London, 1985 In 1985,
Yvonne Brewster directed a production of for the
Black Theatre Co-operative, performed at the
Tricycle Theatre (11 April 1985 – 4 May 1985) and at
The Drill Hall Arts Centre (9 July 1985 – 20 July 1985), with the cast featuring
Carmen Munroe,
Gary McDonald, Peter Harding, Jacqueline de Peza, Freddie Brooks, Guy Gregory, Ella Wilder and Kwabena Manso.
Off-Broadway revival, 1986 Roundabout Theatre Company staged a 25th-anniversary production of
Raisin at the
Union Square Theatre from July to September 1986, directed by
Harold Scott and starring
Olivia Cole as Lena,
Starletta DuPois as Ruth, and
James Pickens Jr. as Walter Lee, with
John Fiedler reprising his Broadway and film role as Lindner. The production had a limited national tour including stops in
Los Angeles and
Washington, D.C., with
Esther Rolle taking over as Lena and
Danny Glover as Walter Lee, respectively. The production served as the basis for the 1989 PBS
American Playhouse film adaptation, with Rolle, DuPois, Glover, and Fiedler reprising their roles.
Broadway revival, 2004 A revival ran on Broadway at the
Royale Theatre from April 26, 2004, to July 11, 2004 with the following cast: •
Sean Combs – Walter Lee Younger •
Audra McDonald – Ruth Younger •
Phylicia Rashad – Lena Younger •
Sanaa Lathan – Beneatha Younger •
Bill Nunn – Bobo •
David Aaron Baker – Karl Lindner • Lawrence Ballard – moving man • Teagle F. Bougere – Joseph Asagai • Frank Harts – George Murchison • Billy Eugene Jones – moving man • Alexander Mitchell – Travis Younger The director was
Kenny Leon, and
David Binder and
Vivek Tiwary were producers. The play won two 2004 Tony Awards: Best Actress in a Play (Phylicia Rashad) and Best Featured Actress in a Play (Audra McDonald), and was nominated for Best Revival of a Play and Best Featured Actress in a Play (Sanaa Lathan).
Royal Exchange, Manchester production, 2010 In 2010,
Michael Buffong directed a widely acclaimed production at the
Royal Exchange Theatre in
Manchester, described by Dominic Cavendish in
The Daily Telegraph as "A brilliant play, brilliantly served". Michael Buffong, Ray Fearon and Jenny Jules all won
MEN Awards. The cast were: •
Jenny Jules – Ruth Younger •
Ray Fearon – Walter Lee Younger •
Tracy Ifeachor – Beneatha Younger •
Starletta DuPois (who played Ruth in the 1989 film) – Lena Younger • Damola Adelaja – Joseph Asagai • Simon Combs – George Murchison • Tom Hodgkins – Karl Lindner • Ray Emmet Brown – Bobo/Moving Man
Broadway revival, 2014 A second revival ran on Broadway from April 3, 2014, to June 15, 2014, at the
Ethel Barrymore Theatre. The play won three 2014
Tony Awards: Best Revival of a Play, Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play (Sophie Okonedo) and Best Direction of a Play (Kenny Leon). •
Denzel Washington – Walter Lee Younger •
Sophie Okonedo – Ruth Younger •
LaTanya Richardson Jackson – Lena Younger •
Anika Noni Rose – Beneatha Younger •
Stephen McKinley Henderson – Bobo •
David Cromer – Karl Lindner • Keith Eric Chappelle – moving man •
Sean Patrick Thomas – Joseph Asagai • Jason Dirden – George Murchison • Billy Eugene Jones – moving man • Bryce Clyde Jenkins – Travis Younger
Arena Stage revival, 2017 The play opened on April 6, 2017, at
Arena Stage in Washington, D.C., directed by Tazewell Thompson, with the following cast: • Will Cobbs – Walter Lee Younger • Lizan Mitchell – Lena Younger • Dawn Ursula – Ruth Younger • Joy Jones – Beneatha Younger • Jeremiah Hasty – Travis Younger • Mack Leamon – Bobo/Asagai • Thomas Adrian Simpson – Karl Lindner • Keith L. Royal Smith – George Murchison
Off-Broadway revival, 2022 A new production of the play, directed by
Robert O'Hara, first played in Summer 2019 at the
Williamstown Theatre Festival, starring
S. Epatha Merkerson as Lena Younger. O'Hara directed the same production with a largely different cast at
The Public Theater Off-Broadway in 2022, starring
Tonya Pinkins as Lena Younger. The production was notable for emphasizing the danger the Youngers face in moving to Clybourne Park, a notion that was written into the script by Hansberry but most major interpretations, including the film, avoid due to undercutting a perceived happy ending. Though Hansberry biographer Imani Perry claims this interpretation was the "closest to Lorraine's vision that I have ever seen", the production was criticized for this ending by
The New York Timess Jesse Green, in a negative review that Pinkins claimed scuttled plans for the production to transfer to Broadway. ==Other versions==