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Les Misérables (musical)

Les Misérables (/l ˌmɪzəˈrɑːb(əl), -blə/ lay MIZ-ə-RAHB(-əl), -⁠RAH-blə, French: [le mizeʁabl]), colloquially known as Les Mis or Les Miz (/l ˈmɪz/ lay MIZ), is a sung-through musical and an adaptation of Victor Hugo's 1862 novel of the same name, by Claude-Michel Schönberg (music), Alain Boublil, Jean-Marc Natel (original French lyrics) and Herbert Kretzmer (English lyrics). The original French musical premiered in Paris in 1980 with direction by Robert Hossein. Its English-language adaptation by producer Cameron Mackintosh has been running in London since October 1985, making it the longest-running musical in the West End and the second longest-running musical in the world after the original Off-Broadway run of The Fantasticks.

Les Misérables
MusicClaude-Michel Schönberg
Lyrics
(Original Text)
Book
  • Alain Boublil
  • Claude-Michel Schönberg
BasisLes Misérables
by Victor Hugo
Premiere24 September 1980: Palais des Sports, Paris
ProductionsMultiple global productions since 1985
Awards

Set in early 19th-century France, Les Misérables is the story of Jean Valjean, a French peasant, and his desire for redemption, released in 1815 after serving nineteen years in jail for stealing a loaf of bread for his sister's starving child. Valjean decides to break his parole and start his life anew after a bishop inspires him with a tremendous act of mercy. But a police inspector named Javert refuses to let him escape justice and pursues him for most of the play. Along the way, Valjean and a slew of characters are swept into a revolutionary period in France, where a group of young idealists attempt to overthrow the government at a street barricade in Paris.

Background

Les Misérables was originally released as a French-language concept album,[1] and the first musical-stage adaptation of Les Misérables was presented at the Palais des Sports in 1980.[2]

In 1983, about six months after producer Cameron Mackintosh had opened Cats on Broadway, he received a copy of the French concept album from director Peter Farago. Farago had been impressed by the work and asked Mackintosh to produce an English-language version of the show. Initially reluctant, Mackintosh eventually agreed. Mackintosh, in conjunction with the Royal Shakespeare Company, assembled a production team to adapt the French musical for a British audience. After two years in development, the English-language version opened in London on 8 October 1985, by the Royal Shakespeare Company at the Barbican Centre, then the London home of the RSC. The success of the West End musical led to a Broadway production.

Critical reception and milestones

Critical reviews for Les Misérables were initially negative. At the opening of the London production, The Sunday Telegraph's Francis King described the musical as "a lurid Victorian melodrama produced with Victorian lavishness" and Michael Ratcliffe of The Observer considered the show "a witless and synthetic entertainment", while literary scholars condemned the project for converting classic literature into a musical.[3][4] Public opinion differed: the box office received record orders. The three-month engagement sold out, and reviews improved. The original London production ran from October 1985 to July 2019, playing over 13,000 performances and making it the second longest-running musical in the world after The Fantasticks,[5] the second longest-running West End show after The Mousetrap,[6] and the longest-running musical in the West End.[7] On 3 October 2010, the show celebrated its 25th anniversary with three productions running in London: the original production at the Queen's Theatre; the 25th Anniversary touring production at the Barbican Centre; and the 25th Anniversary concert at London's O2 Arena.[7]

The Broadway production opened 12 March 1987 and ran until 18 May 2003, closing after 6,680 performances. At the time of its closing, it was the second-longest-running musical in Broadway history.[8] As of 2022, it remains the sixth longest-running Broadway show.[9] The show was nominated for 12 Tony Awards, of which it won eight, including Best Musical and Best Original Score.

Subsequently, numerous tours and international and regional productions have been staged, as well as concert and broadcast productions. Several recordings have also been made. A Broadway revival opened in 2006 at the Broadhurst Theatre and closed in 2008, and a second Broadway revival opened in 2014 at the Imperial Theatre and closed in September 2016. The show was placed first in a BBC Radio 2 listener poll of Britain's "Number One Essential Musicals" in 2005, receiving more than forty percent of the votes.[10] A film version directed by Tom Hooper was released at the end of 2012 to generally positive reviews as well as numerous awards.

Emblem

 
The drawing of Cosette by Émile Bayard that served as the model for the musical's emblem.

The musical's emblem is a picture of the waif Cosette sweeping the Thénardiers' inn (which occurs in the musical during "Castle on a Cloud"). It is usually cropped to a head-and-shoulders portrait, superimposed on the French flag. The image is based on an etching by Gustave Brion, which in turn was based on the drawing by Émile Bayard. Bayard's drawing appeared in several of the novel's earliest French-language editions.

Synopsis

Prologue

In 1815 in France, a chain gang of prisoners work at hard labor ("Prologue: Work Song"). After 19 years in prison, Jean Valjean, "Prisoner 24601," is released on parole by the prison guard Javert. By law, Valjean must display a yellow ticket of leave, which identifies him as an ex-convict ("On Parole").

As a convict, Valjean is shunned wherever he goes and cannot find regular work with decent wages or lodging. Only the Bishop of Digne offers him food and shelter. Discontented, Valjean steals the Bishop's silver. He is captured by the police, but rather than turn him in, the Bishop tells the police that the silver was a gift, also giving Valjean a pair of silver candlesticks. The Bishop tells Valjean that he must use silver to become an honest man. ("Valjean Arrested, Valjean Forgiven"). Humbled by the Bishop's kindness, Valjean resolves to redeem himself ("Valjean's Soliloquy (What Have I Done?)") and tears up his yellow ticket, breaking his parole.

Act I

Eight years later, in 1823, Jean Valjean assumed a new identity as Monsieur Madeleine, a wealthy factory owner and mayor of Montreuil-sur-Mer. Fantine is a single mother working in his factory, trying to support her daughter Cosette, who is being raised by an innkeeper and his wife while Fantine labors in the city. The factory foreman lusts after Fantine, and when she rejects his advances, he takes it out on the other workers, who resent her for it. One day, a coworker steals a letter about Cosette from Fantine, revealing to the other workers that Fantine has a child. A fight breaks out, and the foreman and other workers use the incident as a pretense to fire Fantine ("At the End of the Day"). Fantine reflects on her broken dreams and about Cosette's father, who abandoned them both ("I Dreamed a Dream"). Desperate for money, she sells her locket and hair, finally becoming a prostitute ("Lovely Ladies") and attracting local sailors. When she fights back against an abusive customer named Bamatabois, Javert, now a police inspector stationed in Montreuil-sur-Mer, arrives to arrest her. Valjean passes by the scene and pities Fantine when he realizes she once worked for him. He orders Javert to release her, and Valjean takes her to a hospital ("Fantine's Arrest").

Soon afterward, Valjean rescues a man who is pinned by a runaway cart ("The Runaway Cart"). Javert, who has pursued the fugitive Valjean all these years, witnesses the incident. He becomes suspicious, remembering the incredible strength Valjean displayed in the work camp. However, it turns out a man who looks like Valjean has been arrested and is about to go to trial for breaking parole. The real Valjean realizes that this case of mistaken identity could free him forever, but he is not willing to see an innocent man go to prison in his place. He confesses his identity to the court ("Who Am I? (The Trial)"). At the hospital, a delirious Fantine dreams of Cosette. Valjean promises to find Cosette and protect her ("Come to Me (Fantine's Death)"). Relieved, Fantine succumbs to her illness and dies. Javert arrives to take Valjean back into custody, but Valjean asks Javert for time to fetch Cosette. Javert refuses, insisting that a criminal like Valjean can never change for the better. They struggle, but Valjean overpowers Javert and escapes ("The Confrontation").

In Montfermeil, the duplicitous innkeepers, the Thénardiers, use Cosette as a servant and treat her cruelly while extorting money from Fantine to indulge their own daughter Éponine. Cosette dreams of a life with a mother where she is not forced to work and is treated lovingly ("Castle on a Cloud"). The Thénardiers cheat their customers, stealing their possessions and setting high prices for low-quality services while living a life of criminal depravity ("Master of the House"). Valjean meets Cosette while she's on an errand drawing water, and offers the Thénardiers payment to adopt her ("The Bargain"). The Thénardiers feign concern for Cosette, claiming that they love her like a daughter and that she is in fragile health. Valjean negotiates with the Thénadiers, for whom he pays 1,500 francs in the end. Valjean and Cosette leave for Paris ("The Waltz of Treachery").

 
Julie Lund as Éponine in a Danish production of the musical

Nine years later, in 1832, Paris is in upheaval because of the impending death of General Lamarque, the only man in the government who shows mercy to the poor. Among those mingling in the streets are the student revolutionaries Marius Pontmercy and Enjolras, who contemplate the effect Lamarque's death will have on the poor and desperate in Paris. The Thénardiers have since lost their inn and now run a street gang that consists of thugs Brujon, Babet, Claquesous, and Montparnasse. The Thénardiers' daughter Éponine is also now grown and has fallen in love with her oblivious friend Marius, as well as the streetwise young urchin Gavroche who knows everything that happens in the slums ("Look Down"). The Thénardiers prepare to con some charitable visitors, who turn out to be Valjean and a fully-grown Cosette. While the gang confounds her father, Cosette runs into Marius, and the pair fall in love. Thénardier recognizes Valjean, but Javert intervenes before they can finish the robbery ("The Robbery"). Valjean and Cosette escape, and only later does Javert suspect who they were. Javert makes a vow that he will find Valjean and recapture him ("Stars"). Meanwhile, Marius persuades Éponine to help him find Cosette ("Éponine's Errand").

At a small café, Enjolras exhorts a group of idealistic students to prepare for revolution. Marius interrupts the serious atmosphere by fantasizing about his new-found love, much to the amusement of his compatriots ("The ABC Café/Red and Black"). When Gavroche brings the news of General Lamarque's death, the students realize that they can use the public's dismay to incite their revolution and that their time has come ("Do You Hear the People Sing?"). At Valjean's house, Cosette thinks about her meeting with Marius. She confronts Valjean about the secrets he keeps about his and her own past ("Rue Plumet/In My Life"). Éponine leads Marius to Cosette's garden. He and Cosette meet again and confess their mutual love, while a heartbroken Éponine watches them through the garden gate and laments that Marius has fallen in love with another ("A Heart Full of Love"). Thénardier and his gang arrive, intending to rob Valjean's house, but Éponine stops them by screaming a warning ("The Attack on Rue Plumet"). The scream alerts Valjean, who believes that the intruder was Javert. He tells Cosette that it's time once again for them to go on the run, and starts planning for them to flee France altogether.

On the eve of the 1832 Paris Uprising, Valjean prepares to go into exile. Cosette and Marius part in despair, while Enjolras encourages all of Paris to join the revolution. Éponine acknowledges despairingly that Marius will never love her, and Marius is conflicted about whether to follow Cosette or join the uprising. Meanwhile, Javert reveals his plans to spy on the students and the Thénardiers scheme to profit off the coming violence. Marius decides to stand with his friends, and all anticipate what the dawn will bring ("One Day More").[7][11]

Act II

 
John Owen-Jones as Jean Valjean

The students build a barricade to serve as their rally point. Javert, who is disguised as a rebel, volunteers to "spy" on the government troops. Marius discovers that Éponine has disguised herself as a boy to join the rebels. Wanting to keep his best friend safe from the impending violence, he sends her to deliver a farewell letter to Cosette. ("Building the Barricade (Upon These Stones)") Valjean intercepts the letter and learns about Marius and Cosette's romance. Éponine walks the streets of Paris alone, imagining that Marius is there with her, but laments that her love for Marius will never be reciprocated ("On My Own").

The French army arrives at the barricade and demands that the students surrender ("At the Barricade"). However, Javert tells the students that the government will not attack that night ("Javert's Arrival"). Gavroche recognizes him and quickly exposes him as a spy, and the students detain him ("Little People"). The students plan to spark a general uprising with their act of defiance, hoping that all the people of Paris will side with them and overwhelm the army. Éponine returns to find Marius but is shot by the soldiers who were crossing the barricade. As Marius holds her, she assures him that she feels no pain and reveals her love for him before dying in his arms ("A Little Fall of Rain (Eponine's Death)"). The students mourn this first loss of life at the barricades and resolve to fight in her name. Enjolras attempts to comfort Marius, who is devastated and heartbroken over the death of his best friend. Valjean arrives at the barricade, crossing the government lines disguised as a soldier ("Night of Anguish"). He hopes that he can protect Marius in the coming battle for Cosette's sake. The rebels are suspicious of him at first, but accept him after he saves Enjolras from a soldier. Valjean asks Enjolras to allow him to be the executioner of the imprisoned Javert, which Enjolras grants. But as soon as Valjean and Javert are alone, Valjean frees him. Javert warns Valjean that he will not give up his pursuit and rejects what he perceives as a bargain for Valjean's freedom. Valjean says there are no conditions to his release, and holds no grudges toward Javert for doing his duty ("The First Attack").

The students settle down for the night and express anxiety about the battle to come. Enjolras tells the other students to stay awake for a surprise attack, but he tells Marius to get some sleep because of the latter's devastation over losing Éponine. Grantaire gets angry and asks the students if they fear dying, and Marius wonders if Cosette will remember him if he does ("Drink with Me"). Valjean prays to God to protect Marius, even if the cost for his safety requires Valjean's own life ("Bring Him Home"). As dawn approaches, Enjolras realizes that the people of Paris have not risen up with them, but resolves to fight on in spite of the impossible odds ("Dawn of Anguish"). Their resolve is further increased when the army kills Gavroche, who snuck out to collect ammunition from bodies on the other side of the barricade ("The Second Attack (Death of Gavroche)"). The army gives a final warning, but the rebels fight to the last man. Everyone at the barricade is killed except Valjean and a gravely wounded Marius, who both escape into the sewers ("The Final Battle"). Javert returns to the barricade to search for Valjean, and he finds the open sewer grating.

Valjean carries Marius through the sewers but collapses from exhaustion. Thénardier, who has been looting bodies, comes upon them and extracts a ring from the unconscious Marius. He flees when Valjean regains consciousness ("Dog Eats Dog"). When Valjean carries Marius to the sewer's exit, he finds Javert waiting for him. Valjean begs Javert for one hour to bring Marius to a doctor, and Javert reluctantly agrees. Javert finds himself unable to reconcile Valjean's merciful acts with his perception of Valjean as an irredeemable criminal. Finding himself torn between his beliefs about God and his desire to adhere to the law, Javert commits suicide by throwing himself into the Seine ("Javert's Suicide").

In the wake of the failed revolution, many women mourn the deaths of the students ("Turning"). Marius, wounded but alive, despairs at the deaths of his friends and perceives that their sacrifice was for nothing ("Empty Chairs at Empty Tables"). As he wonders who saved his own life, Cosette confronts him and they reaffirm their blossoming romance. Valjean realizes that Cosette will not need him as a caretaker once she is married and gives them his blessing ("Every Day"). Valjean confesses to Marius that he is an escaped convict and must go away because his presence endangers Cosette ("Valjean's Confession"). He makes Marius promise never to tell Cosette. A few months later, Marius and Cosette marry ("Wedding Chorale"). The Thénardiers gatecrash the reception disguised as nobility and attempt to blackmail Marius, telling him that Valjean is a murderer and that Thénardier saw him carrying a corpse in the sewers. When Thénardier shows him the ring he stole as proof, Marius realizes that it was Valjean who saved his life. The newlyweds leave to find Valjean (in some productions, Marius pauses to give Thénardier a punch in the face). The Thénardiers are not discouraged, instead gloating that their craven practicality has saved their lives time and time again ("Beggars at the Feast").

