Premiere in St. Petersburg The first night of
The Seagull on 17 October
1896 at the
Alexandrinsky Theatre in Petersburg was a disaster, booed by the audience. The hostile audience intimidated
Vera Komissarzhevskaya so severely that she lost her voice. Some considered her the best actor in Russia who, according to Chekhov, had moved people to tears as Nina in rehearsal. as Trigorin from the 1898
Moscow Art Theatre production Moscow Art Theatre production Nemirovich overcame Chekhov's refusal to allow the play to appear in Moscow and convinced
Stanislavski to direct the play for their innovative and newly founded
Moscow Art Theatre in 1898. Stanislavski prepared a detailed directorial score, which indicated when the actors should "wipe away dribble, blow their noses, smack their lips, wipe away sweat, or clean their teeth and nails with matchsticks", as well as organising a tight control of the overall
mise-en-scène. This approach was intended to facilitate the unified expression of the inner action that Stanislavski perceived to be hidden beneath the surface of the play in its
subtext. Stanislavski's directorial score was published in 1938. Stanislavski played Trigorin, while
Vsevolod Meyerhold, the future director and
practitioner (whom Stanislavski on his death-bed declared to be "my sole heir in the theatre"), played Konstantin, and
Olga Knipper (Chekhov's future wife) played Arkadina. The production opened on 17 December 1898 with a sense of crisis in the air in the theatre; most of the actors were mildly self-tranquilised with
Valerian drops. In a letter to Chekhov, one audience member described how:
Nemirovich-Danchenko described the applause, which came after a prolonged silence, as bursting from the audience like a dam breaking. The production received unanimous praise from the press. He praised the production but was less keen on Stanislavski's own performance; he objected to the "soft, weak-willed tone" in his interpretation (shared by
Nemirovich) of Trigorin and entreated Nemirovich to "put some spunk into him or something". He proposed that the play be published with Stanislavski's score of the production's
mise-en-scène. Chekhov's collaboration with Stanislavski proved crucial to the creative development of both men. Stanislavski's attention to
psychological realism and
ensemble playing coaxed the buried subtleties from the play and revived Chekhov's interest in writing for the stage. Chekhov's unwillingness to explain or expand on the script forced Stanislavski to dig beneath the surface of the text in ways that were new in theatre. The Moscow Art Theatre to this day bears the seagull as its
emblem to commemorate the historic production that gave it its identity.
Other notable productions • The play had its German premiere in April 1909 at the
Hebbel-Theater, Berlin. The play was cordially received but the Berlin correspondent of
The Era doubted that the work would last: "It is in the heavy, gloomy style of most Russian writers, while the interest of the average audience is not lively enough in the heroine's adventures to keep the piece any length of time in the bill". • The first production in English was given at the
Royalty Theatre, Glasgow, on 2 November 1909 by the
Glasgow Repertory Theatre company, with
Mary Jerrold as Arkadina,
Milton Rosmer as Konstantin,
Hubert Harben as Shamrayev,
Campbell Gullan as Trigorin and
Laurence Hanray as Sorin. • The first production in London was at the
Little Theatre on 31 March 1912, with
Gertrude Kingston as Arkadina. • The play's
Broadway premiere was at the Bandbox Theatre on 20 May 1916, with
Helen Westley as Arkadina. • The French premiere, under the title , was staged by
Georges Pitoëff at the
Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Paris, in 1922. The cast included as Arkadina,
Michel Simon as Sorin, Pitoëff as Trigorin and
Ludmilla Pitoëff as Nina. • A production directed by
Theodore Komisarjevsky opened at the
New Theatre, London, on 20 May 1936, with
Edith Evans as Arkadina,
John Gielgud as Trigorin,
Frederick Lloyd as Sorin,
George Devine as Shamrayev,
Martita Hunt as Masha and
Peggy Ashcroft as Nina. After lukewarm reviews of earlier productions the play was now hailed by British critics:
The Times said, "
The Seagull is among the supreme masterpieces of the theatre", and
The Observer commented that Chekhov would begin to rival Shakespeare as the
West End's greatest attraction. • The
Theatre Guild presented the play at the
Shubert Theatre, New York, in March 1938.
