Notable Productions
- 1928: Diamond Lil
- 1940: Du Barry Was a Lady
- 1941: The Corn is Green
- 1946: The Glass Menagerie
- 1947: Our Lan'
- 1949: The Madwoman of Chaillot
- 1952: New Faces of 1952
- 1954: The Boy Friend
- 1955: The Matchmaker
- 1957: The Tunnel of Love
- 1958: The Entertainer
- 1958: Gigi
- 1960: Becket
- 1961: The Night of the Iguana
- 1964: The Subject Was Roses
- 1965: The Owl and the Pussycat; Cactus Flower
- 1971: The Incomparable Max
- 1972: Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well and Living in Paris; Grease
- 1980: Whose Life is it Anyway?; A Day in Hollywood / A Night in the Ukraine
- 1982: Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat
- 1984: The Human Comedy
- 1985: Pack of Lies; Song and Dance
- 1988: Speed the Plow
- 1989: Lend Me a Tenor
- 1992: Conversations with My Father
- 1997: Triumph of Love
- 1998: 'Art'
- 2000: Copenhagen
- 2003: Anna in the Tropics
- 2004: A Raisin In the Sun"
- 2005: Glengarry Glen Ross
- 2006: Three Days of Rain; Martin Short: Fame Becomes Me
- 2007: Frost/Nixon; Rock 'n' Roll*
- 2008: The Country Girl; 13 (musical)
- 2009: God of Carnage
- 2010: Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson (Previews began September 21, 2010. Show's run ended January 2, 2011)
- 2011: That Championship Season (Previews began February 9, 2011, opening March 6, with a limited engagement until May 29, 2011)
- 2011: The Mountaintop (Previews began September 22, 2011, opening October 13, 2011. Show's run ended January 22, 2012)
- 2012: Once (Previews began February 28, 2012, opened March 18, 2012)
Read more about this topic: Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre
Famous quotes containing the words notable and/or productions:
“Every notable advance in technique or organization has to be paid for, and in most cases the debit is more or less equivalent to the credit. Except of course when its more than equivalent, as it has been with universal education, for example, or wireless, or these damned aeroplanes. In which case, of course, your progress is a step backwards and downwards.”
—Aldous Huxley (18941963)
“It is well known, that the best productions of the best human intellects, are generally regarded by those intellects as mere immature freshman exercises, wholly worthless in themselves, except as initiatives for entering the great University of God after death.”
—Herman Melville (18191891)