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Playbill Vault’s Today in Theatre History: March 19

1872 Birthday of singer and actor Anna Held, future wife of Florenz Ziegfeld, and the classic sexy French flirt of her era. She plays that role in a series of musical vehicles including La Poupee, The French Maid, Mam’selle Napoleon, The Parisian Model, and Miss Innocence.

1901 Birthday of groundbreaking set designer Jo Mielziner who wins five Tony Awards for his designs, which include sets for the original productions of Death of a Salesman, Guys and Dolls, A Streetcar Named Desire, South Pacific, The King and I, Gypsy, 1776, and dozens more.

1915 Actor and future “shrew” Patricia Morison is born in New York. In 1948, she stars with Alfred Drake in the original production of Kiss Me, Kate. Her father is actor-playwright William Morrison.

1931 Producer Charles Cochran’s Cochran’s 1931 Revue has a book and music conceived by Noël Coward. It treads the boards at London’s Pavillion Theatre. Bobby Clark, Melville Cooper, and Ada May are in the cast.

1953 Jo Van Fleet and Martin Balsam are two of the inhabitants of Camino Real. Tennessee Williams‘ drama runs just seven weeks at the National Theatre in New York.

1962 Ray Bolger stars in the musical All American, with a score by Charles Strouse and Lee Adams, and libretto by Mel Brooks. It runs 80 performances and introduces the song “Once Upon a Time.”

1998 Proving everything old can be very new again, Cabaret transforms the Henry Miller’s Theatre into the Kit Kat Klub. Directed by Sam Mendes and co-directed and choreographed by Rob Marshall, the revival opens tonight with Natasha Richardson, Ron Rifkin, Mary Louise Wilson, and Alan Cumming. It wins four Tony Awards including Best Revival of a Musical. The production later moves uptown to Studio 54, where it sees several big-name stars such as Jennifer Jason Leigh, Mary McCormack, and Susan Egan play the role of Sally Bowles. It runs 2,377 performances, making it one of the few Broadway revivals to run longer than the original.

2000 A new staging of Eugene O’Neill‘s A Moon for the Misbegotten, starring Cherry Jones and Gabriel Byrne, opens at Broadway’s Walter Kerr Theatre. The revival and its stars earn Tony nominations, and Roy Dotrice wins for Featured Actor in a Play.

2002 British actor Henry Goodman takes over one of the most coveted roles on Broadway: Max Bialystock in the musical The Producers. But he lasts only about a month, to be summarily replaced by understudy Brad Oscar.

2003 Opening night for the R-rated puppet musical Avenue Q, by Robert Lopez, Jeff Marx, and Jeff Whitty, at Off-Broadway’s Vineyard Theatre. It moves to Broadway a few months later, and wins the 2004 Tony Award as Best Musical.

2008 Paul Scofield, whose sonorous voice, commanding presence, and mournfully dignified mien made him one of the leading players of the London and international stage during the latter half of the 20th century, dies at age 86. He is perhaps best known for creating the role of Sir Thomas More in Robert Bolt‘s history play A Man for All Seasons.

2009 A revival of the Arthur LaurentsLeonard BernsteinStephen Sondheim musical West Side Story opens on Broadway at the Palace Theatre. Directed by librettist Laurents, the staging weaves Spanish into the book and songs, with “I Feel Pretty” and “A Boy Like That” delivered entirely in Spanish. The translations are written by Lin-Manuel Miranda.

2012 Cris Alexander, who played one of the three sailors in the original Broadway production of the musical On the Town, dies at age 92. Alexander’s Broadway credits also included nebbishy Walgreens manager Frank Lippencott in Wonderful Town, and obsessed playwright Roland Maule in Present Laughter.

2015 Elisabeth Moss stars in the first Broadway revival of Wendy Wasserstein‘s The Heidi Chronicles, opening at the Music Box Theatre. The production runs only 53 performances.

