Original productions Produced by
C. B. Cochran, the play premiered on 18 August 1930, at the
King's Theatre in
Edinburgh, directed by Coward and starring Coward as Elyot,
Gertrude Lawrence as Amanda,
Laurence Olivier as Victor and
Adrianne Allen as Sibyl. Sets and costumes were designed by
Gladys Calthrop. After successfully touring
Liverpool,
Birmingham,
Manchester and
Southsea for five weeks, the production opened the new
Phoenix Theatre in London on 24 September 1930. A week after the play opened,
Heinemann published the text; a week later,
His Master's Voice issued recordings of scenes from the play performed by Coward and Lawrence. Coward disliked appearing in long runs, and the London run was therefore a limited three-month season. It sold out within a week and was still playing to packed houses when, despite "the gratifying knowledge that we could have run on for another six [months]," it ended on 20 December 1930. The first
Broadway production opened at the
Times Square Theatre on 27 January 1931 with Coward, Lawrence and Olivier reprising their roles and
Jill Esmond, who had married Olivier a few months earlier, as Sibyl.
Walter Winchell described the production as "something to go quite silly over." The New York critics were enthusiastic about the play and Coward's performance. A few weeks before Coward and Lawrence were scheduled to be replaced by
Otto Kruger and
Madge Kennedy, Lawrence collapsed with a combined attack of
laryngitis and
nervous exhaustion. Coward appeared at five performances with her understudy, and then closed the production for two weeks to allow Lawrence to recuperate. She returned, and the two continued in their roles until 9 May 1931. The production ran a total of 256 performances.
Major revivals (1940s to 1970s) The first
West End revival was at the
Apollo Theatre in 1944 starring
John Clements and
Kay Hammond.
Googie Withers took over as Amanda during the run. Over the years, the play has been revived on Broadway six times. The first of these, in 1948, starred
Tallulah Bankhead as Amanda and
Donald Cook as Elyot, with
Barbara Baxley as Sibyl and William Langford as Victor, in a production directed by
Martin Manulis at the
Plymouth Theatre, where it ran for 248 performances. The production toured all but three states of the U.S., and grossed more than $1.5 million. Coward went to see the production "with my heart in my boots and was very pleasantly surprised ... her (Bankhead's) vitality was amazing, and, strange to say, she played the love scene quite beautifully." In 1963, at the start of what Coward called "Dad's Renaissance", a London revival directed by
James Roose-Evans at the
Hampstead Theatre Club heralded Coward's return to critical favour. The success of the production, with
Edward de Souza as Elyot and
Rosemary Martin as Amanda, led to its transfer to the
Duke of York's Theatre. The West End producer wanted to cast established stars in the transfer, but Coward insisted that the young Hampstead cast should be retained. It ran in the West End for 212 performances. A May 1968
Off-Broadway production directed by
Charles Nelson Reilly starred
Elaine Stritch as Amanda, and ran for nine performances at the
Theatre de Lys. A 1969 production, directed by
Stephen Porter and starring
Brian Bedford as Elyot and
Tammy Grimes as Amanda (winning a
Tony Award for her performance), with David Glover as Victor and Suzanne Grossman as Sibyl, opened at Broadway's
Billy Rose Theatre and then moved to the
Broadhurst Theatre to complete its run of 198 performances. The last major revival during Coward's lifetime was at London's
Queen's Theatre in 1972. It was directed by
John Gielgud and starred
Maggie Smith and
Robert Stephens. During the run of the production,
John Standing took over as Elyot, and
Jill Bennett was a replacement as Amanda. Gielgud directed a 1975 Broadway transfer of his production, starring Maggie Smith and John Standing at the
46th Street Theatre, where it ran for 92 performances. In 1978, Smith reprised her role (alongside
Brian Bedford) in a
Stratford Festival production of the play.
Major revivals (1980s to present) and
Richard Burton were the headline stars in a 1983 Broadway production In 1980, a production from the
Greenwich Theatre transferred to the
Duchess Theatre in the West End. It starred
Michael Jayston and
Maria Aitken, and it was directed by Alan Strachan.
