The Music Box Revue opened the theatre glamorously in September 1921, and for each of the next four years, Berlin created an entirely new edition of the show. The theatre then became home to a number of non-musicals starting with
Cradle Snatchers (1925), which featured a young Humphrey Bogart,
Chicago (1926) — later adapted into a musical by Kander and Ebb, and Philip Barry’s
Paris Bound (1927). Cole Porter’s musical
Paris (1928) and the musical revue
The Little Show (1929) closed out the decade.
The 1930s at the Music Box were George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart’s decade. Their show
Once in a Lifetime (1930) was followed by
Merrily We Roll Along (1934)—later adapted into a musical by Stephen Sondheim,
First Lady (1935),
I’d Rather Be Right (which transferred here from the Alvin in 1938), and
The Man Who Came to Dinner (1939). Kaufman (with Morrie Ryskind) penned the book for the Gershwin musical
Of Thee I Sing (1931), which became the first musical to win the Pulitzer Prize. Kaufman also collaborated with Edna Ferber on a number of productions in the 1930s, beginning with
Dinner at Eight (1932), followed by
Stage Door (1936) and
The Land Is Bright (1941), and directed John Steinbeck’s
Of Mice and Men (1937). Hart collaborated with Irving Berlin on
As Thousands Cheer (1933).
A number of notable theatre artists had shows at the Music Box in the 1940s and 1950s. Mike Todd’s
Star and Garter (1942) included music by Irving Berlin and featured Gypsy Rose Lee. Rodgers and Hammerstein produced
I Remember Mama (1944), whose cast included a young Marlon Brando making his Broadway debut. Brando returned to the theatre in
A Flag is Born (1946) by Kurt Weill, whose
Lost in the Stars (1949) also premiered here. Other significant productions include three William Inge plays:
Picnic (1953),
Bus Stop (1955), and
The Dark at the Top of the Stairs (1957);
Separate Tables (1956), an adaptation of
Rashomon (1959) and Peter Shaffer’s
Five Finger Exercise (1959).
Many distinguished playwrights of the 20th century premiered works at the Music Box, including Arthur Laurents’s
Invitation to a March (1960) and Harold Pinter’s
The Homecoming (1967). The 1970s were a decade of mystery, with Anthony Shaffer’s
Sleuth (1970) and
Deathtrap (1978) both running over one thousand performances. Other shows of the 70s and 80s include Alan Ayckbourn’s
Absurd Person Singular (1974), the musical revue
Side by Side by Sondheim (1977),
Agnes of God (1982) with Amanda Plummer, and the Shubert co-production of
Les Liaisons Dangereuses (1987) starring Alan Rickman and Lindsay Duncan.
In the 1990s productions at the playhouse included the musical
Blood Brothers (1993), a theatrical adaptation of the Rodgers and Hammerstein film
State Fair (1996) — producer David Merrick’s last show,
Closer (1999) starring Natasha Richardson, and a revival of Peter Shaffer’s
Amadeus (1999).
The Music Box was home to the Shubert production of Michel Legrand’s
Amour (2002), and a revival of Tennessee Williams’s
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (2003) with Ashley Judd and Ned Beatty. Julianne Moore made her Broadway debut at the Music Box in David Hare's
The Vertical Hour (2006) and Angela Lansbury returned to Broadway here in Terrence McNally's
Deuce (2007) with Marian Seldes. The theatre also premiered Tony and Pulitzer Prize winning
August: Osage County playwright Tracy Lett’s
Superior Donuts (2009), and then offered a revival of
Lend Me A Tenor (2010). More recently, the Music Box showcased the Tony Award winning plays
Jerusalem (2011),
One Man, Two Guvnors (2012), and the Best Musical Revival of
Pippin (2013), the Tony nominated play
King Charles III (2015), the Tony nominated musical
Shuffle Along (2016) and the Tony winning musical
Dear Evan Hansen (2016).
Visit the Internet Broadway Database for a complete list.