The History of our Broadway Theatre
Circle in the Square Theater was originally founded in 1950 by Theodore Mann and José Quintero in an abandoned nightclub in New York City’s Greenwich Village. The name refers to the fact that it was a theater in the round located at 5 Sheridan Square. Mann remained its Artistic Director until his resignation in 1996.
Mann and Quintero had become acquainted while doing summer stock with the Loft Players at the Maverick Theater in Woodstock, New York, and hoped to create a year-round repertory company in the City, and ultimately, their project became the epicenter of a national movement for Off-Broadway theater. By 1951, Jason Wingreen, Aileen Cramer, Ed Mann, and Emily Stevens also joined the founding members.
In 1972, Circle moved to its current Broadway home on 50th Street – the first new Broadway theatre in fifty years.
Over the years, our theatre offered America’s finest actors the chance to take on demanding roles in an atmosphere free of commercial pressure. Circle encouraged these actors to make bold choices and responded to their desire to explore plays that fell outside the popular repertory. Circle committed to the presentation of plays not normally produced on Broadway, allowing our audiences to see challenging material unavailable to them elsewhere.
After the close of the theatre as a producing entity in 1998, Circle in the Square Theatre has remained a fixture on Broadway, hosting productions that carry on the tradition of excellence. In recent years, Circle has been home to 2015 Best Musical Tony Award Winner Fun Home, Jez Butterworth’s The River starring Hugh Jackman, Enemy of the People, Audra McDonald’s Tony-winning performance in Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar & Grill, Lombardi, The Norman Conquests, and Circle in the Square’s longest running show in its history, the multiple Tony-Nominated production of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee.
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Off-Broadway
List only includes shows performed at Circle in the Square's Sheridan Square and Bleecker Street theaters. Productions are listed by the year of their first performance.
1952: Summer and Smoke
1955: La Ronde
1956: The Iceman Cometh
1959: Our Town
1958: The Quare Fellow
1962: Under Milk Wood
1963: Desire Under the Elms
1963: The Trojan Women
1965: The White Devil
1966: Eh?
1967: Drums in the Night
1967: Iphigenia in Aulis
1968: A Moon for the Misbegotten
1969: Little Murders
1970: Boesman and Lena
1972: We Bombed in New Haven
1973: The Hot l Baltimore
1978: I'm Getting My Act Together and Taking It on the Road
1981: American Buffalo
1982: Greater Tuna
1984: To Gillian on Her 37th Birthday
1987: Oil City Symphony
1990: The Rothschilds -
List only includes shows performed at Circle in the Square's Paramount Plaza theater. Productions are listed by the year of their first performance.
1972: Mourning Becomes Electra
1973: Medea
1973: Uncle Vanya
1973: The Waltz of the Toreadors
1973: The Iceman Cometh
1974: Scapino
1974: The National Health
1974: Where's Charley?
1975: All God's Chillun Got Wings
1975: Death of a Salesman
1975: Ah, Wilderness!
1975: The Glass Menagerie
1976: Geraldine Fitzgerald in Songs of the Street
1976: The Lady from the Sea
1976: Pal Joey
1976: The Night of the Iguana
1977: Romeo and Juliet
1977: The Importance of Being Earnest
1977: Tartuffe
1977: Saint Joan
1978: 13 Rue de l'Amour
1978: Once in a Lifetime
1978: The Inspector General
1978: Man and Superman
1980: Major Barbara
1980: The Man Who Came to Dinner
1980: The Bacchae
1980: John Gabriel Borkman
1981: The Father
1981: Candida
1982: Macbeth
1982: Present Laughter
1983: The Misanthrope
1983: The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial
1983: Heartbreak House
1984: Awake and Sing
1984: Design for Living
1985: Arms and the Man
1985: The Marriage of Figaro
1985: The Robert Klein Show!
1986: The Caretaker
1986: You Never Can Tell
1987: Coastal Disturbances
1988: A Streetcar Named Desire
1988: An Evening with Robert Klein
1988: The Night of the Iguana
1988: The Devil's Disciple
1989: Ghetto
1989: Sweeney Todd -
List only includes shows performed at Circle in the Square's Paramount Plaza theater. Productions are listed by the year of their first performance.
1990: The Miser
1991: Taking Steps
1991: Getting Married
1991: On Borrowed Time
1992: Salome
1992: Anna Karenina
1993: Three Productions by Thornton Wilder
1994: The Shadow Box
1995: Uncle Vanya
1995: The Rose Tattoo
1995: Garden District
1995: Holiday
1996: Bus Stop
1996: Tartuffe
1996: Hughie
1997: Stanley
1999: Not About Nightingales
2000: True West
2000: The Rocky Horror Show
2002: Metamorphoses
2003: Life (x) 3
2004: Frozen
2005: The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee
2008: Glory Days
2009: The Norman Conquests
2010: The Miracle Worker
2010: Lombardi
2011: Godspell
2013: Soul Doctor
2014: Bronx Bombers
2014: Lady Day at Emerson's Bar and Grill
2014: The River
2015: Fun Home
2016: In Transit
2017: Once on This Island
2019: Oklahoma!