At a convent, Valjean awaits his death, having nothing left to live for. The spirit of Fantine appears to him and tells him that he has been forgiven and will soon be with God. Cosette and Marius arrive to find Valjean near death. Valjean thanks God for letting him live long enough to see Cosette again, and Marius thanks him for saving his life ("Valjean's Death"). Valjean gives Cosette a letter confessing his troubled past and the truth about her mother. As he dies, the spirits of Fantine and Éponine guide him to Heaven reminding him that "to love another person is to see the face of God". They are joined by the spirits of those who died at the barricades, all of whom sing of the coming of a better world ("Do You Hear The People Sing? (Reprise)").[11]

Musical numbers

Act I
# Song Performer(s)
1 "Prologue: Work Song" Chain Gang, Javert, Jean Valjean
2 "Prologue: On Parole" Jean Valjean, Farmer, Labourer, Innkeeper's Wife, Innkeeper, Bishop of Digne
3 "Prologue: Valjean Arrested, Valjean Forgiven" Constables, Bishop of Digne
4 "Prologue: Valjean's Soliloquy (What Have I Done?)" Jean Valjean
5 "At the End of the Day" Fantine, Foreman, Factory Girl, Jean Valjean, Factory Workers, Ensemble
6 "I Dreamed a Dream" Fantine
7 "Lovely Ladies" Fantine, Sailors, Whores, Old Woman, Crone, Pimp, Ensemble
8 "Fantine's Arrest" Bamatabois, Fantine, Javert and Jean Valjean
9 "'The Runaway Cart" Fauchevelant, Javert, Jean Valjean, Ensemble
10 "Who Am I?" Jean Valjean
11 "Come to Me" Fantine and Jean Valjean
12 "The Confrontation" Javert and Jean Valjean
13 "Castle on a Cloud" Young Cosette, Madame Thénardier
14 "Master of the House" Monsieur Thénardier, Madame Thénardier, Ensemble
15 "The Well Scene" Jean Valjean and Young Cosette
16 "The Bargain / The Waltz of Treachery" Jean Valjean, Monsieur Thénardier, Madame Thénardier, Young Cosette
17 "Look Down" Gavroche, Old Woman, Prostitute, Pimp, Enjolras, Marius, Company
18 "The Robbery" Monsieur Thénardier, Madame Thénardier, Marius, Éponine, Jean Valjean
19 "Javert's Intervention" Javert, Monsieur Thénardier
20 "Stars" Javert
21 "Éponine's Errand" Éponine and Marius
22 "The ABC Café / Red and Black" Enjolras, Marius, Grantaire, Combeferre, Feuilly, Courfeyrac, Joly, Lesgles, Prouvaire, Gavroche
23 "Do You Hear the People Sing?" Enjolras, Combeferre, Courfeyrac, Feuilly, Ensemble
24 "In My Life" Cosette, Jean Valjean, Marius and Éponine
25 "A Heart Full of Love" Marius, Cosette and Éponine
26 "The Attack on Rue Plumet" Monsieur Thénardier, Brujon, Babet, Claquesous, Montparnasse, Éponine, Marius, Jean Valjean and Cosette
27 "One Day More" Jean Valjean, Marius, Cosette, Éponine, Enjolras, Javert, Monsieur Thénardier, Madame Thénardier and Company
Act II
# Song Performer(s)
28 "Building the Barricade" Enjolras, Javert, Grantaire, Students, Marius, Éponine
29 "On My Own" Éponine
30 "At the Barricade" Enjolras, Marius, Grantaire, Students, and Army Officer
31 "Javert's Arrival" Javert and Enjolras
32 "Little People" Gavroche, Enjolras, Javert
33 "A Little Fall of Rain (Eponine's Death)" Éponine and Marius
34 "Night of Anguish" Enjolras and Students
35 "The First Attack" Enjolras, Jean Valjean, Javert, Students
36 "Drink with Me" Feuilly, Prouvaire, Joly, Grantaire, Marius, Company
37 "Bring Him Home" Jean Valjean
38 "Dawn of Anguish" Enjolras
39 "The Second Attack (Death of Gavroche)" Enjolras, Marius, Jean Valjean, Gavroche, Students
40 "The Final Battle" Army Officer, Enjolras, Company
41 "The Sewers / Dog Eats Dog" Monsieur Thénardier
42 "Javert's Soliloquy" Javert
43 "Turning" Women of Paris
44 "Empty Chairs at Empty Tables" Marius
45 "Every Day / A Heart Full of Love (Reprise)" Cosette, Marius and Jean Valjean
46 "Valjean's Confession" Marius and Jean Valjean
47 "Wedding Chorale / Beggars at the Feast" Marius, Monsieur Thénardier, Madame Thénardier, Company
48 "Epilogue: Valjean's Death" Jean Valjean, Fantine, Cosette, Marius and Éponine
49 "Do You Hear the People Sing? (Reprise)" Full Company

Instrumentation

The standard orchestration for the 2009 U.K. tour of Les Misérables consisted of:[12]

Characters

Character[13] Voice[14] Description
Jean Valjean tenor
A♭2–B4 [15]
Prisoner 24601. After being released from imprisonment for serving nineteen years (five for stealing a loaf of bread and fourteen for multiple escape attempts), he breaks parole and, after receiving mercy from Bishop Myriel, turns his life around to live for God, showing the effects of God's grace that bring a corrupt man into virtuous and selfless living. He changes his identity, becoming the wealthy mayor of a small town. He later adopts Cosette, the only daughter of Fantine.[16]
Inspector Javert baritone
F2–F♯4
Respects the law above all else and relentlessly pursues Valjean, hoping to bring the escaped convict to justice. He firmly believes in the justice of the law and has no room for mercy.
Fantine alto
D3–E♭5
An impoverished factory worker who loses her job and, as a result, turns to prostitution in order to continue paying the Thénardiers to care for her illegitimate daughter, Cosette. As Fantine dies of consumption, she asks Valjean to look after her child.
Marius Pontmercy baritenor
A2–A♭4
A student revolutionary is friends with Éponine, but falls in love with Cosette, and she with him. He is later rescued from the barricades by Valjean, who ultimately gives Marius and Cosette his blessing, allowing them to be married.
Cosette soprano
B♭3–C6
Cosette, the daughter of Fantine, has grown up to become a beautiful young woman of culture and privilege under Valjean's adoptive and loving fatherly care and protection. She falls in love with Marius, and he returns her equally strong and pure romantic feelings. She marries him at the end of the musical.
Éponine Thénardier mezzo-soprano
F3–E5
Daughter of the Thénardiers, Éponine, now a ragged street waif and a thief like her father, secretly loves Marius. Although it causes her great anguish, she helps him locate Cosette and later delivers a message he sends her from the barricade. She is killed while returning to the barricades to see Marius. In the end, she appears as a spirit alongside Fantine and they guide the dying Valjean to Heaven.
Monsieur Thénardier baritone
C3–G4
A second-rate thief, Thénardier runs a small inn where he continually bilks his customers. He and his family later travel to Paris, where he sets up as the leader of a gang of street thugs and con men. An eternal survivor, Thénardier is above nothing and below everything.
Madame Thénardier mezzo-soprano
G♯3–E5
Thénardier's unscrupulous wife, who abuses Cosette but dotes on her own daughter, Éponine. She is fully complicit in most of her husband's crimes and schemes.
Enjolras baritenor
A2–G♯4 (B♭4 optional)
The leader of the student revolutionaries and a friend of Marius. He is idealistic, although his plan is doomed to failure.
Grantaire baritone
D♭3–G4
A student revolutionary. He believes in nothing, he only joins the revolution because of his admiration of Enjolras. Witty and drunken, he is happy being with the student group and they put up with him. He also keeps a watchful eye on Gavroche.
The Bishop of Digne bass
A2–E4
Shelters Valjean after his release from jail and gives him gifts of silver and absolution. His acts of kindness move Valjean to surrender his ways to God, escaping the label of "criminal" and living in a new identity.
Gavroche boy soprano
A3–G5
A streetwise urchin who knows everyone and everything that happens in the slums of Paris. He joins up with the revolutionaries and later dies on the barricade attempting to recover ammunition from fallen soldiers. According to the book by Victor Hugo, Gavroche is the son of the Thénardiers.

Casts

Original casts

Character Original West End Production[17] Original Broadway Production Original Australia Production Original U.S. Tour[18] Original U.K. Tour 1st Broadway Revival 25th Anniversary U.K. Tour 25th Anniversary U.S. Tour Film Version 2nd Broadway Revival West End Revival
1985 1987 1992 2006 2009 2010 2012 2014 2019
Jean Valjean Colm Wilkinson Normie Rowe William Solo Jeff Leyton Alexander Gemignani John Owen-Jones Lawrence Clayton Hugh Jackman Ramin Karimloo Jon Robyns
Inspector Javert Roger Allam Terrence Mann Philip Quast Herndon Lackey Philip Quast Norm Lewis Earl Carpenter Andrew Varela Russell Crowe Will Swenson Bradley Jaden
Fantine Patti LuPone Randy Graff Debbie Byrne Diane Fratantoni Ria Jones Daphne Rubin-Vega Madalena Alberto Betsy Morgan Anne Hathaway Caissie Levy Carrie Hope Fletcher
Marius Pontmercy Michael Ball David Bryant Simon Burke Hugh Panaro Mike Sterling Adam Jacobs Gareth Gates Justin Scott Brown Eddie Redmayne Andy Mientus Harry Apps
Cosette Rebecca Caine Judy Kuhn Marina Prior Tamara Jenkins Sarah Ryan Ali Ewoldt Katie Hall Jenny Latimer Amanda Seyfried Samantha Hill Lily Kerhoas
Éponine Thénardier Frances Ruffelle Jodie Gillies Renee Veneziale Meredith Braun Celia Keenan-Bolger Rosalind James Chasten Harmon Samantha Barks Nikki M. James Shan Ako
Monsieur Thénardier Alun Armstrong Leo Burmester Barry Langrish Tom Alan Robbins Tony Timberlake Gary Beach Ashley Artus Michael Kostroff Sacha Baron Cohen Cliff Saunders Gerard Carey
Madame Thénardier Susan Jane Tanner Jennifer Butt Robyn Arthur Victoria Clark Louise Plowright Jenny Galloway Lynne Wilmot Shawna Hamic Helena Bonham Carter Keala Settle Josefina Gabrielle
Enjolras David Burt Michael Maguire Anthony Warlow John Herrera Daniel Coll Aaron Lazar Jon Robyns Jeremy Hays Aaron Tveit Kyle Scatliffe Ashley Gilmour
Grantaire Clive Carter Anthony Crivello Michael Turkich Michael McCormick Allan Hardman Drew Sarich Adam Linstead Joseph Spieldenner George Blagden John Rapson Ciarán Bowling
The Bishop of Digne Ken Caswell Norman Large Unknown Kevin McGuire Kenneth Orr James Chip Leonard David Lawrence Benjamin Magnuson Colm Wilkinson Adam Monley Rodney Earl Clarke
Gavroche Ian Tucker
Oliver Spencer
Liza Hayden
Braden Danner
RD Robb
Brian Rooney
Tobi Monique Harris
Adam Lloyd
William Snow
Lantz Landry
Andrew Renshaw
Adam Booth
Laurence Porter
Edward Crangle
Brian D'Addario
Jacob Levine
Austyn Myers
Jordi Clark
Robert Madge
Josh Caggiano
Ethan Paul Khusidman
Daniel Huttlestone Joshua Colley
Gaten Matarazzo
Logan Clark
Taye Matthew
Billy Jenkins
Ché Grant
Charlie Stripp

Notable replacements

West End (1985–2019)
Broadway (1987–2003)
Broadway revival (2006–08)
25th Anniversary US tour (2010–13)
Broadway revival (2014–16)
West End revival (2019–)

Concert casts

Character The 10th Anniversary Dream Cast in Concert The Windsor Castle Concert The Hollywood Bowl Concert The 25th Anniversary Concert The All-Star Staged Concert[19] The All-Star Staged Concert Revival The Staged Concert
1995 2004 2008 2010 2019 2020 2021
Jean Valjean Colm Wilkinson Michael Ball J. Mark McVey Alfie Boe Jon Robyns
Inspector Javert Philip Quast Michael McCarthy Brian Stokes Mitchell Norm Lewis Michael Ball Bradley Jaden
Fantine Ruthie Henshall Joanna Ampil Melora Hardin Lea Salonga Carrie Hope Fletcher Lucie Jones
Marius Pontmercy Michael Ball Gary Tushaw John Lloyd Young Nick Jonas Rob Houchen Harry Apps
Cosette Judy Kuhn Julia Möller Michele Maika Katie Hall Lily Kerhoas Amara Okereke Charlie Burn
Éponine Thénardier Lea Salonga Gemma Wardle Lea Michele Samantha Barks Shan Ako
Monsieur Thénardier Alun Armstrong Stephen Tate Michael McCormick Matt Lucas Gerard Carey
Madame Thénardier Jenny Galloway Katy Secombe Ruth Williamson Jenny Galloway Katy Secombe Josefina Gabrielle
Enjolras Michael Maguire Ramin Karimloo Tom Lowe Ramin Karimloo Bradley Jaden Jamie Muscato
Grantaire Anthony Crivello Matt Harrop Daniel Guzman Hadley Fraser Raymond Walsh Connor Jones
The Bishop of Digne Paul Monaghan Andy Mace Patrick Reese Earl Carpenter Simon Bowman Earl Carpenter
Gavroche Adam Searles Unknown Sage Ryan Robert Madge Logan Clark Unknown
Alternate Valjean - John Owen-Jones Dean Chisnall

Notable replacements

The All-Star Staged Concert (2019)

Additional notable performers

Productions

Sit-down productions

Original French production

 
The Palais des Sports, now Dôme de Paris, in Paris where the musical was first performed.

Alain Boublil's initial idea to adapt Victor Hugo's novel into a musical came while at a performance of the musical Oliver! in London:

As soon as the Artful Dodger came onstage, Gavroche came to mind. It was like a blow to the solar plexus. I started seeing all the characters of Victor Hugo's Les Misérables—Valjean, Javert, Gavroche, Cosette, Marius, and Éponine—in my mind's eye, laughing, crying, and singing onstage.[20]

He shared the idea with French composer Claude-Michel Schönberg, and the two developed a rough synopsis and analysis of each character's mental and emotional state, as well as that of an audience. Schönberg then began work on the music, while Boublil the text. According to Boublil, "I could begin work on the words. This I did—after myself deciding on the subject and title of every song—in collaboration with my friend, poet Jean-Marc Natel."[21] Two years later, a two-hour demo tape of Schönberg accompanying himself on the piano and singing every role was completed. An album of this collaboration was recorded at CTS Studios in Wembley and was released in 1980, selling 260,000 copies.[citation needed]

The concept album includes Maurice Barrier as Jean Valjean, Jacques Mercier as Javert, Rose Laurens as Fantine, Yvan Dautin as Thénardier, Marie-France Roussel as Mme. Thénardier, Richard Dewitte as Marius, Fabienne Guyon as Cosette, Marie-France Dufour as Éponine, Michel Sardou as Enjolras, Fabrice Bernard as Gavroche, Maryse Cédolin as Young Cosette, Claude-Michel Schönberg as Courfeyrac, Salvatore Adamo as Combeferre, Michel Delpech as Feuilly, Dominique Tirmont as M. Gillenormand, and Mireille as the hair buyer.

