; Broadway
On the Town premiered on Broadway at the
Adelphi Theater on December 28, 1944, directed by
George Abbott and with
choreography by Jerome Robbins. It closed on February 2, 1946, after 462 performances. The production starred
John Battles (Gabey, who replaced
Kirk Douglas before tryouts),
Cris Alexander (Chip),
Nancy Walker (Hildy),
Sono Osato (Ivy), Betty Comden (Claire), and Adolph Green (Ozzie). The musical director was
Max Goberman. The original production of
On the Town was notable for its racially diverse cast and intentional avoidance of racial stereotypes. The Japanese-American dancer Sono Osato starred as Ivy; there were six African-Americans in the cast, who were treated as part of the citizenry; and nine months into the run, the black conductor
Everett Lee took over the podium. The first Broadway revival opened at the
Imperial Theatre on October 31, 1971, and closed on Jan 1, 1972, after 73 performances.
Donna McKechnie,
Phyllis Newman, and
Bernadette Peters co-starred as Ivy, Claire, and Hildy. The director and choreographer was
Ron Field. Peters received a nomination for the 1972
Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical. In his review for the
New York Times,
Clive Barnes wrote: The second Broadway revival opened at the
Gershwin Theatre on November 19, 1998, and ran for 69 performances. This production began as a summer event at the
Public Theater's
Delacorte Theater in
Central Park and made use of the venue in unique ways. Upon its Broadway Transfer, critics disparaged the subsequent production and changes as lifeless and bland by comparison.
Lea Delaria's performance as Hildy the taxi driver (and especially her all-stops-out rendition of "I Can Cook, Too") won wide praise, with
Ben Brantley writing "Working through the saucy double-entendres and scat embellishments of
I Can Cook Too, Hildy's
mating call of a solo, Ms. DeLaria makes an obliging captive of anyone watching her." The cast featured Jay Armstrong Johnson (Chip),
Tony Yazbeck (Gabey) and
Clyde Alves (Ozzie), and
Megan Fairchild (Ivy), Alysha Umphress (Hildy), and
Elizabeth Stanley (Claire) as the three women in the sailors' lives, as well as
Jackie Hoffman (Madame Dilly),
Michael Rupert (Judge Pitkin), and
Allison Guinn (Lucy Schmeeler). ; Other US An
Encores! staged concert was presented at
New York City Center from November 19, 2008, through November 23, 2008, as part of a citywide celebration of Leonard Bernstein's 90th birthday.
John Rando was the director, Warren Carlyle the choreographer, with a cast that featured Justin Bohon (Chip),
Christian Borle (Ozzie), Tony Yazbeck (Gabey), Jessica Lee Goldyn (Ivy),
Leslie Kritzer (Hildy Esterhazy),
Jennifer Laura Thompson (Claire De Loone), and
Andrea Martin (Madame P. Dilly). In reviewing this production,
Charles Isherwood wrote: "The production is rich in dance ... and winning performances (particularly from Tony Yazbeck as the lovelorn sailor Gabey, and a scenery-devouring Andrea Martin as a nutso-dipso voice teacher), but it's richest of all in music. There are several ballet sequences, instant reprises, jazzy pop songs, classical spoofs, and soaring ballads." A production of
On the Town opened in June 2013 at Barrington Stage Company in Massachusetts.
John Rando directed the production and Joshua Bergasse choreographed. The production starred
Tony Yazbeck (Gabey),
Clyde Alves (Ozzie), Jay Armstrong Johnson (Chip), Alysha Umphress (Hildy), Deanna Doyle (Ivy), Elizabeth Stanley (Claire), Michael Rupert (Judge Pitkin),
Allison Guinn (Lucy Schmeeler), and Nancy Opel (Madame P. Dilly). In his review
Ben Brantley wrote: "John Rando's production of
On the Town, the 1944 musical about three sailors on shore leave in New York City, is one of those rare revivals that remind us of what a hit show from long was originally all about. The joy of Mr. Rando's production is in its air of erotic effortlessness." ; London The first London production of
On the Town opened at the
Prince of Wales Theatre on May 30, 1963, and ran for 63 performances. It was directed and choreographed by
Joe Layton and starred
Elliott Gould and Don McKay. The main female roles were taken by two Americans,
Carol Arthur and Andrea Jaffe, and an English actress,
Gillian Lewis. It was not a propitious time for new musicals in London, given dramatic developments that year in British popular music. A month earlier,
Bock and
Harnick's
She Loves Me had opened on Broadway and ran for some 300 performances, but flopped when it came to London in 1964, not least because people thought the title had something to do with the
Beatles. In 1992,
Michael Tilson Thomas led the
London Symphony Orchestra and an all-star, crossover cast of opera and theater performers in a semi-staged concert version produced by
Deutsche Grammophon and recorded for both CD and video release. The video was also aired on the
PBS series
Great Performances, and in the UK on both
BBC Two and
BBC Radio 3 in January 1994. Participants included
Frederica von Stade,
Thomas Hampson,
Tyne Daly,
Cleo Laine,
David Garrison,
Samuel Ramey, and, as both narrators and performers, Comden and Green themselves. The resulting recordings included material cut at various stages of the musical's development. Thomas revived this concert edition of the work in 1996 with the
San Francisco Symphony, with many of the same performers.
On The Town was part of
English National Opera's repertoire, running April 20 – May 25, 2007, at the
London Coliseum, with Caroline O'Connor as Hildy, with choreography by
Stephen Mear. As part of their 2017 Season, the
Regent's Park Open Air Theatre staged
On The Town, directed and choreographed by Drew McOnie; it is billed as the biggest dance musical ever staged at the theatre. A semi-staged concert version was performed at the
Royal Albert Hall, London, as part of the 2018
Proms, on 25 August, the exact centenary of Bernstein's birth. The London Symphony Orchestra was conducted by
John Wilson. ==1949 film version==