In German The play was originally produced at the
Schauspielhaus Zürich, produced by
Leopold Lindtberg in 1941. Most of the score consisted of original compositions by the Swiss composer
Paul Burkhard; the rest had been arranged by him. The musicians were placed in view of the audience so that they could be seen, one of Brecht's many techniques in epic theatre.
Therese Giehse, a well-known actress at the time, took the title role.
Teo Otto designed the stage. The second production of
Mother Courage took place in then
East Berlin in 1949, with Brecht's (second) wife
Helene Weigel, his main actress and later also director, as Mother Courage.
Paul Dessau supplied a new score, composed in close collaboration with Brecht himself. This production would highly influence the formation of Brecht's company, the
Berliner Ensemble, which would provide him a venue to direct many of his plays. (Brecht died directing
Galileo for the Ensemble.) Brecht revised the play for this production in reaction to the reviews of the Zürich production, which empathized with the "heart-rending vitality of all maternal creatures". Even so, he wrote that the Berlin audience failed to see Mother Courage's crimes and participation in the war and focused on her suffering instead. The next production (and second production in Germany) was directed by Brecht at the
Munich Kammerspiele in 1950, with the original Mother Courage, Therese Giehse, and with a set designed by Teo Otto (see photo,
above.) • 1956 - American premiere by the Actor's Workshop at the (San Francisco) East Bay Kindeshule Sat.Feb. 4, 1956 • 1958 – American première at the
Cleveland Play House, starring Harriet Brazier as Mother Courage, directed by Benno Frank, with set design by Paul Rodgers. • 1959 –
BBC television broadcast, adapted by
Eric Crozier from Eric Bentley's English translation, produced by
Rudolph Cartier, featuring
Flora Robson as Mother Courage. • 1961 – Second British production at Stratford-upon-Avon Amateur Players. Directed by American
Keith Fowler and presented on the floor of the Stratford Hippodrome, it drew high acclaim. The title role was played by Elizabeth "Libby" Cutts, with
Digby Day as Swiss Cheese. During this production Wilder first met Bancroft's then-boyfriend,
Mel Brooks. • 1971 – Staging of Brecht's original Berliner Ensemble production for the
Melbourne Theatre Company at the
Princess Theatre, directed by Joachim Tenschert.
Gloria Dawn played Mother Courage. • 1980 – New adaptation by
Ntozake Shange at
The Public Theater, set in the American South during
Reconstruction, directed by
Wilford Leach, with
Gloria Foster as Mother Courage. • 1982 – Multi-ethnic production by
Internationalist Theatre at London's Theatre Space. Its "attack on the practice of war could not—with South Atlantic news (
Falklands War) filling the front pages—have been more topical." Margaret Robertson played Mother Courage. and
Angelique Rockas played Yvette • 1984 –
Royal Shakespeare Company production at the
Barbican Theatre in London, translated by
Hanif Kureishi, with
Judi Dench in the title role. • 1995 – Production at London's
Royal National Theatre based on
David Hare's translation, directed by
Jonathan Kent, featuring
Diana Rigg, who won an
Evening Standard Theatre Award for her performance in the title role. • 2006 –
The Public Theater production in New York City, with a new translation by
Tony Kushner, music by
Jeanine Tesori, directed by
George C. Wolfe, and starring
Meryl Streep as Mother Courage. • 2009 – Production at
Royal National Theatre, directed by
Deborah Warner, featuring
Fiona Shaw in the title role, with new songs performed live by
Duke Special. • 2013 – All-indigenous Australian production at the
Queensland Performing Arts Centre's Playhouse Theatre directed by
Wesley Enoch, with a new translation by Paula Nazarski. • 2024 –
Blue Raincoat Theatre Company production in
Sligo,
Ireland at The Factory Performance Space.
In other languages In Spanish, the play was first staged in Argentina in 1953 at Teatro IFT in
Buenos Aires, with
Cipe Lincovsky in the title role. In 1972,
Henry Jayasena adapted the play into Sinhalese, under the title
Diriya Mawa Saha Agey Daruwo (The Brave Mother and Her Children). In 2003, a translation by
Johannes Edfelt and Brita Edfelt was staged at the
Royal Dramatic Theatre, with
Stina Ekblad in the title role. as Yvette and
Renu Setna as The Chaplain (1982) ==Brecht's reaction==