Elizabeth Taylor as Amanda and
Richard Burton as Elyot were the headliners in a highly anticipated 1983 Broadway production directed by
Milton Katselas, which opened at the
Lunt-Fontanne Theatre in May 1983 following a pre-Broadway run at the Shubert Theatre in
Boston in April 1983. It co-starred
John Cullum as Victor and
Kathryn Walker as Sibyl and ran for 63 performances. After closing on Broadway, this production toured to the
John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in August and September 1983, the
Shubert Theatre, Chicago in September, and the
Wilshire Theatre, Los Angeles in October 1983. In 1990, a revival at London's
Aldwych Theatre, starring
Keith Baxter and
Joan Collins, directed by Tim Luscombe, was not well received, although
Sara Crowe won an
Olivier Award, Actress in a Supporting Role, as Sibyl.
Arvin Brown directed Collins as Amanda and
Simon Jones as Elyot in a 1992 Broadway production that closed after only 11 previews and 37 performances at the
Broadhurst Theatre. The last West End production of the 20th century was at the
National Theatre, running from May to September 1999, with
Anton Lesser as Elyot and
Juliet Stevenson as Amanda, directed by
Philip Franks. A 2001 London revival emphasised the harshness and darker side of the play; it starred
Alan Rickman and
Lindsay Duncan, directed by
Howard Davies at the Albery Theatre (subsequently renamed the
Noël Coward Theatre). Duncan won the Olivier Award for her performance,
Tim Hatley won for his set designs, and
Jenny Beavan won for costumes. A Broadway transfer of Davies's West End production, starring Rickman and Duncan, ran for 127 performances at the
Richard Rodgers Theatre in 2002. It won the Tony Award for Best Revival, while Duncan won for Leading Actress and Hatley won for sets. In 2009 at its new home, the Hampstead Theatre presented a revival directed by Lucy Bailey, with
Jasper Britton as Elyot and
Claire Price as Amanda. A 2010 revival at the
Vaudeville Theatre in London was directed by
Richard Eyre and starred
Matthew Macfadyen as Elyot and
Kim Cattrall as Amanda. The ten-week limited season ran from February to May 2010. This production then moved to North America, starring Cattrall and
Paul Gross. It had tryouts in Toronto from 16 September to 30 October 2011 and played on Broadway at the
Music Box Theatre from 6 November, with an official opening on 17 November.
Simon Paisley Day played Victor, and
Anna Madeley played Sibyl. The production closed early, on 31 December 2011. A production ran at the
Chichester Festival Theatre from 28 September (previews from 21 September) to 27 October 2012, starring
Anna Chancellor as Amanda and
Toby Stephens as Elyot, with
Anthony Calf as Victor and
Anna-Louise Plowman as Sibyl. It was directed by
Jonathan Kent. This production was reprised with the same cast at the
Gielgud Theatre, in London, from 3 July (previews from 22 June) to 21 September 2013. This performance was broadcast to participating cinemas in the UK from 6 February 2014, and in the US on 11 December 2013, by CinemaLive and
Digital Theatre in their West End Theatre Series. A UK tour of
Private Lives starring
Patricia Hodge and
Nigel Havers opened in October 2021 in
Bath. This production cast all the lead roles as much older than in previous productions, which was initially met with scepticism. However, the change was received well by audiences and the tour broke several box-office records before ending in
Nottingham in April 2022. This production transferred to the
Ambassadors Theatre in the West End from 31 August to 25 November 2023. Another revival ran at the
Donmar Warehouse in London from 7 April to 27 May 2023. The production starred
Stephen Mangan,
Rachael Stirling,
Laura Carmichael, and Sargon Yelda. The
Rose Theatre,
Octagon Theatre Bolton &
Mercury Theatre co-production of the play directed by Tanuja Amarasuriya and supported by
The Royal Theatrical Support Trust ran from 4 to 27 September at the Octagon Theatre in Bolton before transferring to Mercury Theatre in Colchester from 1 to 11 October. The tour ended with a run at the Rose from 14 to 25 October. The cast starred Jodie Cuaresma, Ashley Gerlach, Chirag Benedict Lobo and Pepter Lunkuse among understudies. ==Critical reception==