The play premiered in the West End in 1964, thanks to the financial support of
Terence Rattigan, who had seen the play at the New Arts Theatre, rated it highly and put up £3,000 in sponsorship. It was directed by Patrick Dromgoole and starred
Madge Ryan as Kath,
Dudley Sutton as Sloane,
Charles Lamb as Kemp, and
Peter Vaughan as Ed. It was designed by
Timothy O'Brien, with costumes supervised by Tazeena Firth. The Broadway production, directed by
Alan Schneider, opened at the
Lyceum Theatre on 12 October 1965 and closed after 13 performances. It starred
Sheila Hancock as Kath,
Dudley Sutton as Sloane,
Lee Montague as Ed, and George Turner as Kemp. William Ritman designed the sets and costumes. The play was revived as part of the Joe Orton Festival at the
Royal Court Theatre in London. Directed by
Roger Croucher, it opened on 17 April 1975 and subsequently transferred to the
Duke of York's Theatre in July. It starred
Beryl Reid as Kath,
Malcolm McDowell as Sloane,
James Ottaway as Kemp, and
Ronald Fraser as Ed.
Harry H. Corbett later took over as Ed and
Kenneth Cranham as Sloane.
John Gunter designed the sets and Deirdre Clancy supervised the costumes. It closed in October 1975. A subsequent London production at the
Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith in 1981 was directed by
Kenneth Williams and starred
Barbara Windsor as Kath. Windsor reprised the role for a national tour in 1993 co-starring
John Challis,
Christopher Villiers, and
Kenneth Waller, directed by John David, produced by Lee Dean, and designed by Mark Bailey. An Off Broadway Revival in 1982 at the
Cherry Lane Theatre won the
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival. Produced by Howard Feuer, Jeremy Ritzer, Laurence Gordon and Sidney Shlenker and directed by John Tillinger, it starred Maxwell Caulfield as Sloane, Barbara Bryne as Kath, Gwyllum Evans as Kemp, and Jerome Dempsey as Ed. In 1985
Greg Hersov directed a production at the
Royal Exchange, Manchester with
Adam Ant as Sloane,
Sylvia Syms as Kath and
James Maxwell as Ed. The
Roundabout Theatre Company revived the play in 2005 under the direction of
Scott Ellis. It starred
Alec Baldwin as Ed,
Chris Carmack as Sloane,
Jan Maxwell as Kath, and
Richard Easton as Kemp. The design team included
Allen Moyer (sets), Michael Krass (costumes), Ken Posner (lights), and
John Gromada (original music and sound). In 1997
Dominic Cooke directed a production for
Terry Hands' inaugural season at
Clwyd Theatr Cymru, which was staged in the
Emlyn Williams Theatre, and starred
Joe McFadden as Sloane,
Robert Blythe as Ed, Lynne Verrall as Kath, and
Jimmy Gardner as Kemp. In 2007, the
Melbourne Theatre Company staged a production at the Fairfax Theatre in the Melbourne Arts Centre in Melbourne. Directed by Simon Phillips, it starred Richard Piper as Ed,
Ben Guerens as Sloane,
Amanda Muggleton as Kath, and
Bob Hornery as Kemp. It was designed by Shaun Gorton, with music by
David Chesworth. From 29 January 2009, a production at the
Trafalgar Studios in London starred
Imelda Staunton as Kath,
Mathew Horne as Sloane,
Simon Paisley Day as Ed and
Richard Bremmer as Kemp. The show played at the Trafalgar until 11 April 2009. A 2012 production at the
Comédie des Champs-Élysées in Paris, directed by
Michel Fau (as
Que faire de Mr Sloane?) featured
Gaspard Ulliel in the title role,
Charlotte de Turckheim as Kath and Fau as Eddie. ==Screen adaptations==