That year, in September 1980, a stage version directed by veteran French film director Robert Hossein was produced at the Palais des Sports in Paris. The show was a success, with 100 performances seen by over 500,000 people.[22][page needed][23][24]

Most of the cast from the concept album performed in the production.[22][25] The cast included Maurice Barrier as Valjean, Jean Vallée as Javert, Rose Laurens as Fantine, Maryse Cédolin and Sylvie Camacho and Priscilla Patron as Young Cosette, Marie-France Roussel as Mme. Thénardier, Yvan Dautin as M. Thénardier, Florence Davis and Fabrice Ploquin and Cyrille Dupont as Gavroche, Marianne Mille as Éponine, Gilles Buhlmann as Marius, Christian Ratellin as Enjolras, Fabienne Guyon as Cosette, René-Louis Baron as Combeferre, Dominique Tirmont as M. Gillenormand, Anne Forrez as Mlle. Gillenormand, and Claude Reva as the storyteller.[22][25][26][27]

Original London production

 
Les Misérables at Sondheim Theatre in London

The English-language version, with lyrics by Herbert Kretzmer and additional material by James Fenton, was substantially expanded and reworked from a literal translation by Siobhan Bracke of the original Paris version, in particular adding a prologue to tell Jean Valjean's background story. Kretzmer's lyrics are not a direct translation of the French, a term that Kretzmer refused to use. A third of the English lyrics were a rough translation, another third were adapted from the French lyrics and the final third consisted of new material. The majority is performed in recitative style; the vocalists use natural speech, not musical metrics.[28]

The first production in English, produced by Cameron Mackintosh and adapted and directed by Trevor Nunn and John Caird, played to preview performances beginning on 28 September 1985 and formally opened on 8 October 1985 at the Barbican Centre, London. It was billed in the programme as "The Royal Shakespeare Company presentation of the RSC/Cameron Mackintosh production".

The set was designed by John Napier, costumes by Andreane Neofitou and lighting by David Hersey. Musical supervision and orchestrations were by John Cameron, who had been involved with the show since Boublil and Schönberg hired him to orchestrate the original French concept album. Musical staging was by Kate Flatt with musical direction by Martin Koch.

The original London cast included Colm Wilkinson as Jean Valjean, Roger Allam as Javert, Ken Caswell as the Bishop of Digne, Patti LuPone as Fantine, Zoë Hart, Justine McIntyre, Jayne O'Mahony and Joanne Woodcock as Young Cosette, Danielle Akers, Gillian Brander and Juliette Caton as Young Éponine, Susan Jane Tanner as Madame Thénardier, Alun Armstrong as Thénardier, Frances Ruffelle as Éponine, Rebecca Caine as Cosette, Michael Ball as Marius, David Burt as Enjolras, Clive Carter as Grantaire/Bamatabois, with Ian Tucker, Oliver Spencer and Liza Hayden sharing the role of Gavroche.[29][30][17]

On 4 December 1985, the show transferred to the Palace Theatre, London and moved again on 3 April 2004, to the smaller Queen's Theatre, now called the Sondheim Theatre, with some revisions of staging.[31]

The show celebrated its ten-thousandth performance on 5 January 2010,[32] and its 30th anniversary in October 2015.[33] The co-production has generated valuable income for the Royal Shakespeare Company.[34]

The original show closed at the Queen's Theatre on 13 July 2019 to allow for theatre refurbishments, while a staged concert was performed at the adjacent Gielgud Theatre for a four-month run.[35][36]

2019 Revival

The updated staging developed for the 25th anniversary production at the Barbican, opened at the newly renamed Sondheim Theatre on 18 December 2019 in previews with opening night set for 16 January 2020.[35][37] The new production is co-directed by James Powell and Laurence Connor with set and image design by Matt Kinley, lighting by Paule Constable, sound by Mick Potter and costumes by Andreane Neofitou and Christine Rowlands. The first cast for this new version included Jon Robyns (Valjean), Bradley Jaden (Javert), Carrie Hope Fletcher (Fantine), Shan Ako (Éponine), Lily Kerhoas (Cosette), Harry Apps (Marius), Gerard Carey (Thénardier), Josefina Gabrielle (Madame Thénardier) and Ashley Gilmour (Enjolras).[38]

The show was forced to close temporarily from March 16, 2020, as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. It was announced in June 2020 that it would not reopen until 2021.[39] It reopened on 25 September 2021.[40]

Original Broadway production

The musical opened as a pre-Broadway tryout at the Kennedy Center's Opera House in Washington, D.C., on 27 December 1986. It ran for eight weeks through 14 February 1987.[41]

The musical then premiered on Broadway on 12 March 1987 at The Broadway Theatre. Colm Wilkinson and Frances Ruffelle reprised their roles from the London production.[42] The $4.5 million production had a more than $4 million advance sale prior to its New York opening.[43]

The show underwent further tightening, namely with improved sewer lighting and the incorporation of the Javert suicide scene effect.[44] A New York Times report consisted of the following: "The transfer from London to the United States has prompted further modifications. 'We are taking this opportunity to rethink and perfect, to rewrite some details which probably no one else will see, but which for us are still long nights of work,' Mr. Boublil says. 'There are things that nobody had time to do in London, and here we have a wonderful opportunity to fix a few things. No one will notice, perhaps, but for us, it will make us so happy if we can better this show. We would like this to be the final version.'"[43] Two songs were deleted—the complete version of Gavroche's song "Little People" and the adult Cosette's "I Saw Him Once". A short section at the beginning of "In My Life" replaced "I Saw Him Once". The lyrics in Javert's "Stars" were changed. It now ended with the line, "This I swear by the stars!", while the London production and cast recording ended with the repeated line, "Keeping watch in the night".

The original Broadway cast included Colm Wilkinson as Jean Valjean, David Bryant as Marius, Judy Kuhn as Cosette, Michael Maguire as Enjolras, Frances Ruffelle as Éponine, Braden Danner as Gavroche, Donna Vivino as Young Cosette, Jennifer Butt as Madame Thénardier, Leo Burmester as Thénardier, Randy Graff as Fantine, Terrence Mann as Javert, and Chrissie McDonald as Young Éponine.[42]

Other members of the original Broadway cast included Anthony Crivello (Grantaire/Bamatabois), Kevin Marcum (Brujon), John Dewar (Joly), Paul Harman (Combeferre/Foreman), Joseph Kolinski (Feuilly), Alex Santoriello (Montparnasse/Labourer), Jesse Corti (Courfeyrac/Farmer), Susan Goodman (Old Woman/Innkeeper's Wife), John Norman (Prouvaire/Pimp), Norman Large (Bishop/Lesgles), Marcus Lovett (Babet/Constable), Cindy Benson (Old Woman), Steve Shocket (Claquesous/Fauchevelant/Constable/Pimp), Marcie Shaw, Jane Bodle, Joanna Glushak, Ann Crumb (Factory Girl), Kelli James, and Gretchen Kingsley-Weihe. Michael Hinton was the original drummer and credited on the cast album.[42]

The musical ran at the Broadway Theatre through 10 October 1990, when it moved to the Imperial Theatre.[42] It was scheduled to close on 15 March 2003, but the closing was postponed by a surge in public interest.[45] According to an article in The Scotsman, "Sales picked up last October, when Sir Cameron made the announcement that the show would be closing on March 15th... its closure postponed to May 18th because of an unexpected increase in business."[46] After 6,680 performances in sixteen years,[46] when it closed on 18 May 2003,[42] it was the second-longest-running Broadway musical after Cats.[47] It was surpassed by The Phantom of the Opera in 2006.[48]

This Broadway production of Les Misérables and its advertising in New York City is a recurring theme in American Psycho. The reviewer for the Financial Times wrote that Les Misérables is "the book's hilarious main cultural compass-point".[49]

Original Australia production

A production opened in Australia at the Theatre Royal, Sydney on November 27, 1987. The cast featured Normie Rowe as Valjean, Philip Quast as Javert, Anthony Warlow as Enjolras, Debbie Byrne as Fantine, Simon Burke as Marius, Marina Prior as Cosette, Jodie Gillies as Eponine, Barry Langrish as Thénardier, and Robyn Arthur as Madame Thénardier. Rob Guest later took over the role of Valjean. The production closed on August 17, 1991.[50]

1989 Toronto production

The first Canadian production of Les Miserables began performances at the Royal Alexandra Theatre on March 15, 1989. The cast was headed by Michael Burgess as Jean Valjean, with Thomas Goerz as Javert and Louise Pitre as Fantine. After 14 months, the production toured other Canadian cities, including Vancouver, before returning to Toronto where it played another year, before finally closing on July 5, 1992.

2006 Broadway revival

Only three years after the original run closed, Les Misérables began a return to Broadway on 9 November 2006 at the Broadhurst Theatre for a limited run that was subsequently made open-ended.

Using the set, costumes, performers, and other resources from the recently finished third US national touring production, the production was only slightly altered. Minor changes included colourful projections blended into its existing lighting design, and a proscenium that extended out into the first two boxes on either side of the stage.

Some cuts made to the show's prologue during its original Broadway run were restored, lyrics for Gavroche's death scene (known in the revival as "Ten Little Bullets") cut during the development of the original London production were restored, and much of the show was re-orchestrated by Christopher Jahnke, introducing a snare and timpani-heavy sound played by a 14-member band, a reduction of about 8 musicians from the original production's 22 musician orchestration.[citation needed]

The original 2006 Broadway revival cast included Alexander Gemignani as Jean Valjean, Norm Lewis as Javert, Daphne Rubin-Vega as Fantine, Celia Keenan-Bolger as Éponine, Aaron Lazar as Enjolras, Adam Jacobs as Marius, Ali Ewoldt as Cosette, Gary Beach as Thénardier, Jenny Galloway as Madame Thénardier, Drew Sarich as Grantaire, Brian D'Addario, Jacob Levine, Skye Rainforth and Austyn Myers as Gavroche, and Tess Adams, Kylie Liya Goldstein and Carly Rose Sonenclar as Young Cosette/Young Éponine.[51]

Lea Salonga, who previously played the role of Éponine in the 10th Anniversary concert, replaced Rubin-Vega as Fantine beginning on 2 March 2007. Zach Rand replaced Jacob Levine as Gavroche on 15 March 2007. Ann Harada replaced Jenny Galloway as Mme. Thénardier on 24 April 2007. Ben Davis joined playing Javert, and Max von Essen playing Enjolras. Ben Crawford and Mandy Bruno joined the cast that day too, playing Brujon and Éponine respectively. On 29 June 2007, Chip Zien joined the cast as Monsieur Thénardier. Sarich took over the role of Javert, and on 23 July 2007, took over the role of Valjean following Gemignani's departure. On 5 September 2007, it was announced that John Owen-Jones (who was playing Valjean in London) was to join the Broadway cast. In return, Sarich would join the London cast in Owen-Jones' place. Judy Kuhn, who originated the role of Cosette, returned to the show after twenty years as Fantine, succeeding Salonga.

The revival closed on 6 January 2008 after 17 previews and 463 performances.[52]

2013 Toronto revival

A new production starring homecoming Ramin Karimloo was mounted at the Princess of Wales Theatre in Toronto. Co-directed by Lawrence Connor and James Powell,[53] the new Toronto production was based on the 25th Anniversary touring production.[54] Previews began on 27 September 2013 with the opening night on 9 October. Preparatory to a Broadway transfer, Toronto performances ended on 2 February 2014.[55][56][57][58] In addition to Laurence Olivier Award nominee Karimloo as Jean Valjean, fellow West End star Earl Carpenter reprised the role of Inspector Javert.[59] Other cast members included Genevieve Leclerc as Fantine, Samantha Hill as Cosette, Melissa O'Neil as Éponine, Perry Sherman as Marius, Cliff Saunders as Monsieur Thénardier, Lisa Horner as Madame Thénardier, and Mark Uhre as Enjolras.[60] The roles of young Cosette and young Éponine were shared by Ella Ballentine, Saara Chaudry and Madison Oldroyd. Gavroche was shared by David Gregory Black and Aiden GlennRead.[61] Colm Wilkinson, who originated the role of Jean Valjean, portrayed the Bishop of Digne in a one-day performance symbolically handing the torch (along with the candlesticks) to Karimloo.[62][63]

2014 Broadway revival

The 2013 Toronto production moved to Broadway in March 2014 with previews beginning 1 March 2014 at the Imperial Theatre and an official opening on 23 March 2014.[64][65] The creative team again was directed by Laurence Connor and James Powell, with set design by Matt Kinley, costumes by Andreane Neofitou and Christine Rowlands, lighting by Paule Constable, sound by Mick Potter and projections by Fifty-Nine Productions. Cameron Mackintosh once again produced the show. On 22 October 2013, it was announced that Ramin Karimloo, Will Swenson, Caissie Levy, and Nikki M. James would be headlining the revival cast as Jean Valjean, Javert, Fantine, and Éponine respectively.[66] Andy Mientus and Samantha Hill also starred as Marius and Cosette respectively.[67][68] Angeli Negron and McKayla Twiggs share the role of Young Cosette.[69] On 30 August 2015, Karimloo ended his run of the show and was replaced by Alfie Boe. After Boe's final performance on 28 February, the role of Valjean was played by John Owen-Jones beginning 1 March 2016 until the production closed on 4 September 2016, after 1,026 performances over two-and-a-half years.[70] The revival recouped its entire initial investment and grossed $109 million.[71]

The 2014 Broadway revival was nominated for 3 Tony Awards: Best Revival of a Musical, Best Leading Actor in a Musical for Karimloo, and Best Sound Design for Potter.

Touring productions

US national tours

The show had three national touring companies of the original Broadway production in the US, all of which shared the Broadway producer and manager, creative teams, as well nearly identical sets, costumes, and lighting. While the touring production and the New York production were running simultaneously, the staff, cast members, crew, and musicians of the two productions interchanged often, which contributed to keeping both companies of the show in form. When the New York production closed in 2003, the Third National Tour continued for another three years, and enjoyed the influx of many members from the original and subsequent New York companies.

The First National Tour opened at Boston's Shubert Theatre on 12 December 1987, and continued to play major cities until late 1991. The Second National Tour (called "The Fantine Company") opened at Los Angeles' Shubert Theatre on 1 June 1988. The production played for fourteen months then transferred to San Francisco's Curran Theatre where it enjoyed a similar run. The Third National Tour of Les Misérables (called "The Marius Company") was one of the longest running American touring musical productions. Opening on 28 November 1988, at the Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center in Florida, and closing on 23 July 2006, at the Fox Theatre in St. Louis, Missouri,[72] the tour ran for seventeen years and 7,061 performances. The tour played in 145 cities in 43 states. The same touring company also frequently performed in Canada, made a 1994 diversion to Singapore, and another diversion in 2002 to be the first Western musical production to visit China, opening in Shanghai's Grand Theatre for a three-week engagement.