2021: Chicken & Biscuits
2022: American Buffalo
2022: KPOP
2024: An Enemy of the People
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Circle produced over 150 shows while it was a producing theatre, earning a national reputation for its landmark presentations of Bellow, Capote, Moliere, Shakespeare, Steinbeck, Thomas, Wilder and Williams.
Most influential were productions of O’Neill’s The Iceman Cometh, Long Day's Journey Into Night, A Moon for the Misbegotten and two definitive productions of Hughie.
Circle also introduced audiences in the U.S. to Genet’s The Balcony, Behan’s The Quare Fellow, Fugard’s Boesman and Lena, and offered major revivals of Euripides’ The Trojan Women, Webster’s The White Devil, Pirandello’s Six Characters in Search of an Author, Shaw’s Heartbreak House, Barry’s Holidat, Inge’s Bus Stop, Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd and Williams’ The Glass Menagerie, The Night of the Iguana, A Streetcar Named Desire, The Rose Tattoo, and Garden District.
Circle is also responsible for the New York premieres of such works as Weller’s Loose Ends, Sobel’s Ghetto, Howe’s Coastal Disturbances and Korder’s Search and Destroy.
Thornton Wilder’s Plays for Bleeker Street and the McNally-Melfi-Horowitz triptych, Morning, Noon and Night were written specifically for Circle in the Square.
In recent years, the Circle stage has been home to Metamorphoses (2002), The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee (2005), Fun Home (2015), The Norman Conquests (2009), Lady Day at Emerson's Bar and Grill (2014), The River (2014), Once on This Island (2017), Oklahoma! (2019), and An Enemy of the People (2024)
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Josephine Abady, Alan Arkin, Wlliam Ball, Michael Cacoyannis, Liviu Ciuei, Robert Falls, Theodore Mann, Mike Nichols, Stephen Porter, Jose Quintero, David Saint, Susan Shulman and David Warren.
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Jane Alexander
Mary Alice
Alan Arkin
Elizabeth Ashley
Annette Bening
Kelly Bishop
Philip Bosco
Matthew Broderick
Zak Brown
David Carradine
Myra Carter
Dixie Carter
Richard Chamberlain
Julie Christie
Liviu Ciulei
Jill Clayburgh
Michael Cocoyannis
Frances Conroy
Billy Crudup
John Cullum
Tim Daly
Blythe Danner
Colleen Dewhurst
Griffin Dunne
Mildred Dunnock
Marsha Eck
Gregg Edelman
Melissa Errico
Peter Falk
James Farentino
Jules Feiffer
Jules Fisher
Hallie Foote
Horton Foote
Elizabeth Franz
Victor Garber
Lillian Gish
John Glover
Tony Goldwyn
Tammy Grimes
George Grizzard
Bob Gunton
Uta Hagen
Harry Hamlin
Rosemary Harris
Rex Harrison
Glenne Headley
Dustin Hoffman
George S. Irving
Dana Ivey
Anne Jackson
Salome Jens
Michael Jeter
James Earl Jones
Raul Julia
Lisa Kirk -
Kevin Kline
Swoosie Kurtz
Nathan Lane
Frank Langella
Anthony LaPaglia
Laura Linney
John Lithgow
John Malkovich
Audra McDonald
Frances McDormand
Leonard Melfi
Eve Merriam
Sylvia Miles
Rita Moreno
Michael Moriarty
Joe Namath
Carrie Nye
Al Pacino
Geraldine Page
Irene Papas
Mary-Louise Parker
Estelle Parsons
Austin Pendleton
Bronson Pinchot
Larry Pine
Amanda Plummer
Robert Lu Pone
Stephen Porter
Aidan Quinn
Ellis Raab
Vanessa Redgrave
Lynn Redgrave
Jason Robards
Reg Rogers
John Rubinstein
Mercedes Ruehl
George C. Scott
George Segal
Martin Sheen
Antony Sher
Jamey Sheridan
Gary Sinise
Vitali Solomon
Maureen Stapleton
Frances Sternhagen
Marlo Thomas
Rip Torn
Maria Tucci
Cicely Tyson
Eli Wallach
Treat Williams
Nicol Williamson
Elizabeth Wilson
Joanne Woodward
Max Wright
Theresa Wright
Circle’s first production was Howard Richardson and Richard Berney’s Dark of the Moon in 1951. Tickets were sold for $1.50 apiece. City officials determined that the Sheridan Square space had been zoned as a cabaret, so tables were built around the stage, and the audience was served cookies and punch in order to meet the requirements of the cabaret laws. Other shows staged during Circle’s inaugural season included Jean Anouihl’s Antigone and Federico Garcia Lorca’s Yerma.