More of Today’s Birthdays: Moms Mabley 1894. Hugh Wheeler 1912. Phyllis Newman 1933. Renee Taylor 1933. Glenn Close 1947. Neil LaBute 1963.

Watch highlights from the 2009 Broadway revival of West Side Story:

13 Televisions Show Starring Big Broadway Names

More than ever—and in the age of peak TV—more and more theatre actors cross over into work on television and streaming series.

With upcoming pilots and new seasons already underway, familiar Broadway faces make their way to TV. Check out the list of highlights below to see some of the theatre stars you can watch out for on the small screen.

RECENTLY PREMIERED AND AIRING/STREAMING NOW

The Good Fight - Season 3 Trailer - OVERRIDE

The Good Fight
Broadway stars: Christine Baranski, Sarah Steele, Audra McDonald, Bernadette Peters
Baranski leads the cast as Diane Lockhart, a lawyer whose savings and lifelong hard work are completely destroyed after her goddaughter’s reputation goes under. A spin-off of hit network series The Good Wife is now in its third season and follows Diane’s journey as she tries to rebuild and start fresh at a new lawfirm. Steele, Broadway alum from The Humans, has been with the series from the start. McDonald joined the cast as a series regular in 2018 as Liz Reddick-Lawrence, a fellow attorney, and Broadway legend Peters makes recurring appearances on the series as Lenore Rindell, the wife of Diane’s former financial aide, and the mother of her goddaughter, Maia. Tony nominee Brenda Braxton will appear this season. Past guest stars have included Andrea Martin, Corey Cott, Helene Yorke, Kelli O’Hara, Becky Ann Baker, and more. The Good Fight is one of those shows you’ll always find Broadway faces.
How to watch: CBS All Access
Premiere Date: March 14, 2019

READ: Catch Christine Baranski, Audra McDonald, Michael Sheen, and More in Trailer for The Good Fight Season 3

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Gillian Anderson and Sheila Reid Jan Versweyveld

Sex Education
Broadway star: Gillian Anderson
High-schooler Otis Milburn teams up with his crush Maeve Wiley to set up a secret sex therapy business at school to help other students with their problems in the bedroom. Gillian Anderson plays Otis’ mother, Jean, who is a licensed sex therapist and the reason why Otis knows so much about the subject in the first place. Theatrelovers will recognize Anderson as the star of the West End’s All About Eve, playing at the Noël Coward Theatre in a limited engagement directed by Ivo van Hove.
How to watch: Netflix
Premiere date: Season 1 is currently streaming and a second season was recently announced.

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Heléne York

The Other Two
Broadway star: Heléne Yorke
Yorke, who has starred in Bullets Over Broadway and American Psycho, plays Brooke Dubek, a former professional dancer who is struggling to come to terms with her younger brother’s overnight fame. She and her older brother (Drew Tarver) try to cope with the 13-year-old’s sudden success, while also trying to find their place in the world.
How to Watch: Thursdays at 10:30PM/9:30c on Comedy Central and catch up OnDemand or at CC.com
Premiere Date: January 24, 2019

READ: Heléne Yorke Proves Her Theatre Credentials

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Rita Moreno, 2012 Courtesy of Broadway Barks

One Day at a Time
Broadway star: Rita Moreno
The Netflix series follows the everyday life of a modern Cuban-American family, and focuses on the issues all American families face today. It also confronts some controversial topics such as mental health issues, religion, and addiction in each episode. Broadway legend Rita Moreno plays Lydia Margarita del Carmen Inclán Maribona Leyte-Vidal de Riera, mom to Penelope Alvarez and abuela to her two kids, Alex and Elena. (Note: Netflix recently announced the series will end after Season 3, but the Norman Lear reboot is looking for a new potential home.)
How to watch: Netflix
Premiere date: Season 3 premiered January 2019

READ: West Side Story’s Rita Moreno on Keeping Her Career Sexy at 87

Bailey Ryon, Milly Shapiro, Sophia Gennusa and Oona Lawrence in <i data-lazy-src=