All US productions (including Broadway and its revival) were visually identical in scale and design but the third national tour was notable for its portability without sacrificing the Broadway-caliber experience. Thanks to innovative touring techniques borrowed from the pop/rock concert industry, the 4.5 million dollar production was adaptable to smaller and larger venues and traveled complete in all of 8 semi tractor trailers. It was set up and ready to go in less than 24 hours and broken down and packed up in about 16 hours. This allowed it to reach many cities and venues in its acclaimed, original Broadway form.

A new national tour began on 21 September 2017 at the Providence Performing Arts Centre (PPAC). It starred Nick Cartell as Valjean, Josh Davis as Javert, Melissa Mitchell as Fantine, J. Anthony Crane as Thénardier, Allison Guinn as Madame Thénardier, Joshua Grosso as Marius, Phoenix Best as Éponine, Matt Shingledecker as Enjolras and Jillian Butler as Cosette. The roles of young Cosette and Éponine were shared by Zoe Glick and Sophie Knapp, while the role of Gavroche was shared by Jordan Cole and Julian Lerner. It uses much of the staging and technical work of the 2014 Broadway revival.[73]

Another tour launched on 7 October 2022 at the State Theatre, Cleveland, with Nick Cartell as Jean Valjean, Preston Truman Boyd as Javert, Haley Dortch as Fantine, Matt Crowle as Thénardier, Christina Rose Hall as Madame Thénardier, Addie Morales as Cosette, Gregory Lee Rodriguez as Marius, Christine Heesun Hwang as Eponine, Devin Archer as Enjolras, and Randy Jeter as Bishop of Digne.[74]

UK and Ireland tours

1992–1993 tour

The first tour of the UK and Ireland opened at the Palace Theatre, Manchester 14 April 1992[75] with Jeff Leyton (Jean Valjean), Philip Quast (Javert, later replaced by Michael McCarthy)[76] Ria Jones (Fantine), Meredith Braun (Éponine), Mike Sterling (Marius, later replaced by Richard Burman),[76] Tony Timberlake (Thénardier), Louise Plowright (Mdme Thénardier), Sarah Ryan (Cosette) and Daniel Coll (Enjolras).[77][78] The production then moved on to the Point Theatre, Dublin, Ireland, opening 30 June 1993,[79] and then to Playhouse, Edinburgh, Scotland, opening 23 September 1993.[80]

1997–2000 tour

In 1997 a second tour began at the Theatre Royal, Plymouth, running from 6 May until 14 June,[81] the cast featured: Stig Rossen (Jean Valjean), Michael McCarthy (Javert), Julia Worsley (Fantine), Gemma Sandy (Éponine), Norman Bowman (Marius), Cameron Blakely (Thénardier), Cathy Breeze (Mdme Thénardier), Rebecca Vere (Cosette) and Mark O'Malley (Enjolras).[82] The tour then continued as detailed in the table below:

25th anniversary tour

A tour to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the show began performances on 12 December 2009, at the Wales Millennium Centre in Cardiff. Differences from the original production included a new set, new costumes, new direction and alterations to the original orchestrations. The scenery was inspired by the paintings of Victor Hugo. Locations have included Manchester, Norwich, Birmingham, and Edinburgh. The tour also played a special engagement in Paris. From September through October, the show returned to the Barbican Centre, London, site of the original 1985 production. The tour cast featured John Owen-Jones as Valjean, Earl Carpenter as Javert, Gareth Gates as Marius, Ashley Artus as Thénardier, Lynne Wilmot as Madame Thénardier, Madalena Alberto as Fantine, Rosalind James as Éponine, Jon Robyns as Enjolras, Katie Hall as Cosette (with Samara Clarke as Young Cosette), and David Lawrence as the Bishop of Digne. The tour ended on 2 October 2010, at the Barbican Theatre.[102][103][104]

In the fall of 2010, the tour moved to the US with a new company presented by Broadway Across America to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the show opening on Broadway. The tour had its opening on 19 November 2010 at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey, running until 19 December 2010. This tour originally starred Lawrence Clayton as Valjean, Andrew Varela as Javert, Betsy Morgan as Fantine, Jenny Latimer as Cosette, Justin Scott Brown as Marius, Chasten Harmon as Éponine, Michael Kostroff as Thénardier, Shawna Hamic as Madame Thénardier, Jeremy Hays as Enjolras, Josh Caggiano and Ethan Paul Khusidman as Gavroche, Maya Jade Frank, Faith Perez and Juliana Simone alternating as Young Cosette and Young Éponine. J. Mark McVey's daughter, Kylie McVey was the understudy for Young Cosette and Young Éponine. Clayton left the tour in April 2011. Ron Sharpe later took over as Valjean until June 2011. J. Mark McVey was then Valjean (McVey previously played the role on Broadway), but McVey and his daughter left the tour on 1 April 2012. Peter Lockyer replaces him as Valjean. Betsy Morgan left the tour on 2 December 2012. She was replaced by Genevieve Leclerc. The tour ran until 11 August 2013, closing at the Smith Center for the Performing Arts in Las Vegas. The tour's final cast included Peter Lockyer as Valjean, Andrew Varela as Javert, Genevieve Leclerc as Fantine, Lauren Wiley as Cosette, Devin Ilaw as Marius, Briana Carlson-Goodman as Éponine, Timothy Gulan as Thénardier, Shawna Hamic as Madame Thénardier, Jason Forbach as Enjolras, Ava Della Pietra and Erin Cearlock alternating as Little Cosette and Young Eponine, with Mia Sinclair Jenness as Little Girl,[105][106] In 2011 it was reported that the tour is one of six US national Broadway tours that are grossing over $1,000,000 per week.[107]

2018–present tour

A new UK and Ireland tour similar to the 25th anniversary production began at the Curve, Leicester on 3 November 2018, starring Killian Donnelly (Jean Valjean), Nic Greenshields (Javert), Katie Hall (Fantine), Tegan Bannister (Éponine), Bronwen Hanson (Cosette), Harry Apps (Marius), Martin Ball (Thénardier), Sophie-Louise Dann (Madame Thénardier) and Will Richardson (Enjolras).[108]

After a hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the tour resumed performances on 23 November 2021 at the Theatre Royal, Glasgow.[109]

2014 Australian tour

In mid 2013, a brand new Australian tour was announced, with Simon Gleeson as Valjean, Hayden Tee as Javert, Patrice Tipoki as Fantine, Trevor Ashley and Lara Mulcahy as the Thénardiers, Kerrie Anne Greenland as Éponine, Emily Langridge as Cosette, Euan Doidge as Marius and Chris Durling as Enjolras and Nicholas Cradock as Gavroche.[110] The production premiered on 4 July at Her Majesty's Theatre, Melbourne.[111] Additional stops for the Australian tour included the Crown Theatre in Perth,[112] the Capitol Theatre in Sydney,[113] and the Lyric Theatre QPAC in Brisbane.[114] The Australian revival production transferred to Manila, Philippines in March 2016, becoming an international tour.[115]

2016 International tour

On 16 September 2015, it was announced that the Australian tour would launch its international tour in Manila, Philippines at the Theatre at Solaire from March 2016 until 1 May 2016, and proceeded to the Esplanade Theatre in Singapore from May 2016.[115][116] It then had its GCC premiere at the Dubai Opera in Dubai, United Arab Emirates from November 2016.[117]

The Manila and Singapore productions featured Simon Gleeson as Valjean, Earl Carpenter as Javert, Helen Walsh as Madame Thénardier, Cameron Blakely as Thénardier, Kerrie Anne Greenland as Éponine, Emily Langridge as Cosette, Chris Durling as Enjolras, and Paul Wilkins as Marius.[118] Rachelle Ann Go played the role of Fantine in the Manila production, and Patrice Tipoki returned the role in the Singapore production after her stint in the original London production. The Dubai production features John Owen-Jones as Valjean, Hayden Tee as Javert, Patrice Tipoki as Fantine, Peter Polycarpou as Thénardier, Jodie Prenger as Madame Thénardier, Carrie Hope Fletcher as Éponine, Alistair Brammer as Enjolras, Emily Langridge as Cosette, and Paul Wilkins as Marius.[119]

Concert productions

10th Anniversary Concert

On 8 October 1995, the show celebrated the tenth anniversary of the West End production with a concert at the Royal Albert Hall. This 10th Anniversary Concert was nearly "complete", missing only a handful of scenes, including "The Death of Gavroche", "The Robbery" and the confrontation between Marius and the Thénardiers at the wedding feast. Sir Cameron Mackintosh hand-selected the cast, which became known as the Les Misérables Dream Cast, assembled from around the world, and engaged the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. The concert concluded with seventeen Valjeans from various international productions singing, "Do You Hear the People Sing?" in their native languages. The concert cast included Colm Wilkinson as Jean Valjean, Philip Quast as Javert, Paul Monaghan as the Bishop of Digne, Ruthie Henshall as Fantine, Hannah Chick as Young Cosette, Jenny Galloway as Madame Thénardier, Alun Armstrong as Thénardier, Adam Searles as Gavroche, Michael Maguire as Enjolras, Michael Ball as Marius, Judy Kuhn as Cosette, Lea Salonga as Éponine, and Anthony Crivello as Grantaire. The concert was staged by Ken Caswell and conducted by David Charles Abell.

25th Anniversary Concert

The 25th Anniversary Concert of the West End production was held at The O2 in North Greenwich, South East London, United Kingdom, on Sunday, 3 October 2010 at 1:30 pm and 7:00 pm.

It featured Alfie Boe as Jean Valjean, Norm Lewis as Javert, Lea Salonga as Fantine, Nick Jonas as Marius, Katie Hall as Cosette, Jenny Galloway as Madame Thénardier, Ramin Karimloo as Enjolras, Samantha Barks as Éponine, Matt Lucas as Thénardier, Mia Jenkins as Young Cosette, Rob Madge as Gavroche, Hadley Fraser as Grantaire, Cameron Blakely as Bamatabois, and Earl Carpenter as the Bishop of Digne. Casts of the current London, international tour, original 1985 London, and several school productions took part, comprising an ensemble of three hundred performers and musicians. The concert was directed by Laurence Connor & James Powell and conducted by David Charles Abell.[120][121]

The All-Star Staged Concert

From 10 August to 2 December 2019, the musical was performed as a staged concert version at the Gielgud Theatre in the West End during the refurbishment of the adjacent Sondheim Theatre, where the original London production had been running and would be home to the new production from December 2019 onwards.

Featuring a cast and orchestra of over 65, the 16-week concert run starred Michael Ball as Javert, Alfie Boe as Jean Valjean, Carrie Hope Fletcher as Fantine, Matt Lucas and Katy Secombe as the Thénardiers, and John Owen-Jones played Jean Valjean for some performances during the run. Further leads included Rob Houchen (Marius), Bradley Jaden (Enjolras), Shan Ako (Éponine), and Lily Kerhoas (Cosette). Also featured was Earl Carpenter playing Bamatabois and understudying Javert. Simon Bowman played the Bishop of Digne for eight days after which Carpenter took over the role alongside his other two parts.

The final concert was filmed and broadcast live to cinemas on 2 December and has since been released on home video and album, with a tour planned.[122]

In October 2020, on the final of Britain's Got Talent, it was confirmed that the stage concert would return for a limited six-week run at the Sondheim Theatre from 5 December 2020 to 17 January 2021. It was subsequently extended twice and was due to play until 28 February 2021.[123][124] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the audience were socially distanced and capacity was limited to 50%. Due to local COVID restrictions, the show was suspended from 16 December 2020 after just 10 performances, in which Boe had performed as Jean Valjean on eight occasions and Owen-Jones on two occasions. It reopened on 20 May 2021 and ran until 5 September. Ball, Boe, Fletcher, Lucas and Owen-Jones did not reprise their roles at reopening. The new cast featured Jon Robyns as Valjean, Jaden as Javert, Lucie Jones as Fantine, Gerard Carey and Josefina Gabrielle as the Thénardiers, Shan Ako as Éponine, Harry Apps as Marius, Jamie Muscato as Enjolras, Charlie Burn as Cosette, Carpenter as the Bishop of Digne and understudy Javert, Cameron Blakely as Bamatabois/Babet, and at certain performances Dean Chisnall playing the role of Valjean.[40]

Other concert performances

The musical has also been performed in concert at Cardiff Castle and several venues in southern England, produced by Earl Carpenter Concerts. A concert version starring Jeff Leyton, Carmen Cusack, Annalene Beechey and Joanna Ampil was also performed at the Odyssey Arena, Belfast in 2001. In 1989, a one-night concert performance was performed at SkyDome, Toronto, and the largest concert production attracted an audience of approximately 125,000 as part of the Australia Day celebrations in Sydney's Domain Park. The Scandinavian concert tour, produced by Cameron Mackintosh in association with Noble Art, starred Danish musical icon Stig Rossen in the leading role and commemorated author Victor Hugo's 200th birthday. Venues on the tour included the Stockholm Globe Arena, Oslo Spektrum, the Helsinki Hartwell Areena, and the Gothenburg Scandinavium, with audiences totalling over 150,000 for the complete tour.

In November 2004, to celebrate the centennial of the Entente Cordiale, the Queen invited the cast of Les Misérables in the West End to perform for French President Jacques Chirac at Windsor Castle. It was the first time the cast of a West End musical had performed at a Royal residence. The part of Jean Valjean was played by Michael Ball – the original 1985 London and 1995 Dream Cast Marius – and the part of Javert was played by Michael McCarthy, Joanna Ampil as Fantine, Gemma Wardle as Eponine, Julia Möller as Cosette, Gary Tushaw as Marius and Ramin Karimloo as Enjolras. The rest of the cast was the same as in the West End, supplemented by several guest singers and a choir of former performers.

In February 2008, Les Misérables was performed at the Bournemouth International Centre, England with a cast of West End stars accompanied by the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. In August 2008, a concert version, directed by Richard Jay-Alexander, was performed at the Hollywood Bowl. The cast included veteran Les Misérables star J. Mark McVey as Valjean, The Office star Melora Hardin as Fantine, Broadway star and Bowl veteran Brian Stokes Mitchell as Javert, Spring Awakening and Glee star Lea Michele as Éponine, Tony-winning Jersey Boys star John Lloyd Young as Marius, West End star Tom Lowe as Enjolras, Michael McCormick as Thénardier, Ruth Williamson as Madame Thénardier, Michele Maika as Cosette, Maddie Levy as Young Cosette, and Sage Ryan as Gavroche.

In September 2008, it was performed at the St John Loveridge Hall in Guernsey with a cast of West End performers—the first time that it had been professionally performed on the Island where Victor Hugo wrote the novel. Former London Valjean Phil Cavill reprised his role alongside veteran Michael McCarthy as Javert. In March 2009, the Guernsey production was remounted at Fort Regent in Jersey; and in July 2009, the musical was performed in concert at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight.

