After the maiden performance, Coward withdrew it from the cycle. The
Broadway production in 1936 omitted
Star Chamber as did the Canadian productions in 1938, the Broadway revivals in 1948 and 1967 and the 1981
Lyric Theatre production in London. In 2000 the
Williamstown Theatre Festival revived six of the plays, including
Star Chamber. The sheer expense involved in mounting what are effectively ten different productions has usually deterred revivals of the entire
Tonight at 8.30 cycle. However, the Antaeus Classical Theater Ensemble in Los Angeles revived all ten plays in October 2007, and the
Shaw Festival did so in 2009. The
BBC broadcast the play on the
Home Service in May 1940 starring
Margaretta Scott, and again in June 1941. In 1991, BBC television mounted productions of the
Tonight at 8.30 plays with
Joan Collins taking the Lawrence roles, but
Star Chamber was omitted. The play was not included in the Heinemann edition of the
Tonight at 8.30 plays published in 1936, and was first published in 1939 in
Rose Window, a tribute to
St Bartholomew's Hospital by twenty-five authors, including
Vera Brittain,
J.B. Priestley,
Hugh Walpole,
Emlyn Williams and
Radclyffe Hall as well as Coward. The book was illustrated by Anna Zinkeisen, who contributed a drawing of Xenia James (Lawrence's role) to accompany
Star Chamber. In connection with Coward's centenary in 1999, the play was printed in the 7th volume of the Methuen series of Coward's
Collected Plays. In 2018, as part of an almost complete cycle of the
Tonight at 8.30 plays (omitting
Fumed Oak)
Star Chamber was revived in London at the
Jermyn Street Theatre, with a slightly modified text, directed by
Tom Littler. the cast included
Ian Hallard as Johnny and
Sara Crowe as Xenia.
Rosemary Ashe played Violet. ==Notes==