The Enemy Within
Broadway stars: James Carpinello and Sophia Gennusa
CIA operative Erica Shepherd (played by Jennifer Carpenter of Dexter) complies with a Russian master criminal to save her daughter, played by Gennusa. When she is caught for her crimes, she is sentenced to life in prison for treason. The show picks up three years later, when the same Russian villain poses a new threat and the FBI needs Shepherd’s help. Broadway fans will recognize the young star as one of the original Matildas in Matilda The Musical, a performance that earned her a Tony Honor for Excellence. Carpinello, who has been seen on Broadway in Saturday Night Fever, Xanadu, and Rock of Ages, plays recurring character Anthony Cabrera, another CIA official who worked with Shepherd prior to her arrest.
How to Watch: Mondays at 10PM/9c on NBC and catchup OnDemand
Premiere date: February 25, 2019

READ: The 13 Youngest Actors Who Made Tony History

UPCOMING THIS SPRING

The Village

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Will Chase Monica Simoes

Broadway stars: Will Chase, Katrina Lenk, Hailey Kilgore
This new drama follows the intertwined stories of residents of a Brooklyn apartment building as they all come together to try and battle individual challenges. Chase, currently leading the Broadway revival of Kiss Me, Kate, will play John, a character introduced in the pilot. Lenk, a Tony winner for The Band’s Visit and Kilgore, a Tony nominee for Once On This Island, will be seen later in the premiere season.
How to Watch: Tuesdays at 10PM/9c on NBC
Premiere date: March 19, 2019

Fosse/Verdon

Fosse/Verdon_Trailer_OVERRIDE

Broadway stars: Michelle Williams, Norbert Leo Butz, Laura Osnes, Brandon Uranowitz, Tyler Hanes, Kelli Barrett, Ethan Slater, Ahmad Simmons, Bianca Marroquin
The highly anticipated FX series chronicles the five-decades-long professional and romantic relationship of famed choreographer and director Bob Fosse and Broadway performer Gwen Verdon. This show is chock-filled with Broadway vets: Michelle Williams, Broadway’s recent Sally Bowles, as Gwen Verdon, two-time Tony winner Norbert Leo Butz as Paddy Cheyefsky, two-time Tony nominee Laura Osnes as Shirley MacLaine, two-time Tony nominee Brandon Uranowitz as Dustin Hoffman, Cats alum Tyler Hanes as Jerry Orbach, Wicked alum Kelli Barrett as Liza Minnelli, Tony nominee Ethan Slater as Joel Grey, Hadestown performer Ahmad Simmons as Ben Vereen, and Chicago’s Bianca Marroquin as Chita Rivera. Lin-Manuel Miranda and Alex Lacamoire will also executive produce, Dear Evan Hansen scribe Steven Levenson wrote the pilot serves as showrunner, and Andy Blankenbuehler is the show’s choreographer.
How to watch: Tuesdays at 10PM/9c on FX
Premiere date: April 9, 2019

READ: A Guide to the Characters of FX’s Fosse/Verdon


Ramy

Caroline Basu
Caroline Basu

Broadway star: Caroline Basu
Ramy Youssef plays Ramy, the son of Egyptian immigrants, who navigates through a politically polarized town in New Jersey while struggling to uphold the values of his Muslim community and fit in with his peers. May Calamnawy plays the female lead, Dena, and School of Rock alum Caroline Basu will play her younger self.
How to Watch: Hulu
Premiere date: April 19, 2019

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Mandy Gonzales, Javier Muñoz and Rory O’Malley Bruce Glikas/FilmMagic

Like Magic and American Princess
Broadway star: Rory O’Malley
Having originated the role of Elder McKinley in The Book of Mormon and having played King George in Hamilton, O’Malley now has two upcoming TV projects. Like Magic tells the story of aspiring magicians trying to make names for themselves in the dog-eat-dog world of magic. O’Malley will play Michael V, one half of a magic duo. In American Princess, a socialite runs away to join a local Renaissance Faire after her wedding doesn’t go as planned. O’Malley is set to play the Faire’s beloved Shakespeare.
How to watch: Like Magic has been picked up by NBC; American Princess on Lifetime
Premiere dates: Like Magic TBA; American Princess June 2, 2019