Lynn Fontanne played Arkadina, with
Alfred Lunt (Trigorin),
Sydney Greenstreet (Sorin),
Margaret Webster (Masha) and, in her Broadway debut,
Uta Hagen (as Nina). As in Britain, the play now received respectful and enthusiastic notices: one reviewer called it "great drama, tragic and luminous, with a light which shadows the petty playwrighting of today's dramatists". •
Sacha Pitoëff's 1962 production for a five-month tour of France, Switzerland, Belgium and Luxembourg featured
Romy Schneider as Nina. • The first of two productions by the
National Theatre in London was in 1994, in an adaptation by
Pam Gems, directed by
John Caird, with
Judi Dench (Arkadina),
Norman Rodway (Sorin),
Bill Nighy (Trigorin) and
Edward Petherbridge (Dorn). A second production by the National Theatre, in 2006, had a cast headed by
Juliet Stevenson in a production of
Martin Crimp's adaptation, directed by
Katie Mitchell. • In 1998, a production by
Daniela Thomas, assisted by
Luiz Päetow, toured Brazil under the title
Da Gaivota, with
Fernanda Montenegro as Arkadina,
Matheus Nachtergaele as Treplyov, and
Fernanda Torres as Nina. • The
Joseph Papp Public Theater presented Chekhov's play as part of the
New York Shakespeare Festival summer season in
Central Park from 25 July 2001 to 26 August 2001. The production, directed by
Mike Nichols, starred
Meryl Streep as Arkadina,
Christopher Walken as Sorin,
Philip Seymour Hoffman as Treplyov,
John Goodman as Shamrayev,
Marcia Gay Harden as Masha,
Kevin Kline as Trigorin,
Debra Monk as Polina,
Stephen Spinella as Medvedenko, and
Natalie Portman as Nina. • In January 2007, the
Royal Court Theatre staged a production of
The Seagull with
Kristin Scott Thomas as Arkadina,
Mackenzie Crook as Treplyov and
Carey Mulligan as Nina. It also featured
Chiwetel Ejiofor and
Art Malik. The production was directed by
Ian Rickson. • In 2007 a production by the
Royal Shakespeare Company toured internationally before coming into residence at the
West End's
New London Theatre until 12 January 2008. It starred
Frances Barber as Arkadina,
William Gaunt and
Ian McKellen alternating as Sorin,
Richard Goulding as Treplyov,
Jonathan Hyde as Dorn,
Monica Dolan as Masha, and
Romola Garai as Nina. Garai in particular was well reviewed. • On 16 September 2008, the
Walter Kerr Theatre on Broadway began previews of Ian Rickson's production of
The Seagull with
Kristin Scott Thomas reprising her role as Arkadina. The cast also included
Peter Sarsgaard as Trigorin,
Mackenzie Crook as Treplyov,
Art Malik as Dorn,
Carey Mulligan as Nina,
Zoe Kazan as Masha, and
Ann Dowd as Polina. • In 2011, a new version directed by
Golden Mask winner
Yuri Butusov debuted at
Konstantin Raikin's Satyricon theater, notable for its return to comedy and "
Brechtian-style techniques". In 2017 and in coordination with Butusov, a production was filmed and subtitled in English by the Stage Russia project. • The
Oregon Shakespeare Festival staged
Seagull in the New Theatre from 22 February until 22 June 2012, adapted and directed by
Libby Appel. • In 2014, a translation into
Afrikaans under the title
Die seemeeu, directed by
Christiaan Olwagen and starring
Sandra Prinsloo, was staged at the
Aardklop arts festival in
Potchefstroom. • In January 2015, Toronto's Crow's Theatre produced
The Seagull in association with
Canadian Stage and
The Company Theatre. Helmed by Crow's Theatre's artistic director
Chris Abraham, the creative team was composed of set and costume designer Julie Fox, lighting designer Kimberly Purtell and sound designer Thomas Ryder Payne. The Robert Falls adaptation, based on a translation by
George Calderon, featured an all-Canadian cast including
Yanna McIntosh as Arkadina,
Eric Peterson as Sorin,
Christine Horne as Nina,
Tony Nappo as Shamrayev,
Bahia Watson as Masha,
Tom McCamus as Dorn and
Gregory Prest as Medvedenko. •
Regent's Park Open Air Theatre presented a new version of
The Seagull by
Torben Betts in June 2015. The production received critical praise for its design by
Jon Bausor and the new adaptation by Betts. • In March 2015, Hurrah Hurrah and the Hot Blooded Theatre Company presented
The Seagull in an unused shop-front with the help of
The Rocks Pop-up. • In 2016,
Thomas Ostermeier, director of Berlin's
Schaubühne theatre, directed
The Seagull at the
Théâtre de Vidy, Lausanne. • In 2020,
Anya Reiss's adaptation of
The Seagull began previews on 11 March in the
Playhouse Theatre, starring
Emilia Clarke as Nina and
Indira Varma as Irina. The production was suspended on 16 March due to the COVID-19 pandemic but subsequently reopened at the
Harold Pinter Theatre in July 2022 and ran until September. • Also in 2020, the
Auckland Theatre Company presented an on-line production during the COVID-19 lockdown, using the device of a Zoom meeting for the stage. It was adapted by Eli Kent and Eleanor Bishop, who also directed it, with rehearsals and performances carried out online. It was well received by critics around the world, with
The Scotsman declaring it one of the "best plays to watch online". == Analysis and criticism ==