International productions

The show has been produced in forty-two countries and translated into twenty-one languages: English, French (re-translated from the English version[clarification needed]), German (Austria and Germany), Spanish (six versions: two from Spain, two from Mexico, one from Argentina, and one from Venezuela), Japanese, Hebrew, Hungarian, Icelandic, Norwegian (Bokmål and Nynorsk), Polish, Swedish (in Sweden and in Finland), Dutch (Netherlands and Belgium), Danish, Finnish, Brazilian Portuguese, Estonian, Czech, Mauritian Creole, Basque, Catalan and Korean. Including singles and promos, there have been over seventy official recordings from worldwide productions.[125]

The first full West End / Broadway production in Europe (mainland) was set up in Oslo, Norway at Det Norske Teatret and opened on 17 March 1988.[126] The production was in Norwegian and starred Norwegian singer/actor Øystein Wiik as Jean Valjean, Paul Åge Johannessen as Javert, Øivind Blunck as Thénardier, Kari Gjærum as Fantine, Amund Enger as Enjolras and Guri Schanke as Éponine. The first Oslo production was hugely successful and some 10% of Norway's entire population saw the show in the first 6 months. Øystein Wiik went on to also star as Jean Valjean in the productions in Vienna and London in 1989–1990.

The stage show, which had changed so significantly since its Parisian conception as a stadium concert in 1980, was translated back into the language of Victor Hugo for its French world première in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, in 1991. This production had a cast that presented five shows a week in French and three a week in English.

In 1998, a concert version in English was produced in Malta, at the Mediterranean Conference Centre, Valletta. This production was staged by a company called Act React and featured talents like Ray Mangion as Jean Valjean, Roger Tirazona as Javert, Julie James as Fantine, Leila Benn Harris as Eponine, Claire Debono as Cosette, Fabrizio Faniello as Marius, Lawrence Gray as Enjolras, Rennie Vella as Thenardier, Doreen Galea as Madame Thenardier, Dean Zammit as Gavroche and Hannah Schembri as Little Cosette.

North American productions

In September 2008, a mini-tour produced by Atlanta's Theater of the Stars played Eisenhower Hall at the United States Military Academy,[127][failed verification] in West Point, New York; the Filene Center at the Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts in Vienna, Virginia; Kansas City Starlight Theatre; and the Fox Theater in Atlanta. The show featured a new set of original pictures painted by Victor Hugo himself. Robert Evan played Valjean, returning to the role he played in the mid-nineties on Broadway. Also featured were Nikki Rene Daniels as Fantine and Robert Hunt as Javert, both reprising their roles from the Broadway revival. Fred Hanson directed the production. The creative team included Matt Kinley as Scenic Designer, Ken Billington as Lighting Designer, Peter Fitzgerald and Erich Bechtel as Sound Designers, Zachary Borovay as Projection Designer, and Dan Riddle as musical director and Conductor.[128]

In 2008, the Signature Theatre in Arlington, Virginia staged a small venue "black box" version of the play. Signature received Mackintosh's special permission for the production: "One of the great pleasures of being involved with the creation of Les Misérables is seeing this marvelous musical being done in a completely different and original way. Having seen many shows brilliantly reimagined at Signature I have no doubt that Eric and his team will come up with a revolutionary new take on Les Miz unlike anything anyone has seen before. Viva la différence!"[129] The production officially opened on 14 December 2008 (after previews from 2 December), and ran through 22 February 2009 (extended from 25 January 2009).[130][131]

A 2014 production at the Dallas Theater Center modernized the staging in a way rarely attempted in productions of this play, set visually in the modern-day United States rather than 1830s France. The concept was thought to be refreshing as a change from typical production styles and effective as a commentary on modern inequality. Though, much controversy surrounded their unauthorized depart from the authors' libretto and score.[132][133]

In Panama, Les Misérables was staged in 2014 in Spanish at the famed National Theatre of Panama for a short, sold-out run, directed by Aaron Zebede.[134]

School edition

The school edition cuts a considerable amount of material from the original show. It is divided into thirty scenes and, although no critical scenes or songs have been removed, it runs 25–30 minutes shorter than the official version making the total running time about 2+12 hours.[135] A few subtle changes of vocal pitch have been made: "What Have I Done?", Valjean's Soliloquy, "Stars" by Javert, "A Little Fall of Rain" by Éponine and Marius, "Turning", and "Castle on a Cloud" lose a verse each. During "Fantine's Arrest" Bamatabois loses two verses. The song "Fantine's Death/Confrontation" is edited, and the counterpoint duel between Javert and Valjean is lost, as well as a verse by Fantine. "Dog Eats Dog" by Thénardier is heavily truncated. "Beggars at the Feast", is shortened, with Thénardier losing a verse, and the song before it, "Wedding Chorale", is excluded entirely although the rest of the wedding remains in place. Also, the drinker's introduction to "Master of the House" is cut completely.[136]

Film adaptation

Cast recordings

English

The following recordings of Les Misérables are available in English: the Original London Cast, the Original Broadway Cast, the Complete Symphonic Recording, the 10th Anniversary London Concert, The 25th Anniversary UK Tour Cast and The 25th Anniversary London Concert.

Original London Cast recording

The Original London Cast recording was the first English language album of the musical. Recorded in 1985, when the show premiered, it is closest to the original French concept album. For example, "Stars" appears before "Look Down" and shortly after, the original version of "Little People" plays, which was later incorporated into the revealing of Javert. It also features a song titled "I Saw Him Once", sung by Cosette, which was later incorporated into the first part of "In My Life". The album has sold 887,000 copies in the US.[137]

Chart (1987) Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[138] 38

Original Broadway Cast recording

The Original Broadway Cast recording was produced in 1987. It included several changes to the songs that are still evident in today's performances. As with its predecessor, it is incomplete, and leaves out songs or parts that are more important narratively than musically (e.g., "Fantine's Arrest", "The Runaway Cart", "The Final Battle"). The album has sold 1,596,000 copies in the US.[137]

Chart (1987/88) Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[138] 89

Complete Symphonic Recording

Recorded in 1988 and released in 1989, the Complete Symphonic Recording features the entire score. (The Czech Revival Recording is the only other album, in any language, to feature the entire score; on the other hand, the four 2003 Japanese recordings feature the entire score after the cuts first made on Broadway at the end of 2000.) Cameron Mackintosh's original plan was to use the Australian cast,[139] but the scope was expanded to create an international cast featuring performers from the major performances of the musical. The cast was recorded in three different places.[140]

The album, produced by David Caddick and conducted by Martin Koch, won the Best Musical Cast Show Album Grammy Award in 1990.[141] The cast includes Gary Morris as Valjean, Philip Quast as Javert, Debra Byrne as Fantine, Gay Soper as Mme. Thénardier, Barry James as Thénardier, Kaho Shimada as Éponine, Ross McCall as Gavroche, Michael Ball as Marius, Anthony Warlow as Enjolras, Tracy Shayne as Cosette and Marissa Dunlop as Young Cosette.[142]

10th Anniversary Concert

The 10th Anniversary recording was of a concert version of Les Misérables, performed at the Royal Albert Hall in October 1995, featuring full orchestra and choir. All parts were sung live, giving the performance a different mood from other recordings. The score was recorded consecutively without pauses or multiple recordings. The concert's encores are also included. As with the original recordings, however, they differed from the stage versions by excluding some songs (e.g., those vital to plot such as "Fantine's Arrest" and "The Runaway Cart" were kept, while unnecessary or complex songs, such as "At the Barricade", were left out).

25th Anniversary UK Tour Cast

Recorded live at the Palace Theatre in Manchester, this recording was released to commemorate 25 years of Les Misérables and features new arrangements and reinspired orchestrations.

25th Anniversary Concert

The 25th Anniversary Concert was recorded live at The O2 Arena on 3 October 2010 and is available on DVD in the UK while the Blu-ray was released worldwide. It was shown in select US theaters via NCM Fathom Events. The release for the DVD and Blu-ray in the United States was 22 February 2011 to promote the film adaptation.

Awards and nominations

Original West End production

Original Broadway production

Year Award Category Nominee Result
1987 Tony Award[146] Best Musical Won
Best Book of a Musical Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schönberg Won
Best Original Score Claude-Michel Schönberg (music) and Herbert Kretzmer & Alain Boublil (lyrics) Won
Best Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical Colm Wilkinson Nominated
Terrence Mann Nominated
Best Actor in a Featured Role in a Musical Michael Maguire Won
Best Actress in a Featured Role in a Musical Frances Ruffelle Won
Judy Kuhn Nominated
Best Direction of a Musical Trevor Nunn and John Caird Won
Best Scenic Design John Napier Won
Best Costume Design Andreane Neofitou Nominated
Best Lighting Design David Hersey Won
Drama Desk Award Outstanding Musical Won
Outstanding Actor in a Musical Colm Wilkinson Nominated
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical Michael Maguire Won
Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Judy Kuhn Nominated
Outstanding Orchestrations John Cameron Won
Outstanding Music Claude-Michel Schönberg Won
Outstanding Set Design John Napier Won

2013 Toronto revival

Year Award Category Nominee Result
2014 Dora Award[147][148] Outstanding Production Nominated
Outstanding Male Performance Ramin Karimloo Nominated
Mark Uhre Nominated
Aiden Glenn Nominated
Outstanding Female Performance Melissa O'Neil Won
Outstanding Direction Laurence Connor and James Powell Nominated
Outstanding Scenic Design Matt Kinley Nominated
Outstanding Costume Design Andreane Neofitou and Christine Rowland Won
Outstanding Lighting Design Paule Constable Nominated
Outstanding Choreography James Dodgson Nominated
Outstanding Ensemble Entire ensemble Nominated

2014 Broadway revival

2014 Australian revival

Year Award Category Nominee Result
2014 Green Room Awards Production Nominated
Actor in a Leading Role Simon Gleeson Nominated
Hayden Tee Won
Direction James Powell and Laurence Connor Nominated
Musical Direction Geoffrey Castles Nominated
Design (Lighting) Paule Constable Nominated
Design (Sound) Mick Potter Nominated
Design (Set and Costume) Matt Kinley (Set and Image Design) Nominated
2015 Helpmann Awards[149][150] Best Musical Won
Best Male Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical Simon Gleeson Won
Hayden Tee Nominated
Best Male Actor in a Supporting Role in a Musical Trevor Ashley Nominated
Chris Durling Nominated
Best Female Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical Patrice Tipoki Nominated
Best Female Actor in a Supporting Role in a Musical Kerrie Anne Greenland Won
Best Direction of a Musical Laurence Connor and James Powell Nominated
Best Choreography in a Musical Michael Ashcroft and Geoffrey Garratt Nominated
Best Lighting Design Paule Constable Won
Best Scenic Design Matt Kinley Nominated
Best Sound Design Mick Potter Won

See also

Notes

References

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Bibliography

External links

  • Official website  
  • ​Les Misérables​ at the Internet Broadway Database  
  • ​Les Misérables​ at the Playbill Vault  
  • An Archive of Performers from the Original Broadway Run of Les Misérables
  • An Archive of Performers from the London Run of Les Misérables