LOOKING AHEAD

Samantha Marie Ware
Samantha Marie Ware

What/If
Broadway stars: Samantha Ware
Billed as a show about “the ripple effects of what happens when acceptable people start doing unacceptable things,” this season will see a newlywed couple accepting a morally questionable offer from an unknown female character. While we don’t know much about Ware’s character just yet, The Book of Mormon and Hamilton alum (she played Nablungi on Broadway and Peggy/Maria in Hamilton in Chicago) will be sure to bring her A game to the show that also stars Chicago actor Renee Zellweger. She was last seen Off-Broadway in the 2018 rock opera This Ain’t No Disco.
How to Watch: Netflix
Premiere date: Upcoming 2019

WATCH: Watch Highlights From This Ain’t No Disco

Daveed Diggs and Lena Hall
Daveed Diggs and Lena Hall

Snowpiercer
Broadway stars: Daveed Diggs and Lena Hall
Snowpiercer, based on the 2013 sci-fi film of the same name, follows the story of survivors of the second Ice Age as they come together on a luxury train to battle the arctic climate. Things only get more complicated when the lower class train dwellers decide to overrun the train’s management. Diggs will play a quiet but intelligent prisoner on the train who takes on a role in the uprising. Hall will play the train’s archivist who is tasked with recording all of the events that take place on board. Both Diggs and Hall are Tony winners, Diggs for Hamilton and Hall for Hedwig and the Angry Inch. Diggs currently plays Off-Broadway in the new Suzan-Lori Parks play White Noise.
How to Watch: TNT
Premiere date: Upcoming 2019

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Lin-Manuel Miranda Marc J. Franklin

His Dark Materials
Broadway stars: Lin-Manuel Miranda and Ruth Wilson
Based on the British novel trilogy of the same name, His Dark Materials follows young Lyra Belacqua and Will Parry as they travel through different universes. Tony-winning writer-composer-lyricist Lin-Manuel Miranda plays Lee Scoresby, who guides Lyra on her journeys to the North. Tony nominee Ruth Wilson, who made her Broadway debut in Constellations and will star in this season’s King Lear, is Marisa Coulter.
How to Watch: Set to premiere on BBC, with an HBO release in the U.S.
Premiere date: Upcoming 2019

READ: Watch the New Teaser Trailer for His Dark Materials Starring Lin-Manuel Miranda, Ruth Wilson, and More

ALSO ANNOUNCED

Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist with Mary Steenburgen, Alex Newell, and Skylar Astin

Penny Dreadful: City of Angels with Nathan Lane

Filthy Rich with Corey Cott

Avenue 5 with Josh Gad

Heartstrings with Andy Mientus and Kathleen Turner

A Man’s World by Theresa Rebeck

Mrs. Fletcher with Jasmine Cephas Jones

The Politician with Ben Platt, Laura Dreyfuss

Playbill Vault’s Today in Theatre History: March 16

1914 Female impersonator Julian Eltinge is lyricist and star of The Crinoline Girl. Otto Hauerbach provides the book and Percy Wenrich the score. The show twirls at the Knickerbocker Theatre for 11 weeks.

1918 Actor-manager Sir George Alexander dies in London at age 60. His most popular role was the lead in The Prisoner of Zenda. In 1889 he took his own theatre and began producing the plays of Oscar Wilde and Arthur Wing Pinero.

1922 Phileas Fogg is asked to go Round in Fifty instead of 80 days. The musical runs at London’s Hippodrome for 471 performances. Circling the globe are Renee Reel, George Robey, and Wallace and Barry Lupino.

1933 Right around the Three-Cornered Moon is a family that loses its money and doesn’t know how to work. Ruth Gordon and Brian Donlevy are in the cast of the Gertrude Tokonogy comedy. It runs nearly 10 weeks at the Cort Theatre.

