Original Broadway production Pal Joey premiered on
Broadway on December 25, 1940, at the
Ethel Barrymore Theatre and ran for 374 performances. Directed by
George Abbott with choreography by
Robert Alton, the opening-night cast included
Gene Kelly as Joey,
Vivienne Segal as Vera, and
June Havoc as Gladys.
Van Johnson and
Stanley Donen were also in the cast.
1952 Broadway revival Pal Joey achieved wider acclaim in the decades after its initial production. Throughout much of the 1940s, the songs from
Pal Joey were banned from radio play by
ASCAP, preventing them from becoming popular standards; the ban was lifted in the late 1940s. In 1950, the song "
Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" became popular and was recorded by various bands and pop singers, including
Mel Torme,
Doris Day, and
Gordon Jenkins and
The Harmonicats. Prompted by the song's success,
Goddard Lieberson, the producer of
Columbia Records, decided to produce a studio cast
album of
Pal Joey featuring
Harold Lang as Joey and Vivienne Segal reprising her role as Vera. Because of the popularity of that recording, composer-producer
Jule Styne produced the 1952 revival, in which Lang and Segal starred. The 1952 revival met with greater success than the original production. It opened on January 3, 1952, and closed on April 18, 1953, after 540 performances. Lang and Segal starred, with
Helen Gallagher as Gladys (for which Ms. Gallagher won the Tony Award for best featured actress that year), future Broadway star
Elaine Stritch as Melba,
Jack Waldron as Mike Spears, and
Bob Fosse as the
understudy for Joey. Dances and musical numbers were again staged by
Robert Alton, and the production was directed by
David Alexander. This production had the longest run of any revival of a musical in the history of the Broadway theatre at the time. It won the
New York Drama Critics' Circle Award for Best Musical and became the first musical ever to receive eleven
Donaldson Awards. Elaine Stritch was signed as an understudy to
Ethel Merman in
Call Me Madam at the time; she describes the difficulties of holding both jobs after the previews unexpectedly moved to New Haven in a monologue framed by "Zip" in her one-woman show
Elaine Stritch at Liberty.
London There have been two productions in London's
West End. The first was in March 1954 at the
Princes Theatre, starring
Harold Lang,
Carol Bruce and Sally Bazely. The second was at the
Noël Coward Theatre, from September 1980 until September 1981, starring
Siân Phillips, Danielle Carson, and
Denis Lawson.
1963 City Center revival Mounted at
New York City Center, the production starred
Bob Fosse as Joey Evans,
Viveca Lindfors as Vera Simpson,
Rita Gardner as Linda English,
Elaine Dunn as Gladys Bumps,
Kay Medford as Melba Snyder, and Jack Durant as Ludlow Lowell. While only running for 15 performances from May 29, 1963, to June 9, 1963, Fosse was nominated for a Tony Award for his performance. The production was directed by
Gus Schirmer Jr., used sets by
Howard Bay, and costumes by
Frank Thompson.
1976 Broadway revival In
1976, a revival on Broadway opened on June 27, 1976, at the
Circle in the Square Theatre and closed on August 29, 1976. The show was directed by
Theodore Mann; choreography by
Margo Sappington; musical direction/additional dance arrangements by Scott Oakley; scenery John J. Moore; costumes Arthur Boccia; lighting Ron Wallace; principal orchestrator
Michael Gibson; production stage manager Randall Brooks; stage manager James Bernardi; and press by Merle Debusky and Susan L. Shulman. The opening-night cast featured
Christopher Chadman (Joey); Harold Gary (Mike);
Terri Treas (Kid);
Janie Sell (Gladys); Gail Benedict (Gail); Murphy Cross (Murphy); Rosamond Lynn (Rosamond);
Marilu Henner (Marilu);
Deborah Geffner (Debbie); Boni Enton (Linda);
David Hodo (Gent); Austin Colyer (Ernest);
Denny Martin Flinn (Waldo the Waiter); Michael Leeds (Victor); Kenn Scalice (Delivery Boy); Adam Petroski (Louis); Joe Sirola (Ludlow Lowell); Ralph Farnworth (O'Brien);
Dixie Carter (Melba); and
Joan Copeland (Vera). It ran for 73 performances. A staged concert in the
New York City Center Encores! series in May 1995 (and which first restored "I'm Talkin' to My Pal" to the score) starred
Peter Gallagher and
Patti LuPone. In 2002, there was a
Prince Music Theater production in Philadelphia which starred
Christine Andreas. The following year Andreas won the
Barrymore Award for Outstanding Leading Actress in a Musical for her performance as Vera Simpson.
2008 Broadway revival Producer
Marc E. Platt, along with Richard Greenberg (who had written the 1992 Boston adaptation) and director
Joe Mantello planned a revival for fall 2007, which was postponed. The
Roundabout Theatre Company and Platt presented a limited engagement, with previews beginning on November 14, 2008, officially opening on December 18, 2008, and closing on March 1, 2009. The original book by
John O'Hara had undergone substantial "adaptation" by Greenberg, eliminating characters and reassigning songs. This new production also included a song for Joey that was cut prior to the 1940 Broadway premiere, "I'm Talkin' to My Pal" (first rediscovered and used in the 1995 Encores production and recording), and also interpolated two Rodgers & Hart songs, which were sung by Joey and Linda: "Are You My Love?" (from the 1936 film
Dancing Pirate) and "I Still Believe in You" (from the 1930 musical
Simple Simon). Mantello directed, with choreography by
Graciela Daniele. The production starred
Stockard Channing as Vera,
Martha Plimpton as Gladys, Matthew Risch as Joey, Jenny Fellner as Linda, and
Robert Clohessy as Mike. The set designer was
Scott Pask, with costumes by
William Ivey Long and lighting by
Paul Gallo. Advance publicity for the show included a full page spread in the November issue of
Vogue, featuring
Christian Hoff in costume as Joey. Hoff began previews as Joey, but when he was forced to leave the production on November 22, 2008, due to an injury, his understudy, Matthew Risch, took over the part. Risch had previously appeared on Broadway in featured roles in
Chicago and
Legally Blonde.
2023 City Center production In May 2023,
New York City Center announced that it would stage a production as its annual fall gala presentation. The production would feature a new book by
Richard LaGravenese and
Daniel Beaty, choreography by
Savion Glover, and direction by Glover and
Tony Goldwyn. Casting would feature
Brooks Ashmanskas as Melvin,
Loretta Devine as Lucille (replacing the originally announced
Jennifer Holliday in a role newly created for this production due to scheduling conflicts), Aisha Jackson as Linda,
Elizabeth Stanley as Vera, and
Ephraim Sykes as Joey. The show ran for 7 performances from November 1 to 7, 2023. ==Critical response==