misérables, musical, misérables, ɑː, rahb, blə, french, mizeʁabl, colloquially, known, sung, through, musical, adaptation, victor, hugo, 1862, novel, same, name, claude, michel, schönberg, music, alain, boublil, jean, marc, natel, original, french, lyrics, her. Les Miserables l eɪ ˌ m ɪ z e ˈ r ɑː b el b l e lay MIZ e RAHB el RAH ble French le mizeʁabl colloquially known as Les Mis or Les Miz l eɪ ˈ m ɪ z lay MIZ is a sung through musical and an adaptation of Victor Hugo s 1862 novel of the same name by Claude Michel Schonberg music Alain Boublil Jean Marc Natel original French lyrics and Herbert Kretzmer English lyrics The original French musical premiered in Paris in 1980 with direction by Robert Hossein Its English language adaptation by producer Cameron Mackintosh has been running in London since October 1985 making it the longest running musical in the West End and the second longest running musical in the world after the original Off Broadway run of The Fantasticks Les MiserablesMusicClaude Michel SchonbergLyricsHerbert Kretzmer English Lyrics Alain Boublil Original French Lyrics Jean Marc Natel Original Text BookAlain Boublil Claude Michel SchonbergBasisLes Miserablesby Victor HugoPremiere24 September 1980 Palais des Sports ParisProductionsMultiple global productions since 1985AwardsTony Award for Best MusicalTony Award for Best Book of a MusicalTony Award for Best Original ScoreLaurence Olivier Award for Most Popular ShowDrama Desk Award for Outstanding MusicalDrama Desk Award for Outstanding MusicHelpmann Award for Best MusicalSet in early 19th century France Les Miserables is the story of Jean Valjean a French peasant and his desire for redemption released in 1815 after serving nineteen years in jail for stealing a loaf of bread for his sister s starving child Valjean decides to break his parole and start his life anew after a bishop inspires him with a tremendous act of mercy But a police inspector named Javert refuses to let him escape justice and pursues him for most of the play Along the way Valjean and a slew of characters are swept into a revolutionary period in France where a group of young idealists attempt to overthrow the government at a street barricade in Paris Contents 1 Background 2 Critical reception and milestones 3 Emblem 4 Synopsis 4 1 Prologue 4 2 Act I 4 3 Act II 5 Musical numbers 6 Instrumentation 7 Characters 8 Casts 8 1 Original casts 8 1 1 Notable replacements 8 1 1 1 West End 1985 2019 8 1 1 2 Broadway 1987 2003 8 1 1 3 Broadway revival 2006 08 8 1 1 4 25th Anniversary US tour 2010 13 8 1 1 5 Broadway revival 2014 16 8 1 1 6 West End revival 2019 8 2 Concert casts 8 2 1 Notable replacements 8 2 1 1 The All Star Staged Concert 2019 8 3 Additional notable performers 9 Productions 9 1 Sit down productions 9 1 1 Original French production 9 1 2 Original London production 9 1 3 2019 Revival 9 1 4 Original Broadway production 9 1 5 Original Australia production 9 1 6 1989 Toronto production 9 1 7 2006 Broadway revival 9 1 8 2013 Toronto revival 9 1 9 2014 Broadway revival 9 2 Touring productions 9 2 1 US national tours 9 2 2 UK and Ireland tours 9 2 2 1 1992 1993 tour 9 2 2 2 1997 2000 tour 9 2 3 25th anniversary tour 9 2 3 1 2018 present tour 9 2 4 2014 Australian tour 9 2 5 2016 International tour 10 Concert productions 10 1 10th Anniversary Concert 10 2 25th Anniversary Concert 10 3 The All Star Staged Concert 10 4 Other concert performances 11 International productions 11 1 North American productions 11 2 School edition 12 Film adaptation 13 Cast recordings 13 1 English 13 1 1 Original London Cast recording 13 1 2 Original Broadway Cast recording 13 1 3 Complete Symphonic Recording 13 1 4 10th Anniversary Concert 13 1 5 25th Anniversary UK Tour Cast 13 1 6 25th Anniversary Concert 14 Awards and nominations 14 1 Original West End production 14 2 Original Broadway production 14 3 2013 Toronto revival 14 4 2014 Broadway revival 14 5 2014 Australian revival 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 17 1 Bibliography 18 External linksBackground EditLes Miserables was originally released as a French language concept album 1 and the first musical stage adaptation of Les Miserables was presented at the Palais des Sports in 1980 2 In 1983 about six months after producer Cameron Mackintosh had opened Cats on Broadway he received a copy of the French concept album from director Peter Farago Farago had been impressed by the work and asked Mackintosh to produce an English language version of the show Initially reluctant Mackintosh eventually agreed Mackintosh in conjunction with the Royal Shakespeare Company assembled a production team to adapt the French musical for a British audience After two years in development the English language version opened in London on 8 October 1985 by the Royal Shakespeare Company at the Barbican Centre then the London home of the RSC The success of the West End musical led to a Broadway production Critical reception and milestones EditSee also Long running musical theatre productions Critical reviews for Les Miserables were initially negative At the opening of the London production The Sunday Telegraph s Francis King described the musical as a lurid Victorian melodrama produced with Victorian lavishness and Michael Ratcliffe of The Observer considered the show a witless and synthetic entertainment while literary scholars condemned the project for converting classic literature into a musical 3 4 Public opinion differed the box office received record orders The three month engagement sold out and reviews improved The original London production ran from October 1985 to July 2019 playing over 13 000 performances and making it the second longest running musical in the world after The Fantasticks 5 the second longest running West End show after The Mousetrap 6 and the longest running musical in the West End 7 On 3 October 2010 the show celebrated its 25th anniversary with three productions running in London the original production at the Queen s Theatre the 25th Anniversary touring production at the Barbican Centre and the 25th Anniversary concert at London s O2 Arena 7 The Broadway production opened 12 March 1987 and ran until 18 May 2003 closing after 6 680 performances At the time of its closing it was the second longest running musical in Broadway history 8 As of 2022 it remains the sixth longest running Broadway show 9 The show was nominated for 12 Tony Awards of which it won eight including Best Musical and Best Original Score Subsequently numerous tours and international and regional productions have been staged as well as concert and broadcast productions Several recordings have also been made A Broadway revival opened in 2006 at the Broadhurst Theatre and closed in 2008 and a second Broadway revival opened in 2014 at the Imperial Theatre and closed in September 2016 The show was placed first in a BBC Radio 2 listener poll of Britain s Number One Essential Musicals in 2005 receiving more than forty percent of the votes 10 A film version directed by Tom Hooper was released at the end of 2012 to generally positive reviews as well as numerous awards Emblem EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The drawing of Cosette by Emile Bayard that served as the model for the musical s emblem The musical s emblem is a picture of the waif Cosette sweeping the Thenardiers inn which occurs in the musical during Castle on a Cloud It is usually cropped to a head and shoulders portrait superimposed on the French flag The image is based on an etching by Gustave Brion which in turn was based on the drawing by Emile Bayard Bayard s drawing appeared in several of the novel s earliest French language editions Synopsis EditPrologue Edit In 1815 in France a chain gang of prisoners work at hard labor Prologue Work Song After 19 years in prison Jean Valjean Prisoner 24601 is released on parole by the prison guard Javert By law Valjean must display a yellow ticket of leave which identifies him as an ex convict On Parole As a convict Valjean is shunned wherever he goes and cannot find regular work with decent wages or lodging Only the Bishop of Digne offers him food and shelter Discontented Valjean steals the Bishop s silver He is captured by the police but rather than turn him in the Bishop tells the police that the silver was a gift also giving Valjean a pair of silver candlesticks The Bishop tells Valjean that he must use silver to become an honest man Valjean Arrested Valjean Forgiven Humbled by the Bishop s kindness Valjean resolves to redeem himself Valjean s Soliloquy What Have I Done and tears up his yellow ticket breaking his parole Act I Edit Eight years later in 1823 Jean Valjean assumed a new identity as Monsieur Madeleine a wealthy factory owner and mayor of Montreuil sur Mer Fantine is a single mother working in his factory trying to support her daughter Cosette who is being raised by an innkeeper and his wife while Fantine labors in the city The factory foreman lusts after Fantine and when she rejects his advances he takes it out on the other workers who resent her for it One day a coworker steals a letter about Cosette from Fantine revealing to the other workers that Fantine has a child A fight breaks out and the foreman and other workers use the incident as a pretense to fire Fantine At the End of the Day Fantine reflects on her broken dreams and about Cosette s father who abandoned them both I Dreamed a Dream Desperate for money she sells her locket and hair finally becoming a prostitute Lovely Ladies and attracting local sailors When she fights back against an abusive customer named Bamatabois Javert now a police inspector stationed in Montreuil sur Mer arrives to arrest her Valjean passes by the scene and pities Fantine when he realizes she once worked for him He orders Javert to release her and Valjean takes her to a hospital Fantine s Arrest Soon afterward Valjean rescues a man who is pinned by a runaway cart The Runaway Cart Javert who has pursued the fugitive Valjean all these years witnesses the incident He becomes suspicious remembering the incredible strength Valjean displayed in the work camp However it turns out a man who looks like Valjean has been arrested and is about to go to trial for breaking parole The real Valjean realizes that this case of mistaken identity could free him forever but he is not willing to see an innocent man go to prison in his place He confesses his identity to the court Who Am I The Trial At the hospital a delirious Fantine dreams of Cosette Valjean promises to find Cosette and protect her Come to Me Fantine s Death Relieved Fantine succumbs to her illness and dies Javert arrives to take Valjean back into custody but Valjean asks Javert for time to fetch Cosette Javert refuses insisting that a criminal like Valjean can never change for the better They struggle but Valjean overpowers Javert and escapes The Confrontation In Montfermeil the duplicitous innkeepers the Thenardiers use Cosette as a servant and treat her cruelly while extorting money from Fantine to indulge their own daughter Eponine Cosette dreams of a life with a mother where she is not forced to work and is treated lovingly Castle on a Cloud The Thenardiers cheat their customers stealing their possessions and setting high prices for low quality services while living a life of criminal depravity Master of the House Valjean meets Cosette while she s on an errand drawing water and offers the Thenardiers payment to adopt her The Bargain The Thenardiers feign concern for Cosette claiming that they love her like a daughter and that she is in fragile health Valjean negotiates with the Thenadiers for whom he pays 1 500 francs in the end Valjean and Cosette leave for Paris The Waltz of Treachery Julie Lund as Eponine in a Danish production of the musical Nine years later in 1832 Paris is in upheaval because of the impending death of General Lamarque the only man in the government who shows mercy to the poor Among those mingling in the streets are the student revolutionaries Marius Pontmercy and Enjolras who contemplate the effect Lamarque s death will have on the poor and desperate in Paris The Thenardiers have since lost their inn and now run a street gang that consists of thugs Brujon Babet Claquesous and Montparnasse The Thenardiers daughter Eponine is also now grown and has fallen in love with her oblivious friend Marius as well as the streetwise young urchin Gavroche who knows everything that happens in the slums Look Down The Thenardiers prepare to con some charitable visitors who turn out to be Valjean and a fully grown Cosette While the gang confounds her father Cosette runs into Marius and the pair fall in love Thenardier recognizes Valjean but Javert intervenes before they can finish the robbery The Robbery Valjean and Cosette escape and only later does Javert suspect who they were Javert makes a vow that he will find Valjean and recapture him Stars Meanwhile Marius persuades Eponine to help him find Cosette Eponine s Errand At a small cafe Enjolras exhorts a group of idealistic students to prepare for revolution Marius interrupts the serious atmosphere by fantasizing about his new found love much to the amusement of his compatriots The ABC Cafe Red and Black When Gavroche brings the news of General Lamarque s death the students realize that they can use the public s dismay to incite their revolution and that their time has come Do You Hear the People Sing At Valjean s house Cosette thinks about her meeting with Marius She confronts Valjean about the secrets he keeps about his and her own past Rue Plumet In My Life Eponine leads Marius to Cosette s garden He and Cosette meet again and confess their mutual love while a heartbroken Eponine watches them through the garden gate and laments that Marius has fallen in love with another A Heart Full of Love Thenardier and his gang arrive intending to rob Valjean s house but Eponine stops them by screaming a warning The Attack on Rue Plumet The scream alerts Valjean who believes that the intruder was Javert He tells Cosette that it s time once again for them to go on the run and starts planning for them to flee France altogether On the eve of the 1832 Paris Uprising Valjean prepares to go into exile Cosette and Marius part in despair while Enjolras encourages all of Paris to join the revolution Eponine acknowledges despairingly that Marius will never love her and Marius is conflicted about whether to follow Cosette or join the uprising Meanwhile Javert reveals his plans to spy on the students and the Thenardiers scheme to profit off the coming violence Marius decides to stand with his friends and all anticipate what the dawn will bring One Day More 7 11 Act II Edit John Owen Jones as Jean Valjean The students build a barricade to serve as their rally point Javert who is disguised as a rebel volunteers to spy on the government troops Marius discovers that Eponine has disguised herself as a boy to join the rebels Wanting to keep his best friend safe from the impending violence he sends her to deliver a farewell letter to Cosette Building the Barricade Upon These Stones Valjean intercepts the letter and learns about Marius and Cosette s romance Eponine walks the streets of Paris alone imagining that Marius is there with her but laments that her love for Marius will never be reciprocated On My Own The French army arrives at the barricade and demands that the students surrender At the Barricade However Javert tells the students that the government will not attack that night Javert s Arrival Gavroche recognizes him and quickly exposes him as a spy and the students detain him Little People The students plan to spark a general uprising with their act of defiance hoping that all the people of Paris will side with them and overwhelm the army Eponine returns to find Marius but is shot by the soldiers who were crossing the barricade As Marius holds her she assures him that she feels no pain and reveals her love for him before dying in his arms A Little Fall of Rain Eponine s Death The students mourn this first loss of life at the barricades and resolve to fight in her name Enjolras attempts to comfort Marius who is devastated and heartbroken over the death of his best friend Valjean arrives at the barricade crossing the government lines disguised as a soldier Night of Anguish He hopes that he can protect Marius in the coming battle for Cosette s sake The rebels are suspicious of him at first but accept him after he saves Enjolras from a soldier Valjean asks Enjolras to allow him to be the executioner of the imprisoned Javert which Enjolras grants But as soon as Valjean and Javert are alone Valjean frees him Javert warns Valjean that he will not give up his pursuit and rejects what he perceives as a bargain for Valjean s freedom Valjean says there are no conditions to his release and holds no grudges toward Javert for doing his duty The First Attack The students settle down for the night and express anxiety about the battle to come Enjolras tells the other students to stay awake for a surprise attack but he tells Marius to get some sleep because of the latter s devastation over losing Eponine Grantaire gets angry and asks the students if they fear dying and Marius wonders if Cosette will remember him if he does Drink with Me Valjean prays to God to protect Marius even if the cost