1948 An unusual double-bill of one-acts opens at the Cort Theatre: Thornton Wilder‘s The Happy Journey to Trenton and Camden and Jean-Paul Sartre‘s The Respectful Prostitute. It runs a respectable 318 performances.

1969 The Great White Way turns red, white, and blue when 1776 opens at the 46th Street Theatre. The musical about the Declaration of Independence, with music and lyrics by Sherman Edwards and book by Peter Stone, stars Howard Da Silva, William Daniels, Ken Howard, and, making her Broadway debut, Betty Buckley.

1997 Paula Vogel’s How I Learned To Drive opens at Off-Broadway’s Vineyard Theatre and stars Mary-Louise Parker and David Morse. The play transfers to the Century Theatre and wins the 1998 Pulitzer Prize for Drama (as it was not eligible for the 1997 award owing to a scheduling technicality.) Despite the award, the show closes as scheduled, four days after winning, on April 19, 1998.

2000 After years of international touring and even a TV broadcast, the Celtic dance revue Riverdance opens at the Gershwin Theatre under the title Riverdance - on Broadway, and runs 605 performances.

2003 Playwright Suzan-Lori Parks opens her first new drama since winning the Pulitzer Prize the previous year, but many newspapers refuse to print the title. Fucking A, her new take on Nathaniel Hawthorne‘s The Scarlet Letter, opens at the Public Theater‘s Anspacher Theater, with a cast that includes Mos Def, Daphne Rubin-Vega, and Bobby Cannavale. Michael Greif directs.

2014 Mitch Leigh, the theatre composer and jingle writer who had a single, but enduring, hit musical in Man of La Mancha, and who, with a handful of repeated, but dramatically escalating musical phrases, gave the world an aspirational anthem in “The Impossible Dream,” dies at age 86. Leigh’s other Broadway musicals include Cry for Us All, Home Sweet Homer, Sarava, Chu Chem, and Ain’t Broadway Grand. Also an accomplished director, he received a Tony nomination for his work on the 1985 revival of The King and I.

2017 Danny DeVito makes his Broadway debut in a revival of Arthur Miller‘s The Price at the Roundabout Theatre Company‘s American Airlines Theatre. The production also stars Mark Ruffalo, Tony Shalhoub, and Jessica Hecht.

Today’s Birthdays: Elsie Janis 1889. Conrad Nagel 1897. Henny Youngman 1906. Leo McKern 1920. Jerry Lewis 1926. Sheila Bond 1928. Victor Garber 1949. Kate Nelligan 1951. Alan Tudyk 1971.

Watch highlights from the 2016 Encores! production of 1776, starring Santino Fontana as John Adams:

Immersive Shenandoah, Starring Taylor Hicks and Rachel Potter, Opens at Serenbe March 15

Serenbe Playhouse launches its 10th anniversary season with the Civil War-set musical Shenandoah, which officially opens March 15. The Atlanta-area theatre company, known for creating epic, site-specific outdoor productions, sets Shenandoah in the midst of a Civil War re-enactment incorporating more than 100 soldiers, horses, and canon fire to sweep audiences into the story.

Artistic Director Brian Clowdus directs the production that stars American Idol Season 5 winner Taylor Hicks and The X Factor finalist Rachel Potter. Shenandoah has a book by James Lee Barrett, Peter Udell, and Phillip Rose with music by Gary Geld and lyrics by Udell.

Performances are scheduled through April 7.

Also featured in the cast are Caleb Baumann (Gabriel), Daniel Burns (James Anderson), Chase Davidson (Jacob Anderson), Pilot Bunch (Boy Anderson), Sophie DeLeo (Jenny Anderson), Jeremy Gee (John Anderson), Cullen Gray (Nathan Anderson), Jordan Patrick (Sam), Aaron Schilling (Henry Anderson), and Jeremy Skidmore (Rev. Byrd). The ensemble includes Andrew Andersen, Alden Burroughs, Brady Dunn, Destiny Freeman, Alexandria Joy, Karley Rene, and Terrence Smith.

