Original Broadway production {{Multiple image |direction = vertical | width = 175 The original Broadway production was produced by
Irene Mayer Selznick and directed by
Elia Kazan.
Brooks Atkinson, reviewing the opening in
The New York Times, described Tandy's "superb performance" as "almost incredibly true", concluding that Williams "has spun a poignant and luminous story". Later in the run,
Uta Hagen succeeded Tandy,
Carmelita Pope succeeded Hunter, and
Anthony Quinn succeeded Brando. Hagen and Quinn took the show on a national tour directed by
Harold Clurman, and then returned to Broadway for additional performances.
Ralph Meeker also took on the part of Stanley both in the Broadway and touring companies. Tandy received a
Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play in 1948, sharing the honor with
Judith Anderson and
Katharine Cornell. The original Broadway production closed, after 855 performances, in 1949. The original cast included,
Jessica Tandy as
Blanche DuBois,
Karl Malden as Harold "Mitch" Mitchell,
Marlon Brando as
Stanley Kowalski,
Kim Hunter as
Stella Kowalski,
Rudy Bond as Steve Hubbell,
Nick Dennis as Pablo Gonzales,
Peg Hillias as Eunice Hubbell, Vito Christi as Young Collector,
Richard Garrick as Doctor, Ann Dere as Nurse (later called the Matron),
Gee Gee James as Negro Woman and
Edna Thomas as Mexican Woman.
Other early productions The first adaptation of
Streetcar in Greece was performed in 1948 by Koun's Art Theater, two years before its film adaptation and one year before its London premiere, directed by
Karolos Koun starring
Melina Mercouri as Blanche and
Vasilis Diamantopoulos as Stanley, with original music by
Manos Hadjidakis. The London production, directed by
Laurence Olivier, opened at the
Aldwych Theatre on October 12, 1949. It starred
Bonar Colleano as Stanley,
Vivien Leigh as Blanche,
Renée Asherson as Stella and
Bernard Braden as Mitch. An Australian production with
Viola Keats as Blanche and
Arthur Franz as Stanley opened at the
Comedy Theatre in Melbourne in February 1950.
Revivals The first all-black production of
Streetcar was likely performed by the Summer Theatre Company at Lincoln University in Jefferson City, Missouri, in August 1953 and directed by one of Williams's former classmates at Iowa, Thomas D. Pawley, as noted in the
Streetcar edition of the "Plays in Production" series published by Cambridge University Press.
Tallulah Bankhead, for whom Williams originally had written the role of Blanche, starred in a 1956 New York City Center Company production directed by Herbert Machiz. In 1972, American composer
Frances Ziffer set
A Streetcar Named Desire to music. The first Broadway revival of the play was in 1973. It was produced by the
Lincoln Center, at the
Vivian Beaumont Theater, and starred
Rosemary Harris as Blanche,
James Farentino as Stanley and
Patricia Conolly as Stella. In 1976,
Rip Torn enlisted director
Jack Gelber to helm a revival at the once celebrated Academy Festival Theatre in
Lake Forest, Illinois starring himself as Stanley and his wife
Geraldine Page as Blanche. The production was threateningly realistic, projecting a brightly lit, garbage-filled stage reflecting a hostile, predatory world and immersing the audience in a total theatre experience. Gelber's Streetcar was troubling for the critics because it was raw, even dangerous. It pushed the Streetcar script to the farthest reaches of urban violence and unabated naturalism. One review said "This is not the Blanche of butterfly wings. This is gossamer with guts." Page's performance was described as displaying little of Leigh's hysteria or Tandy's forlorn helplessness. The spring 1988 revival at the
Circle in the Square Theatre starred
Aidan Quinn opposite
Blythe Danner as Blanche and
Frances McDormand as Stella. A highly publicized and acclaimed revival in 1992 starred
Alec Baldwin as Stanley and
Jessica Lange as Blanche. It was staged at the
Ethel Barrymore Theatre, where the original production was staged. This production proved so successful that it was filmed for television. It featured
Timothy Carhart as Mitch and
Amy Madigan as Stella, as well as future
Sopranos stars
James Gandolfini and
Aida Turturro. Gandolfini was Carhart's understudy. In 1997,
Le Petit Theatre du Vieux Carré in New Orleans mounted a 50th Anniversary production, with music by the
Marsalis family, starring
Michael Arata and Shelly Poncy. In 2009, the
Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia, where the original pre-Broadway tryout was held, staged a production of the play. In 1997, at Steppenwolf Theatre, Chicago IL, Gary Sinise as Stanley, John C Reilly as Mitch, Kathryn Erbe as Stella, and Laila Robins as Blanche.