for his safety requires Valjean s own life Bring Him Home As dawn approaches Enjolras realizes that the people of Paris have not risen up with them but resolves to fight on in spite of the impossible odds Dawn of Anguish Their resolve is further increased when the army kills Gavroche who snuck out to collect ammunition from bodies on the other side of the barricade The Second Attack Death of Gavroche The army gives a final warning but the rebels fight to the last man Everyone at the barricade is killed except Valjean and a gravely wounded Marius who both escape into the sewers The Final Battle Javert returns to the barricade to search for Valjean and he finds the open sewer grating Valjean carries Marius through the sewers but collapses from exhaustion Thenardier who has been looting bodies comes upon them and extracts a ring from the unconscious Marius He flees when Valjean regains consciousness Dog Eats Dog When Valjean carries Marius to the sewer s exit he finds Javert waiting for him Valjean begs Javert for one hour to bring Marius to a doctor and Javert reluctantly agrees Javert finds himself unable to reconcile Valjean s merciful acts with his perception of Valjean as an irredeemable criminal Finding himself torn between his beliefs about God and his desire to adhere to the law Javert commits suicide by throwing himself into the Seine Javert s Suicide In the wake of the failed revolution many women mourn the deaths of the students Turning Marius wounded but alive despairs at the deaths of his friends and perceives that their sacrifice was for nothing Empty Chairs at Empty Tables As he wonders who saved his own life Cosette confronts him and they reaffirm their blossoming romance Valjean realizes that Cosette will not need him as a caretaker once she is married and gives them his blessing Every Day Valjean confesses to Marius that he is an escaped convict and must go away because his presence endangers Cosette Valjean s Confession He makes Marius promise never to tell Cosette A few months later Marius and Cosette marry Wedding Chorale The Thenardiers gatecrash the reception disguised as nobility and attempt to blackmail Marius telling him that Valjean is a murderer and that Thenardier saw him carrying a corpse in the sewers When Thenardier shows him the ring he stole as proof Marius realizes that it was Valjean who saved his life The newlyweds leave to find Valjean in some productions Marius pauses to give Thenardier a punch in the face The Thenardiers are not discouraged instead gloating that their craven practicality has saved their lives time and time again Beggars at the Feast At a convent Valjean awaits his death having nothing left to live for The spirit of Fantine appears to him and tells him that he has been forgiven and will soon be with God Cosette and Marius arrive to find Valjean near death Valjean thanks God for letting him live long enough to see Cosette again and Marius thanks him for saving his life Valjean s Death Valjean gives Cosette a letter confessing his troubled past and the truth about her mother As he dies the spirits of Fantine and Eponine guide him to Heaven reminding him that to love another person is to see the face of God They are joined by the spirits of those who died at the barricades all of whom sing of the coming of a better world Do You Hear The People Sing Reprise 11 Musical numbers EditMain article Songs from Les Miserables Act I Song Performer s 1 Prologue Work Song Chain Gang Javert Jean Valjean2 Prologue On Parole Jean Valjean Farmer Labourer Innkeeper s Wife Innkeeper Bishop of Digne3 Prologue Valjean Arrested Valjean Forgiven Constables Bishop of Digne4 Prologue Valjean s Soliloquy What Have I Done Jean Valjean5 At the End of the Day Fantine Foreman Factory Girl Jean Valjean Factory Workers Ensemble6 I Dreamed a Dream Fantine7 Lovely Ladies Fantine Sailors Whores Old Woman Crone Pimp Ensemble8 Fantine s Arrest Bamatabois Fantine Javert and Jean Valjean9 The Runaway Cart Fauchevelant Javert Jean Valjean Ensemble10 Who Am I Jean Valjean11 Come to Me Fantine and Jean Valjean12 The Confrontation Javert and Jean Valjean13 Castle on a Cloud Young Cosette Madame Thenardier14 Master of the House Monsieur Thenardier Madame Thenardier Ensemble15 The Well Scene Jean Valjean and Young Cosette16 The Bargain The Waltz of Treachery Jean Valjean Monsieur Thenardier Madame Thenardier Young Cosette17 Look Down Gavroche Old Woman Prostitute Pimp Enjolras Marius Company18 The Robbery Monsieur Thenardier Madame Thenardier Marius Eponine Jean Valjean19 Javert s Intervention Javert Monsieur Thenardier20 Stars Javert21 Eponine s Errand Eponine and Marius22 The ABC Cafe Red and Black Enjolras Marius Grantaire Combeferre Feuilly Courfeyrac Joly Lesgles Prouvaire Gavroche23 Do You Hear the People Sing Enjolras Combeferre Courfeyrac Feuilly Ensemble24 In My Life Cosette Jean Valjean Marius and Eponine25 A Heart Full of Love Marius Cosette and Eponine26 The Attack on Rue Plumet Monsieur Thenardier Brujon Babet Claquesous Montparnasse Eponine Marius Jean Valjean and Cosette27 One Day More Jean Valjean Marius Cosette Eponine Enjolras Javert Monsieur Thenardier Madame Thenardier and CompanyAct II Song Performer s 28 Building the Barricade Enjolras Javert Grantaire Students Marius Eponine29 On My Own Eponine30 At the Barricade Enjolras Marius Grantaire Students and Army Officer31 Javert s Arrival Javert and Enjolras32 Little People Gavroche Enjolras Javert33 A Little Fall of Rain Eponine s Death Eponine and Marius34 Night of Anguish Enjolras and Students35 The First Attack Enjolras Jean Valjean Javert Students36 Drink with Me Feuilly Prouvaire Joly Grantaire Marius Company37 Bring Him Home Jean Valjean38 Dawn of Anguish Enjolras39 The Second Attack Death of Gavroche Enjolras Marius Jean Valjean Gavroche Students40 The Final Battle Army Officer Enjolras Company41 The Sewers Dog Eats Dog Monsieur Thenardier42 Javert s Soliloquy Javert43 Turning Women of Paris44 Empty Chairs at Empty Tables Marius45 Every Day A Heart Full of Love Reprise Cosette Marius and Jean Valjean46 Valjean s Confession Marius and Jean Valjean47 Wedding Chorale Beggars at the Feast Marius Monsieur Thenardier Madame Thenardier Company48 Epilogue Valjean s Death Jean Valjean Fantine Cosette Marius and Eponine49 Do You Hear the People Sing Reprise Full CompanyInstrumentation EditThe standard orchestration for the 2009 U K tour of Les Miserables consisted of 12 Bass Cello Horn 1 Horn 2 Keyboard 1 Keyboard 2 Percussion Reed 1 Alto Flute Alto Recorder Flute Piccolo Reed 2 Cor Anglais Oboe Reed 3 B Clarinet Bass Clarinet E Clarinet Tenor Recorder Trombone Tuba Trumpet Flugelhorn Viola ViolinCharacters EditCharacter 13 Voice 14 DescriptionJean Valjean tenorA 2 B4 15 Prisoner 24601 After being released from imprisonment for serving nineteen years five for stealing a loaf of bread and fourteen for multiple escape attempts he breaks parole and after receiving mercy from Bishop Myriel turns his life around to live for God showing the effects of God s grace that bring a corrupt man into virtuous and selfless living He changes his identity becoming the wealthy mayor of a small town He later adopts Cosette the only daughter of Fantine 16 Inspector Javert baritoneF2 F 4 Respects the law above all else and relentlessly pursues Valjean hoping to bring the escaped convict to justice He firmly believes in the justice of the law and has no room for mercy Fantine altoD3 E 5 An impoverished factory worker who loses her job and as a result turns to prostitution in order to continue paying the Thenardiers to care for her illegitimate daughter Cosette As Fantine dies of consumption she asks Valjean to look after her child Marius Pontmercy baritenorA2 A 4 A student revolutionary is friends with Eponine but falls in love with Cosette and she with him He is later rescued from the barricades by Valjean who ultimately gives Marius and Cosette his blessing allowing them to be married Cosette sopranoB 3 C6 Cosette the daughter of Fantine has grown up to become a beautiful young woman of culture and privilege under Valjean s adoptive and loving fatherly care and protection She falls in love with Marius and he returns her equally strong and pure romantic feelings She marries him at the end of the musical Eponine Thenardier mezzo sopranoF3 E5 Daughter of the Thenardiers Eponine now a ragged street waif and a thief like her father secretly loves Marius Although it causes her great anguish she helps him locate Cosette and later delivers a message he sends her from the barricade She is killed while returning to the barricades to see Marius In the end she appears as a spirit alongside Fantine and they guide the dying Valjean to Heaven Monsieur Thenardier baritoneC3 G4 A second rate thief Thenardier runs a small inn where he continually bilks his customers He and his family later travel to Paris where he sets up as the leader of a gang of street thugs and con men An eternal survivor Thenardier is above nothing and below everything Madame Thenardier mezzo sopranoG 3 E5 Thenardier s unscrupulous wife who abuses Cosette but dotes on her own daughter Eponine She is fully complicit in most of her husband s crimes and schemes Enjolras baritenor A2 G 4 B 4 optional The leader of the student revolutionaries and a friend of Marius He is idealistic although his plan is doomed to failure Grantaire baritoneD 3 G4 A student revolutionary He believes in nothing he only joins the revolution because of his admiration of Enjolras Witty and drunken he is happy being with the student group and they put up with him He also keeps a watchful eye on Gavroche The Bishop of Digne bassA2 E4 Shelters Valjean after his release from jail and gives him gifts of silver and absolution His acts of kindness move Valjean to surrender his ways to God escaping the label of criminal and living in a new identity Gavroche boy sopranoA3 G5 A streetwise urchin who knows everyone and everything that happens in the slums of Paris He joins up with the revolutionaries and later dies on the barricade attempting to recover ammunition from fallen soldiers According to the book by Victor Hugo Gavroche is the son of the Thenardiers Casts EditOriginal casts Edit Character Original West End Production 17 Original Broadway Production Original Australia Production Original U S Tour 18 Original U K Tour 1st Broadway Revival 25th Anniversary U K Tour 25th Anniversary U S Tour Film Version 2nd Broadway Revival West End Revival1985 1987 1992 2006 2009 2010 2012 2014 2019Jean Valjean Colm Wilkinson Normie Rowe William Solo Jeff Leyton Alexander Gemignani John Owen Jones Lawrence Clayton Hugh Jackman Ramin Karimloo Jon RobynsInspector Javert Roger Allam Terrence Mann Philip Quast Herndon Lackey Philip Quast Norm Lewis Earl Carpenter Andrew Varela Russell Crowe Will Swenson Bradley JadenFantine Patti LuPone Randy Graff Debbie Byrne Diane Fratantoni Ria Jones Daphne Rubin Vega Madalena Alberto Betsy Morgan Anne Hathaway Caissie Levy Carrie Hope FletcherMarius Pontmercy Michael Ball David Bryant Simon Burke Hugh Panaro Mike Sterling Adam Jacobs Gareth Gates Justin Scott Brown Eddie Redmayne Andy Mientus Harry AppsCosette Rebecca Caine Judy Kuhn Marina Prior Tamara Jenkins Sarah Ryan Ali Ewoldt Katie Hall Jenny Latimer Amanda Seyfried Samantha Hill Lily KerhoasEponine Thenardier Frances Ruffelle Jodie Gillies Renee Veneziale Meredith Braun Celia Keenan Bolger Rosalind James Chasten Harmon Samantha Barks Nikki M James Shan AkoMonsieur Thenardier Alun Armstrong Leo Burmester Barry Langrish Tom Alan Robbins Tony Timberlake Gary Beach Ashley Artus Michael Kostroff Sacha Baron Cohen Cliff Saunders Gerard CareyMadame Thenardier Susan Jane Tanner Jennifer Butt Robyn Arthur Victoria Clark Louise Plowright Jenny Galloway Lynne Wilmot Shawna Hamic Helena Bonham Carter Keala Settle Josefina GabrielleEnjolras David Burt Michael Maguire Anthony Warlow John Herrera Daniel Coll Aaron Lazar Jon Robyns Jeremy Hays Aaron Tveit Kyle Scatliffe Ashley GilmourGrantaire Clive Carter Anthony Crivello Michael Turkich Michael McCormick Allan Hardman Drew Sarich Adam Linstead Joseph Spieldenner George Blagden John Rapson Ciaran BowlingThe Bishop of Digne Ken Caswell Norman Large Unknown Kevin McGuire Kenneth Orr James Chip Leonard David Lawrence Benjamin Magnuson Colm Wilkinson Adam Monley Rodney Earl ClarkeGavroche Ian TuckerOliver SpencerLiza Hayden Braden DannerRD Robb Brian RooneyTobi Monique HarrisAdam LloydWilliam Snow Lantz LandryAndrew Renshaw Adam BoothLaurence PorterEdward Crangle Brian D AddarioJacob LevineAustyn Myers Jordi ClarkRobert Madge Josh CaggianoEthan Paul Khusidman Daniel Huttlestone Joshua ColleyGaten Matarazzo Logan ClarkTaye MatthewBilly JenkinsChe GrantCharlie StrippNotable replacements Edit West End 1985 2019 Edit Jean Valjean Alfie Boe Simon Bowman Killian Donnelly Dudu Fisher Simon Gleeson Ramin Karimloo Peter Karrie Peter Lockyer John Owen Jones Stig Rossen Drew Sarich Martin Smith Dave Willetts Antony Hansen u s Bradley Jaden u s Glyn Kerslake u s Javert David Burt Earl Carpenter Clive Carter Peter Corry Hadley Fraser Ethan Freeman Bradley Jaden Norm Lewis Michael McCarthy Tam Mutu Jerome Pradon Philip Quast Hayden Tee David Thaxton Killian Donnelly u s Fantine Madalena Alberto Joanna Ampil Gunilla Backman Sierra Boggess Allyson Brown Carmen Cusack Kerry Ellis Rachelle Ann Go Carola Haggkvist Ruthie Henshall Na Young Jeon Kathleen Rowe McAllen Siobhan McCarthy Claire Moore Silvie Paladino Jenna Russell Celinde Schoenmaker Caroline Sheen Carley Stenson Rebecca Storm Caroline Quentin u s Dianne Pilkington u s Marius Graham Bickley Simon Bowman Alistair Brammer Glenn Carter Martin Crewes Hadley Fraser Gareth Gates Nick Jonas Jon Lee Tom Lowe Adrian Lewis Morgan Jon Robyns Martin Smith Hayden Tee Steve Balsamo u s Ramin Karimloo u s Antony Hansen u s Fra Fee u s Cosette Gina Beck Celia Graham Katie Hall Lucie Jones Camilla Kerslake Myrra Malmberg Dianne Pilkington u s Eponine Sabrina Aloueche Joanna Ampil Samantha Barks Meredith Braun Shonagh Daly Carrie Hope Fletcher Linzi Hateley Danielle Hope Laura Michelle Kelly Alexia Khadime Eva Noblezada Silvie Paladino Sian Reeves Lea Salonga Caroline Sheen Nancy Sullivan Jenna Russell u s Helen Owen u s Monsieur Thenardier Martin Ball Barry James Chris Langham Matt Lucas Hilton McRae Peter Polycarpou Stephen Tate Madame Thenardier Rosemary Ashe Tracie Bennett Vicky Entwistle Jenny Galloway Linzi Hateley Claire Moore Louise Plowright Jodie Prenger Gay Soper Harriet Thorpe Enjolras Graham Bickley Killian Donnelly Bradley Jaden Ramin Karimloo Glyn Kerslake John Owen Jones David Thaxton Oliver Thornton Peter Polycarpou u s Steve Balsamo u s Tam Mutu u s Fra Fee u s Grantaire Graham Bickley Peter Polycarpou John Owen Jones u s The Bishop of Digne David Thaxton u s Gavroche Jonathan Bailey James Buckley James Byng Chris Fountain Daniel Huttlestone Paul Keating Robert Madge Perry Millward Adam SearlesBroadway 1987 2003 Edit Jean Valjean Rob Evan Dudu Fisher Robert Marien Gary Morris John Cudia u s Mike Eldred u s Javert Anthony Crivello Robert Cuccioli Gregg Edelman Shuler Hensley Michael McCarthy Chuck Wagner Robert Westenberg Stephen Bogardus u s David Benoit u s Robert Hunt u s Wade Williams u s Fantine Laurie Beechman Donna Kane Andrea McArdle Maureen Moore Rachel York Debbie Gravitte Catherine Hickland Paige O Hara Melba Moore Christy Baron Alice Ripley Lauren Kennedy Jacquelyn Piro Donovan Marius Chris Diamantopoulos Eric Kunze Peter Lockyer Ricky Martin Hugh Panaro Matthew Porretta Kevin Kern Ciaran Sheehan u s Marcus Lovett u s Hunter Foster u s Max von Essen u s Cosette Jacquelyn Piro Donovan Sarah Litzsinger u s Megan Lawrence u s Elena Shaddow u s Jennifer Paz u s Eponine Jessica Boevers Catherine Brunell Debbie Gibson Diana Kaarina Megan Lawrence Lea Salonga Natalie Toro Sarah Uriarte Berry Shanice Kerry Butler Sarah Litzsinger u s Sutton Foster u s Jennifer Paz u s Monsieur Thenardier Ed Dixon Nick Wyman Ann Crumb u s Marla Schaffel u s David Benoit u s Madame Thenardier Betsy Joslyn Olga Merediz u s Jessica Molaskey u s Enjolras Ron Bohmer Gary Mauer Kevin Earley u s Darren Ritchie u s Grantaire Wade Williams The Bishop of Digne David Benoit Gavroche Michael Shulman Jarrod Spector Jason Tam Michael Zeidman Grant Rosenmeyer Harrison Chad Nick Jonas Lea Michele u s Broadway revival 2006 08 Edit Jean Valjean John Owen Jones Drew Sarich Ben Crawford u s Jeff Kready u s Javert Robert Hunt Drew Sarich Ben Crawford u s Fantine Judy Kuhn Lea Salonga Desi Oakley u s Eponine Megan McGinnis Monsieur Thenardier Chip Zien Madame Thenardier Ann Harada Enjolras Max von Essen Darren Ritchie u s Drew Sarich u s 25th Anniversary US tour 2010 13 Edit Jean Valjean Peter Lockyer Aaron Walpole u s Fantine Jessica Keenan Wynn u s Enjolras Jason Forbach Gavroche Joshua Colley Gaten MatarazzoBroadway revival 2014 16 Edit Jean Valjean Alfie Boe John Owen Jones Kyle Jean Baptiste u s Aaron Walpole u s Javert Earl Carpenter Hayden Tee Fantine Montego Glover Erika Henningsen Alison Luff Melissa O Neil u s Marius Chris McCarrell Eponine Melissa O Neil u s Monsieur Thenardier Gavin Lee Enjolras Jason Forbach The Bishop of Digne Andrew Kober u s West End revival 2019 Edit Jean Valjean John Owen Jones u s Javert David Thaxton Fantine Rachelle Ann Go Ava Brennan Lucie Jones