •
National Theatre (Olivier Theatre), 13 March 1986. New translation by
Robert David MacDonald, directed by Peter Wood. With
Tim Curry as Macheath,
Sally Dexter as Polly,
Joanna Foster as Lucy and
Eve Polycarpou (Adam) as Jenny. •
Donmar Warehouse, 1994. Translation by Robert David MacDonald (book) and
Jeremy Sams (lyrics). With
Tom Hollander as Macheath and
Sharon Small as Polly. This production released a cast recording as was nominated for
Best Musical Revival and
Best Supporting Performance in a Musical (for Tara Hugo as Jenny) at the
1995 Laurence Olivier Awards. •
National Theatre (Cottesloe Theatre) and UK Tour, February 2003. Translation by Jeremy Sams (lyrics) and Anthony Meech (book), directed by Tim Baker. •
National Theatre (Olivier Theatre), 18 May to 1 October 2016. New adaptation by
Simon Stephens, directed by
Rufus Norris. With
Rory Kinnear as Macheath,
Rosalie Craig as Polly, Nick Holder as Peachum,
Haydn Gwynne as Mrs Peachum (nominated for
Best Actress in a Supporting Role in a Musical at the
2017 Laurence Olivier Awards),
Sharon Small as Jenny,
Peter de Jersey as Brown. This production was broadcast live to cinemas worldwide through
NT Live on 22 September. In 2014, the Robert David MacDonald and Jeremy Sams translation (previously used in 1994 at the
Donmar Warehouse) toured the UK, presented by the
Graeae Theatre Company with
Nottingham Playhouse,
New Wolsey Theatre Ipswich,
Birmingham Repertory Theatre and
West Yorkshire Playhouse.
United States In 1946, four performances of the work were given at the
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and
Northwestern University gave six performances in 1948 in
Evanston, Illinois. In 1952,
Leonard Bernstein conducted a concert performance of the work at the
Brandeis University Creative Arts Festival in the Adolph Ullman Amphitheatre,
Waltham, Massachusetts, to an audience of nearly 5,000.
Marc Blitzstein, who translated the work, narrated. At least five
Broadway and
Off-Broadway revivals have been mounted in New York City. • In 1956,
Lotte Lenya won a
Tony Award for her role as Jenny, the only time an
off-Broadway performance has been so honored, in Blitzstein's somewhat softened version of
The Threepenny Opera, which played Off-Broadway at the
Theater de Lys in
Greenwich Village for a total of 2,707 performances, beginning with an interrupted 96-performance run in 1954 and resuming in 1955. Blitzstein had translated the work into English, and toned down some of its acerbities. Over the course of its run, the production featured Scott Merrill as Macheath;
Ed Asner as Mr. Peachum;
Charlotte Rae (later
Carole Cook, billed as Mildred Cook, then
Jane Connell) as Mrs. Peachum;
Jo Sullivan Loesser as Polly;
Bea Arthur as Lucy;
Jerry Orbach as PC Smith, the Street Singer and Mack;
John Astin as Readymoney Matt/Matt of the Mint; and
Jerry Stiller as Crookfinger Jake. • A nine-month run in 1976–77 had a new translation by
Ralph Manheim and
John Willett for
Joe Papp's
New York Shakespeare Festival at the
Vivian Beaumont Theater at
Lincoln Center, directed by
Richard Foreman, with
Raul Julia as Macheath,
Blair Brown as Lucy, and
Ellen Greene as Jenny. The production rescinded some of Blitzstein's modifications. Critics were divided:
Clive Barnes called it "the most interesting and original thing that Joe Papp ... has produced" whilst
John Simon wrote "I cannot begin to list all the injuries done to Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill's masterpiece." with
Alan Cumming playing Macheath,
Nellie McKay as Polly,
Cyndi Lauper as Jenny,
Jim Dale as Mr Peachum,
Ana Gasteyer as Mrs Peachum, Carlos Leon as Filch,
Adam Alexi-Malle as Jacob and
Brian Charles Rooney as a male Lucy. Included in the cast were drag performers. The director was Scott Elliott, the choreographer
Aszure Barton, and, while not adored by the critics, the production was nominated for the "Best Musical Revival" Tony award. Jim Dale was also Tony-nominated for Best Supporting Actor. The run ended on 25 June 2006. • The
Brooklyn Academy of Music presented a production directed by
Robert Wilson and featuring the
Berliner Ensemble for only a few performances in October 2011. The play was presented in German with English supertitles using the 1976 translation by
John Willett. The cast included Stefan Kurt as Macheath, Stefanie Stappenbeck as Polly and Angela Winkler as Jenny.
The Village Voice review said the production "turn[ed] Brecht and Weill's middle-class wake-up call into dead entertainment for rich people. His gelid staging and pallid, quasi-abstract recollections of Expressionist-era design suggested that the writers might have been trying to perpetrate an artsified remake of
Kander and Ebb's
Cabaret. Regional productions include: • Boston's
Charles Playhouse, 27 April through 6 June 1982. Adapted by
Marc Blitzstein and directed by
Geraldine Fitzgerald, the production starred
Elly Stone, Timothy Landfield, Jessica James, and
Maryann Plunkett. • The
Williamstown Theatre Festival, Massachusetts, in June and July 2003. Directed by
Peter Hunt, the musical starred
Jesse L. Martin as Mack,
Melissa Errico as Polly,
David Schramm as Peachum,
Karen Ziemba as Lucy Brown and
Betty Buckley as Jenny. The production received favorable reviews. == Film adaptations ==