Clowdus is marking the theatre’s 10th anniversary with a season of shows that capture turning points in American history. Up next is the Tony-winning musical Ragtime (May 8–June 9), an all-new adaptation of Pocahontas (June 13–August 4), and Hair (July 3–August 18).

Read: Serenbe Playhouse Will Stage Shenandoah, Ragtime, Hair, and Pocahontas World Premiere in 2019

The creative team for Shenandoah includes Bubba Carr (choreography), Chris Brent Davis (music director), Adam Koch (scenic designer), Joel Coady (lighting designer/director of production), Rob Brooksher (sound designer), Emmie Thompson (costume designer), Mark Warner (technical director), and Jake Guinn (stunt coordinator). Casting is by Binder Casting.

Visit serenbeplayhouse.com.

NYTW Postpones New Anna Deavere Smith Project

New York Theatre Workshop has postponed its previously announced production of a new project from renowned writer and performer Anna Deavere Smith. The yet-untitled play from the Notes From the Field creator was slated to round out NYTW’s 2019 season.

NYTW, which will continue to “work with Anna to realize her exciting vision,” will instead co-produce Chisa Hutchinson’s Proof of Love with Audible at the Minetta Lane this spring. The solo play, to be performed by Suzzanne Douglas, will begin performances May 7 ahead of a May 14 opening.

The switch-up follows NYTW’s earlier postponement of Sanctuary City, a new play by Pulitzer Prize winner Martyna Majok, which was scheduled for the spring as part of the 2018–2019 season. That production was delayed due to creative team scheduling conflicts and will be presented at a later date.

As previously reported, in place of Sanctuary City, the Off-Broadway theatre will offer 17 Border Crossings, created and performed by Thaddeus Phillips, with direction by Tatiana Mallarino (Red Eye to Havre de Grace). The show, a look at the imaginary lines that divide the world and the very real barriers they create, will begin previews April 11 ahead of an April 15 opening.

Currently in performances at NYTW is Hurricane Diane, by Pulitzer Prize finalist Madeleine George, directed by Tony nominee Leigh Silverman (Violet). Hurricane Diane, which is co-produced with WP Theater, runs through March 24. The production follows the acclaimed, sold-out run of Slave Play by Jeremy O. Harris.

Remembering Edward Albee: A Look Back at Some of His Work

Three-time Pulitzer Prize winner Edward Albee, the author of dozens of plays, member of the Dramatists Guild Council, and president of the Edward F. Albee Foundation, was born March 12, 1928. He was awarded the Gold Medal in Drama from the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1980 and in 1996 received the Kennedy Center Honors and the National Medal of Arts. Albee passed away September 16, 2016.

His play Three Tall Women makes its Broadway debut this season starring Glenda Jackson, Laurie Metcalf, and Alison Pill, at the Golden Theatre. Additionally, The Signature Theatre production of Edward Albee’s At Home at the Zoo recently extended a second time, now playing through March 25.

Flip through some of Albee’s stage highlights below:

Read more about his legacy here.

A Day in the Life With Wicked’s Katie Rose Clarke

It’s a sleepy winter morning, snow falling in a gentle blanket over a quiet Manhattan, but Wicked’s Katie Rose Clarke is buzzing. The actor, currently starring as Glinda in the hit musical, has been up for hours, caring for her eight-month-old daughter while settling into her new apartment and preparing for a concert appearance. It’s an impressive amount of multitasking, but Clarke is taking it all in stride.

“I think any working mom will tell you that it’s not easy. It is a hard balance to have no matter where you are in life. But I’m so grateful. There’s a new life that wasn’t there before! Having Eleanor in the world and becoming a mom and still working—it’s humbling I get to do these things and have them at the same time.”