Glenn Close starred in
Trevor Nunn's 2002 production for the
National Theatre at the Lyttleton Theatre, London. The 2005 Broadway revival was directed by Edward Hall and produced by The Roundabout Theater Company. It starred
John C. Reilly as Stanley,
Amy Ryan as Stella, and
Natasha Richardson as Blanche. The production was Richardson's final appearance on Broadway; she died in 2009 following a skiing accident. Bette Bourne and Paul Shaw of the British gay theater company Bloolips, and Peggy Shaw and Lois Weaver of the American lesbian theater company Split Britches, collaborated and performed a gender-bent adaptation titled
Belle Reprieve. Blanche was played as "man in a dress", Stanley as a "butch lesbian", Mitch as a "fairy disguised as a man", and Stella as a "woman disguised as a woman". The
Sydney Theatre Company production of
A Streetcar Named Desire premiered on September 5 and ran until October 17, 2009. This production, directed by
Liv Ullmann, starred
Cate Blanchett as Blanche,
Joel Edgerton as Stanley,
Robin McLeavy as Stella and Tim Richards as Mitch. From July 2009 until October 2009,
Rachel Weisz and
Ruth Wilson starred in a highly acclaimed revival of the play in London's West End at the
Donmar Warehouse directed by
Rob Ashford. In April 2012,
Blair Underwood,
Nicole Ari Parker,
Daphne Rubin-Vega and
Wood Harris starred in a multiracial adaptation at the
Broadhurst Theatre. Theatre review aggregator
Curtain Critic gave the production a score of 61 out of 100 based on the opinions of 17 critics. A production at the
Young Vic, London, opened on July 23, 2014, and closed on September 19, 2014. Directed by Benedict Andrews and starring
Gillian Anderson,
Ben Foster,
Vanessa Kirby and
Corey Johnson; this production garnered critical acclaim and is the fastest-selling show produced by the Young Vic. On September 16, 2014, the performance was relayed live to over one thousand cinemas in the UK as part of the
National Theatre Live project. Thus far, the production has been screened in over 2000 venues. From April 23, 2016, until June 4, 2016, the production was reprised at the new
St. Ann's Warehouse in Brooklyn, New York City. In 2020 during the COVID-19 lockdowns, it was released for free on YouTube as part of the National Theatre At Home series. In 2016
Sarah Frankcom directed a production at the
Royal Exchange in Manchester starring
Maxine Peake,
Ben Batt,
Sharon Duncan Brewster and
Youssef Kerkour. It opened on 8 September and closed on 15 October. It was well-received, and Peake's performance in particular received praise. In 2018, it headlined the third annual Tennessee Williams Festival St. Louis at the Grandel Theatre. Carrie Houk, the Festival's Executive Artistic Director, and Tim Ocel, the director of the play, chose to cast the play with actors whose ages were close to Tennessee Williams' original intentions. (The birthday party is for Blanche's 30th birthday.) Sophia Brown starred as Blanche, with Nick Narcisi as Stanley, Lana Dvorak as Stella, and Spencer Sickmann as Mitch. Henry Polkes composed the original score, and James Wolk designed the set. The critics were unanimous in their praise. The play was revived again in 2022 at London's
Almeida Theatre under the direction of
Rebecca Frecknall, with
Patsy Ferran taking the role of Blanche opposite
Paul Mescal as Stanley, and
Anjana Vasan as Stella. The play received widespread critical acclaim and its
West End transfer became the fastest-selling production to date in any
Ambassador Theatre Group venue. The revival received 6
Laurence Olivier Awards nominations, winning 3: Best Revival; and Best Actor and Best Supporting Actress for Mescal and Vasan respectively. In February 2024,
Sewanee: the University of the South, a liberal arts school that received much of Tennessee Williams' estate, revived the play, under the direction of James Crawford. The Tennessee Williams Center in Sewanee houses the university's theatre departments while the school owns the rights to Williams' works. With the show being sold out within days, the production received local acclaim from residents and the student body. A
Pitlochry Festival Theatre production of the play, directed by Elizabeth Newman and with Kirsty Stuart in the role of Blanche DuBois, was staged at the
Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh in October and November 2024. The 2022 Almeida Theatre production is scheduled to return to the West End for a limited three week run at the
Noël Coward Theatre from 3 February 2025. The show is then scheduled to transfer to New York City at the
Brooklyn Academy of Music from 28 February 2025. The entire 2022 revival cast is expected to reprise their roles. In March 2025 a Sheffield Theatres production is running at the
Crucible Theatre in Sheffield. Directed by Josh Seymour. The cast includes
Joanna Vanderham as Blanche. With Amara Okereke as Stella, Jake Dunn as Stanley and Taylor Kovacevic-Ebong as Mitch. == Adaptations ==