Playbill Vault's Today in Theatre History: March 17 | Playbill

Stage to Page Playbill Vault's Today in Theatre History: March 17

In 2005, Monty Python's Spamalot opens on Broadway.

David Hyde Pierce, Hank Azaria, Christopher Sieber, Steve Rosen and Tim Curry in the original Broadway company of Monty Python's Spamalot. Joan Marcus

1924 Doris Keane and Jacob Ben-Ami are Welded. Eugene O'Neill's drama outlines a marriage that is stronger than the couple realizes. It lasts three weeks at the 39th Street Theatre.

1926 The songwriting team of Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart highlight The Girl Friend at the Vanderbilt Theatre in New York. Herbert Fields pens the story of a man who trains for a bicycle race using a butter churn.

1943 Would you Kiss and Tell? Hugh Herbert's play about the lives of teenagers runs 956 performances at the Biltmore Theatre in New York.

1960 Dear Liar exposes the relationship between George Bernard Shaw and Mrs. Patrick Campbell. Using the couple's correspondence as a starting point, Jerome Kilty writes and stages the play. Brian Aherne and Katharine Cornell star.

1992 Glenn Close, Richard Dreyfuss, and Gene Hackman headline Ariel Dorfman's Death and the Maiden, which opens at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre. The plays sees plenty of holiday-appropriate green in advance sales, but the show receives mixed reviews and closes August 2.

1993 Theatre legend Helen Hayes dies at the age of 92. Known as the First Lady of the American Theatre, the awards and honors she received during her lifetime (including the first Tony for Best Actress) filled an entire room in her home. In 1955, on the 50th anniversary of her professional stage debut, a Broadway theatre was named for her. In 1993, the Helen Hayes Awards were established to honor achievement in theatre in her hometown of Washington, DC.

1996 Stephen Sondheim and George Furth team up for a non-musical murder mystery, Getting Away With Murder, with a top-notch cast including Terrence Mann, Christine Ebersole, John Rubinstein, Josh Mostel, and Jodi Long. It runs just 17 performances, but is memorable for its macabre ad. The logo, which showed a pistol-toting gargoyle, was changed after the closing notice to show the gargoyle with the gun pointed at its own head.

2005 A banner day for musical theatre as Monty Python's Spamalot opens on Broadway, starring Tim Curry, Hank Azaria, and David Hyde-Pierce, and The Light in the Piazza begins previews. The two shows dominate the 2005 Tony Awards with Piazza winning the most (six) and Spamalot coming away with Best Musical.

2011 A revival of Tom Stoppard's Arcadia opens on Broadway at the Barrymore Theatre. Billy Crudup, who made his Broadway debut as Septimus Hodge in the original New York production, takes on the role of Bernard Nightingale. The cast also includes Raúl Esparza and Margaret Colin.

2014 Gene Feist, who in 1965 founded the theatre troupe that would grow into the multi-theatre Broadway behemoth, the Roundabout Theatre Company, dies at age 91.

2016 The Roundabout Theatre Company's Broadway revival of She Loves Me opens at Studio 54. Laura Benanti, Zachary Levi, Gavin Creel, and Jane Krakowski star.

Today's Birthdays: Paul Green (1894-1981). Shemp Howard (1895-1955). Alfred Newman (1901-1970). Tamara Geva (1907-1997). Frederick Brisson (1912-1984). Mercedes McCambridge (1916-2004). Rudolph Nureyev (1938-1993). Gary Sinise (b. 1955). Vicki Lewis (b. 1960). Kelly Hutchinson (b. 1976). 

Look Back at Spamalot on Broadway

 
More Today in Theatre History
 X

Blocking belongs
on the stage,
not on websites.

Our website is made possible by
displaying online advertisements to our visitors.

Please consider supporting us by
whitelisting playbill.com with your ad blocker.
Thank you!