It may be hard work but being back in Wicked is also a full circle moment for Clarke. The actor has played the Good Witch off and on since joining the first national tour show in 2007 (joining the Broadway company in 2010), but she is viewing her current stint with the fresh eyes as a new mother. The new perspective fuels a fresh understanding of both the character and Wicked’s place in the cultural landscape.

“I believe that art and theatre does have the power to change and make a difference. It’s hugely important when girls to come see these roles and see themselves onstage.” Clarke explains. “[Girls] need to see that they can do anything. If they have the work ethic, anything is possible. I want my daughter to see that. Playing Glinda is really taxing physically and vocally, but I find the show to be rewarding and important.”

Flip through photos of Clarke’s day below:

Playbill Vault’s Today in Theatre History: March 9

1856 Comedian Eddie Foy is born. He stars in vaudeville and on Broadway, notably in Mr. Hamlet of Broadway, The Earl and the Girl, and Piff! Paff!! Pouf!!! His son, Eddie Foy Jr., also stars on Broadway.

1922 Eugene O’Neill‘s drama The Hairy Ape, the story of a stoker brutalized by his work, opens at the Provincetown Playhouse.

1959 Juno, Marc Blitzstein‘s musical adaptation of Juno and the Paycock, opens at the Winter Garden Theatre with Shirley Booth and Melvyn Douglas. It runs only 16 performances.

1961 Dore Schary adapts and directs Morris West’s novel The Devil’s Advocate. Leo Genn stars in the drama that runs 116 performances at the Billy Rose Theatre.

1966 The English Stage Company is served 18 summonses as a result of William Gaskill’s production of Edward Bond‘s controversial play Saved. Lord Chamberlain had demanded certain changes be made; the company did not comply. Bond and the company are forced to pay costs.

1978 Moliere in Spite of Himself plays at the Colonnades Theatre Lab in New York. The drama is adapted and staged by Michel Lessac and runs for 100 performances.

1978 Encompass Theatre, an Off-Off-Broadway group, launches a series of plays titled Hear Their Voices: Women Founders of the American Theatre, 1910-1945.

1986 At the New York Shakespeare Festival‘s production of Hamlet, Kevin Kline inhabits the “distracted globe” of the Bard’s immortal counterpart. The stageplay runs at Joseph Papp‘s Public Theater through May 11.

1989 Wendy Wasserstein‘s The Heidi Chronicles opens at the Plymouth Theatre. The Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning drama stars Joan Allen and becomes something of a landmark in plays by and about modern American women.

2002 Leonard Gershe, author of the play Butterflies Are Free, the 1969 Broadway comedy that launched the career of Blythe Danner, dies at 79.

2008 Following a 2007 Off-Broadway run at 37 Arts, In The Heights opens at the Richard Rodgers Theatre. Lin-Manuel Miranda co-wrote and stars in the show about life among the Latino residents of Manhattan’s Washington Heights neighborhood, along with Mandy Gonzalez, Karen Olivo, and Priscilla Lopez. The production wins four Tony Awards, including Best Musical.

2009 33 Variations, writer-director Moisés Kaufman‘s music-infused play that lured Jane Fonda back to Broadway after a 46-year absence, opens at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre.

2010 Love Never Dies, Andrew Lloyd Webber‘s sequel to The Phantom of the Opera, opens at the West End’s Adelphi Theatre. Set at the Coney Island fairgrounds 10 years after The Phantom disappeared from the Paris Opera House, the musical stars Ramin Karimloo and Sierra Boggess as The Phantom and Christine.

2017 Sally Field and Joe Mantello star in a revival of Tennessee WilliamsThe Glass Menagerie, opening at the Belasco Theatre. This is Field’s second time playing Southern matriarch Amanda Wingfield, having previously played the role in a 2004 production at the Kennedy Center.

More of Today’s Birthdays: Will Geer 1902. Taina Elg 1930. Joyce Van Patten 1934. Raul Julia 1940. Beau Bridges 1941. Lonny Price 1959.

Watch highlights from the 2010 West End production of Love Never Dies, starring Sierra Boggess and Ramin Karimloo: