Playbill Vault's Today in Theatre History: April 15 | Playbill

Playbill Vault Playbill Vault's Today in Theatre History: April 15 Next to Normal, starring Alice Ripley, opens on Broadway in 2009.
Alice Ripley, Aaron Tveit, and J. Robert Spencer in Next to Normal Joan Marcus

1929 In The Camel Through the Needle's Eye, Miriam Hopkins plays a poor woman who discovers the hard way that money can't buy happiness. This drama runs six months at the Martin Beck Theatre.

1974 Edward J. Moore wrote and stars opposite Conchata Ferrell in The Sea Horse, a Circle Repertory transfer at the Westside Theatre. Marshall W. Mason stages the four-month run of the tale of a lonely barmaid and the man who wants to marry her.

1987 Alfred Uhry's Driving Miss Daisy opens Off-Broadway at the John Houseman Theatre with Dana Ivey, Ray Gill, and Morgan Freeman. The Playwrights Horizons production, which explored racism through the relationship between a Southern white woman and her Black chauffeur is directed by Ron Lagomarsino.

1999 If you want to understand her, you've got to see things from Amy's View. Judi Dench wins the Tony Award for her role in David Hare's drama about an actor and her relationship with her daughter and career. Richard Eyre directs the National Theatre production at Broadway's Barrymore Theatre, which runs for a limited engagement of 115 performances.

2008 Two stars make their Broadway debuts today. Television star Mario Lopez takes over the role of Zach in the revival of A Chorus Line at the Schoenfeld Theatre. Actor and model Boris Kodjoe steps into the role of Brick in the revival of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at the Broadhurst Theatre, while Terrence Howard takes a three week hiatus from the role.

2009 Alice Ripley plays a suburban woman battling mental illness in Tom Kitt and Brian Yorkey’s musical Next to Normal, which opens on Broadway at the Booth Theatre. Directed by Michael Greif, the production also includes J. Robert Spencer, Aaron Tveit, and Jennifer Damiano. Ripley wins a Tony Award for her performance, and the musical wins the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.

2012 The origins of Peter Pan, his nemesis Captain Hook, and the enchanted island of Neverland come to life in Peter and the Starcatcher, the imaginative stage production helmed by the late Roger Rees and Alex Timbers. Christian Borle, Celia Keenan-Bolger, and Adam Chanler-Berat star in the music-filled play at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre. The production wins five Tony Awards, including one for Borle's performance as devious pirate Black Stache.

2013 Late 1930s New York and the twilight of the burlesque era come to life as the world premiere of Douglas Carter Beane's The Nance opens on Broadway at the Lyceum Theatre. Nathan Lane stars as Chauncey Miles, a headline nance performer in New York burlesque who also happens to be a homosexual.

2015 Finding Neverland, a musical about the relationship between playwright J. M. Barrie and the family that inspired Peter Pan, opens on Broadway at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre. Diane Paulus directs a cast that includes Matthew Morrison, Kelsey Grammer, and Laura Michelle Kelly.

More of Today's Birthdays: Henry James (1843–1916). John Williams (1903–1983). Merle Louise (b. 1934). Bjorn Ulvaeus (b. 1945). Arian Moayed (b. 1980). Caissie Levy (b. 1981). Lauren Molina (b. 1981). Madeleine Martin (b. 1993).

 
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