In 1952, Circle produced a revival of Tennessee Williams’ Summer and Smoke starring Geraldine Page, which had failed on Broadway a few years earlier. New York Times theater critic Brooks Atkinson attended the opening night performance, and wrote in his review that “nothing has happened for quite a long time as admirable as the new production at Circle in the Square.” Summer and Smoke became Circle’s first hit, and the Off-Broadway theater movement took root.
Mann and Quintero had lobbied tirelessly since Circle’s inception for permission from Carlotta Monterey O’Neill to produce one of her late husband’s plays, and in 1956 permission was granted for a production of The Iceman Cometh starring Jason Robards, Jr. Circle’s burgeoning reputation was solidified by the production which, like Summer and Smoke, had originally been a Broadway failure. This success has been credited for re-establishing Eugene O’Neill as one of America’s greatest dramatists, and brought Circle numerous awards. It was followed up later that year with the American premier of Long Day’s Journey into Night, starring Frederic March, Florence Eldridge, and Jason Robards, Jr. The production garnered Tony Awards for Best Play and Best Actor for Frederic March. Over the course of its lifespan, Circle in the Square produced nearly all of Eugene O’Neill’s major works.
The company moved to a new performance space at 159 Bleecker Street in 1960, the original home of the Amato Opera Company. The Bleecker Street Theater’s three-sided stage allowed for democratic seating, use of a minimal amount of scenery, and for the audience to be close to the action. This style, pioneered by Circle in the Square, later became a mainstay of regional theater. Also at this time, Quintero left the company to pursue other opportunities. Mann remained at the helm as Artistic Director, a position he would occupy until 1993. His partnership with Paul Libin, Circle’s long-time Managing Director and Producing Director, began in 1963 with their production of The Trojan Women.
Throughout the 1960s, Circle continued to develop as a home for both revivals of classic works, such as Othello and Iphigenia in Aulis, and for new and experimental works such as the American premiers of Jean Genet’s The Balcony and Brendan Behan’s The Quare Fellow. Additionally, Circle presented three critically-acclaimed seasons at Ford’s Theater in Washington, D.C.
In the fall of 1972, Circle moved its base of operations once again, this time at the invitation of Mayor John Lindsay to the Joseph E. Levine Theatre, a 650-seat house at 50th Street and Broadway, though the Bleecker Street theater continued to house workshops of experimental plays and productions of new works until the late 1970s. The first production in their new home was O’Neill’s Mourning Becomes Electra starring Colleen Dewhurst.
Although Circle in the Square is most often associated with Off-Broadway theater, they had been producing shows in Broadway houses as far back as Alfred Hayes’ The Girl on the Via Flaminia in 1954. With the opening of the Uptown theater, Circle had a permanent home on Broadway.
Circle in the Square Uptown, as it came to be known, was also the home of the Circle in the Square Theater School, which opened in 1961 in Greenwich Village, and remains a highly regarded acting conservatory.
In its 70-year history, Circle in the Square launched or reinvigorated the careers of many playwrights, actors, and directors. Among the notable figures who worked on Circle productions are George C. Scott, Tennessee Williams, Thornton Wilder, Al Pacino, Audra McDonald, Geraldine Page, James Earl Jones, Mary Louise Parker, Vanessa Redgrave, and Norm Lewis.
It offered America’s finest actors the chance to take on demanding roles in an atmosphere free of commercial pressure, encouraging these actors to make bold choices and responded to their desire to explore plays that fell outside the popular repertory. Circle committed to the presentation of plays not normally produced on Broadway, allowing our audiences to see challenging material unavailable to them elsewhere.
The History of our Theatre School
Circle in the Square Theatre School opened its doors in 1961 in Greenwich Village with the aim of helping professional actors improve their craft. Working actors could sign up for courses taught by producers and actors who were connected to the theatre, that lasted upwards of six weeks at a time. The atmosphere was that of colleagues teaching colleagues.
In 1972, Circle moved uptown to the current location on West 50th street and changed its focus. Instead of providing short-term classes exclusively to the professional actor, the School became a conservatory that opened its doors to aspiring professionals as well. A full-time training program — The Professional Theatre Workshop — was developed initially with the hope of training the next group of actors for Circle in the Square productions. This two-year workshop strove to combine a collegiate and eclectic style with a rigorous program meant to prepare an actor for any challenge, whether they had worked professionally or not. In addition, the school instituted the Summer Workshops, which offered similar training to the Full-Time program but in a condensed time period, originally seven weeks.
By 1996, the School introduced a musical theatre program. Like the initial workshop, The Professional Musical Theatre Workshop provided intense acting training, but added components that would be specific to the musical theatre actor.
At its inception, Circle in the Square Theatre School only had fifteen students. Now, every year, between its various programs, Circle has approximately 150 students walk through its doors to hone their craft and become great actors.