Monsieur Thenardier Matt Lucas Madame Thenardier Claire Machin Enjolras Bradley Jaden u s Concert casts Edit Character The 10th Anniversary Dream Cast in Concert The Windsor Castle Concert The Hollywood Bowl Concert The 25th Anniversary Concert The All Star Staged Concert 19 The All Star Staged Concert Revival The Staged Concert1995 2004 2008 2010 2019 2020 2021Jean Valjean Colm Wilkinson Michael Ball J Mark McVey Alfie Boe Jon RobynsInspector Javert Philip Quast Michael McCarthy Brian Stokes Mitchell Norm Lewis Michael Ball Bradley JadenFantine Ruthie Henshall Joanna Ampil Melora Hardin Lea Salonga Carrie Hope Fletcher Lucie JonesMarius Pontmercy Michael Ball Gary Tushaw John Lloyd Young Nick Jonas Rob Houchen Harry AppsCosette Judy Kuhn Julia Moller Michele Maika Katie Hall Lily Kerhoas Amara Okereke Charlie BurnEponine Thenardier Lea Salonga Gemma Wardle Lea Michele Samantha Barks Shan AkoMonsieur Thenardier Alun Armstrong Stephen Tate Michael McCormick Matt Lucas Gerard CareyMadame Thenardier Jenny Galloway Katy Secombe Ruth Williamson Jenny Galloway Katy Secombe Josefina GabrielleEnjolras Michael Maguire Ramin Karimloo Tom Lowe Ramin Karimloo Bradley Jaden Jamie MuscatoGrantaire Anthony Crivello Matt Harrop Daniel Guzman Hadley Fraser Raymond Walsh Connor JonesThe Bishop of Digne Paul Monaghan Andy Mace Patrick Reese Earl Carpenter Simon Bowman Earl CarpenterGavroche Adam Searles Unknown Sage Ryan Robert Madge Logan Clark UnknownAlternate Valjean John Owen Jones Dean ChisnallNotable replacements Edit The All Star Staged Concert 2019 Edit The Bishop of Digne Earl CarpenterAdditional notable performers Edit Jean Valjean James Barbour Jordan Bennett Michael Burgess Jordan Donica Rob Guest Jerzy Jeszke Takeshi Kaga Tommy Korberg Egill olafsson Hugh Panaro Henk Poort Gyula Vikidal Chuck Wagner Oystein Wiik Javert John Diedrich Davis Gaines Uwe Kroger Brad Little Jeff McCarthy Paul Schoeffler William Michals Fantine Joan Almedilla Christy Baron Ann Crumb Hollis Resnik Lisa Vroman Carolee Carmello Pia Douwes Katie Hall Louise Pitre Andrea Rivette Lisa Simone Peta Toppano Marius Gilles Chiasson Tim Howar Josh Young Peter Cousens Uwe Kroger Carlos Marin Danny de Munk Cosette Melissa Errico Lisa Vroman Carolee Carmello Barbara Walsh Lisa Michelson Sarah Uriarte Berry Catherine Brunell Jill Paice Sierra Boggess Anita Louise Combe Joke de Kruijf Marina Prior Erika Ikuta Eponine Ma Anne Dionisio Caren Lyn Tackett Andrea McArdle Michelle Nicastro Sarah Uriarte Berry Sally Dworsky Lisa Michelson Ariana DeBose Autumn Hurlbert Melissa O Neil Kaho Shimada Ashley Spencer Erika Ikuta Monsieur Thenardier Paul de Leeuw Ken Page Jimmy Smagula Madame Thenardier Sharron Matthews Anne L Nathan Lisa Howard Sophie Louise Dann Simone Kleinsma Liz Larsen Enjolras Amick Byram Jarrod Emick Rob Evan Alistair Brammer Daniel Diges Bill van Dijk Uwe Kroger Grantaire Kenny D Aquila William Michals Gavroche Noah Galvin Phillip Glasser Andrew Leeds Aaron Michael Metchik Sam Riegel Rider StrongProductions EditSit down productions Edit Original French production Edit The Palais des Sports now Dome de Paris in Paris where the musical was first performed Alain Boublil s initial idea to adapt Victor Hugo s novel into a musical came while at a performance of the musical Oliver in London As soon as the Artful Dodger came onstage Gavroche came to mind It was like a blow to the solar plexus I started seeing all the characters of Victor Hugo s Les Miserables Valjean Javert Gavroche Cosette Marius and Eponine in my mind s eye laughing crying and singing onstage 20 He shared the idea with French composer Claude Michel Schonberg and the two developed a rough synopsis and analysis of each character s mental and emotional state as well as that of an audience Schonberg then began work on the music while Boublil the text According to Boublil I could begin work on the words This I did after myself deciding on the subject and title of every song in collaboration with my friend poet Jean Marc Natel 21 Two years later a two hour demo tape of Schonberg accompanying himself on the piano and singing every role was completed An album of this collaboration was recorded at CTS Studios in Wembley and was released in 1980 selling 260 000 copies citation needed The concept album includes Maurice Barrier as Jean Valjean Jacques Mercier as Javert Rose Laurens as Fantine Yvan Dautin as Thenardier Marie France Roussel as Mme Thenardier Richard Dewitte as Marius Fabienne Guyon as Cosette Marie France Dufour as Eponine Michel Sardou as Enjolras Fabrice Bernard as Gavroche Maryse Cedolin as Young Cosette Claude Michel Schonberg as Courfeyrac Salvatore Adamo as Combeferre Michel Delpech as Feuilly Dominique Tirmont as M Gillenormand and Mireille as the hair buyer That year in September 1980 a stage version directed by veteran French film director Robert Hossein was produced at the Palais des Sports in Paris The show was a success with 100 performances seen by over 500 000 people 22 page needed 23 24 Most of the cast from the concept album performed in the production 22 25 The cast included Maurice Barrier as Valjean Jean Vallee as Javert Rose Laurens as Fantine Maryse Cedolin and Sylvie Camacho and Priscilla Patron as Young Cosette Marie France Roussel as Mme Thenardier Yvan Dautin as M Thenardier Florence Davis and Fabrice Ploquin and Cyrille Dupont as Gavroche Marianne Mille as Eponine Gilles Buhlmann as Marius Christian Ratellin as Enjolras Fabienne Guyon as Cosette Rene Louis Baron as Combeferre Dominique Tirmont as M Gillenormand Anne Forrez as Mlle Gillenormand and Claude Reva as the storyteller 22 25 26 27 Original London production Edit Les Miserables at Sondheim Theatre in London The English language version with lyrics by Herbert Kretzmer and additional material by James Fenton was substantially expanded and reworked from a literal translation by Siobhan Bracke of the original Paris version in particular adding a prologue to tell Jean Valjean s background story Kretzmer s lyrics are not a direct translation of the French a term that Kretzmer refused to use A third of the English lyrics were a rough translation another third were adapted from the French lyrics and the final third consisted of new material The majority is performed in recitative style the vocalists use natural speech not musical metrics 28 The first production in English produced by Cameron Mackintosh and adapted and directed by Trevor Nunn and John Caird played to preview performances beginning on 28 September 1985 and formally opened on 8 October 1985 at the Barbican Centre London It was billed in the programme as The Royal Shakespeare Company presentation of the RSC Cameron Mackintosh production The set was designed by John Napier costumes by Andreane Neofitou and lighting by David Hersey Musical supervision and orchestrations were by John Cameron who had been involved with the show since Boublil and Schonberg hired him to orchestrate the original French concept album Musical staging was by Kate Flatt with musical direction by Martin Koch The original London cast included Colm Wilkinson as Jean Valjean Roger Allam as Javert Ken Caswell as the Bishop of Digne Patti LuPone as Fantine Zoe Hart Justine McIntyre Jayne O Mahony and Joanne Woodcock as Young Cosette Danielle Akers Gillian Brander and Juliette Caton as Young Eponine Susan Jane Tanner as Madame Thenardier Alun Armstrong as Thenardier Frances Ruffelle as Eponine Rebecca Caine as Cosette Michael Ball as Marius David Burt as Enjolras Clive Carter as Grantaire Bamatabois with Ian Tucker Oliver Spencer and Liza Hayden sharing the role of Gavroche 29 30 17 On 4 December 1985 the show transferred to the Palace Theatre London and moved again on 3 April 2004 to the smaller Queen s Theatre now called the Sondheim Theatre with some revisions of staging 31 The show celebrated its ten thousandth performance on 5 January 2010 32 and its 30th anniversary in October 2015 33 The co production has generated valuable income for the Royal Shakespeare Company 34 The original show closed at the Queen s Theatre on 13 July 2019 to allow for theatre refurbishments while a staged concert was performed at the adjacent Gielgud Theatre for a four month run 35 36 2019 Revival Edit The updated staging developed for the 25th anniversary production at the Barbican opened at the newly renamed Sondheim Theatre on 18 December 2019 in previews with opening night set for 16 January 2020 35 37 The new production is co directed by James Powell and Laurence Connor with set and image design by Matt Kinley lighting by Paule Constable sound by Mick Potter and costumes by Andreane Neofitou and Christine Rowlands The first cast for this new version included Jon Robyns Valjean Bradley Jaden Javert Carrie Hope Fletcher Fantine Shan Ako Eponine Lily Kerhoas Cosette Harry Apps Marius Gerard Carey Thenardier Josefina Gabrielle Madame Thenardier and Ashley Gilmour Enjolras 38 The show was forced to close temporarily from March 16 2020 as a result of the COVID 19 pandemic It was announced in June 2020 that it would not reopen until 2021 39 It reopened on 25 September 2021 40 Original Broadway production Edit The musical opened as a pre Broadway tryout at the Kennedy Center s Opera House in Washington D C on 27 December 1986 It ran for eight weeks through 14 February 1987 41 The musical then premiered on Broadway on 12 March 1987 at The Broadway Theatre Colm Wilkinson and Frances Ruffelle reprised their roles from the London production 42 The 4 5 million production had a more than 4 million advance sale prior to its New York opening 43 The show underwent further tightening namely with improved sewer lighting and the incorporation of the Javert suicide scene effect 44 A New York Times report consisted of the following The transfer from London to the United States has prompted further modifications We are taking this opportunity to rethink and perfect to rewrite some details which probably no one else will see but which for us are still long nights of work Mr Boublil says There are things that nobody had time to do in London and here we have a wonderful opportunity to fix a few things No one will notice perhaps but for us it will make us so happy if we can better this show We would like this to be the final version 43 Two songs were deleted the complete version of Gavroche s song Little People and the adult Cosette s I Saw Him Once A short section at the beginning of In My Life replaced I Saw Him Once The lyrics in Javert s Stars were changed It now ended with the line This I swear by the stars while the London production and cast recording ended with the repeated line Keeping watch in the night The original Broadway cast included Colm Wilkinson as Jean Valjean David Bryant as Marius Judy Kuhn as Cosette Michael Maguire as Enjolras Frances Ruffelle as Eponine Braden Danner as Gavroche Donna Vivino as Young Cosette Jennifer Butt as Madame Thenardier Leo Burmester as Thenardier Randy Graff as Fantine Terrence Mann as Javert and Chrissie McDonald as Young Eponine 42 Other members of the original Broadway cast included Anthony Crivello Grantaire Bamatabois Kevin Marcum Brujon John Dewar Joly Paul Harman Combeferre Foreman Joseph Kolinski Feuilly Alex Santoriello Montparnasse Labourer Jesse Corti Courfeyrac Farmer Susan Goodman Old Woman Innkeeper s Wife John Norman Prouvaire Pimp Norman Large Bishop Lesgles Marcus Lovett Babet Constable Cindy Benson Old Woman Steve Shocket Claquesous Fauchevelant Constable Pimp Marcie Shaw Jane Bodle Joanna Glushak Ann Crumb Factory Girl Kelli James and Gretchen Kingsley Weihe Michael Hinton was the original drummer and credited on the cast album 42 The musical ran at the Broadway Theatre through 10 October 1990 when it moved to the Imperial Theatre 42 It was scheduled to close on 15 March 2003 but the closing was postponed by a surge in public interest 45 According to an article in The Scotsman Sales picked up last October when Sir Cameron made the announcement that the show would be closing on March 15th its closure postponed to May 18th because of an unexpected increase in business 46 After 6 680 performances in sixteen years 46 when it closed on 18 May 2003 42 it was the second longest running Broadway musical after Cats 47 It was surpassed by The Phantom of the Opera in 2006 48 This Broadway production of Les Miserables and its advertising in New York City is a recurring theme in American Psycho The reviewer for the Financial Times wrote that Les Miserables is the book s hilarious main cultural compass point 49 Original Australia production Edit A production opened in Australia at the Theatre Royal Sydney on November 27 1987 The cast featured Normie Rowe as Valjean Philip Quast as Javert Anthony Warlow as Enjolras Debbie Byrne as Fantine Simon Burke as Marius Marina Prior as Cosette Jodie Gillies as Eponine Barry Langrish as Thenardier and Robyn Arthur as Madame Thenardier Rob Guest later took over the role of Valjean The production closed on August 17 1991 50 1989 Toronto production Edit The first Canadian production of Les Miserables began performances at the Royal Alexandra Theatre on March 15 1989 The cast was headed by Michael Burgess as Jean Valjean with Thomas Goerz as Javert and Louise Pitre as Fantine After 14 months the production toured other Canadian cities including Vancouver before returning to Toronto where it played another year before finally closing on July 5 1992 2006 Broadway revival Edit Only three years after the original run closed Les Miserables began a return to Broadway on 9 November 2006 at the Broadhurst Theatre for a limited run that was subsequently made open ended Using the set costumes performers and other resources from the recently finished third US national touring production the production was only slightly altered Minor changes included colourful projections blended into its existing lighting design and a proscenium that extended out into the first two boxes on either side of the stage Some cuts made to the show s prologue during its original Broadway run were restored lyrics for Gavroche s death scene known in the revival as Ten Little Bullets cut during the development of the original London production were restored and much of the show was re orchestrated by Christopher Jahnke introducing a snare and timpani heavy sound played by a 14 member band a reduction of about 8 musicians from the original production s 22 musician orchestration citation needed The original 2006 Broadway revival cast included Alexander Gemignani as Jean Valjean Norm Lewis as Javert Daphne Rubin Vega as Fantine Celia Keenan Bolger as Eponine Aaron Lazar as Enjolras Adam Jacobs as Marius Ali Ewoldt as Cosette Gary Beach as Thenardier Jenny Galloway as Madame Thenardier Drew Sarich as Grantaire Brian D Addario Jacob Levine Skye Rainforth and Austyn Myers as Gavroche and Tess Adams Kylie Liya Goldstein and Carly Rose Sonenclar as Young Cosette Young Eponine 51 Lea Salonga who previously played the role of Eponine in the 10th Anniversary concert replaced Rubin Vega as Fantine beginning on 2 March 2007 Zach Rand replaced Jacob Levine as Gavroche on 15 March 2007 Ann Harada replaced Jenny Galloway as Mme Thenardier on 24 April 2007 Ben Davis joined playing Javert and Max von Essen playing Enjolras Ben Crawford and Mandy Bruno joined the cast that day too playing Brujon and Eponine respectively On 29 June 2007 Chip Zien joined the cast as Monsieur Thenardier Sarich took over the role of Javert and on 23 July 2007 took over the role of Valjean following Gemignani s departure On 5 September 2007 it was announced that John Owen Jones who was playing Valjean in London was to join the Broadway cast In return Sarich would join the London cast in Owen Jones place Judy Kuhn who originated the role of Cosette returned to the show after twenty years as Fantine succeeding Salonga The revival closed on 6 January 2008 after 17 previews and 463 performances 52 2013 Toronto revival Edit A new production starring homecoming Ramin Karimloo was mounted at the Princess of Wales Theatre in Toronto Co directed by Lawrence Connor and James Powell 53 the new Toronto production was based on the 25th Anniversary touring production 54 Previews began on 27 September 2013 with the opening night on 9 October Preparatory to a Broadway transfer Toronto performances ended on 2 February 2014 55 56 57 58 In addition to Laurence Olivier Award nominee Karimloo as Jean Valjean fellow West End star Earl Carpenter reprised the role of Inspector Javert 59 Other cast members included Genevieve Leclerc as Fantine Samantha Hill as Cosette Melissa O Neil as Eponine Perry Sherman as Marius Cliff Saunders as Monsieur Thenardier Lisa Horner as Madame Thenardier and Mark Uhre as Enjolras 60 The roles of young Cosette and young Eponine were shared by Ella Ballentine Saara Chaudry and Madison Oldroyd Gavroche was shared by David Gregory Black and Aiden GlennRead 61 Colm Wilkinson who originated the role of Jean Valjean portrayed the Bishop of Digne in a one day performance symbolically handing the torch along with the candlesticks to Karimloo 62 63 2014 Broadway revival Edit The 2013 Toronto production moved to Broadway in March 2014 with previews beginning 1 March 2014 at the Imperial Theatre and an official opening on 23 March 2014 64 65 The creative team again was directed by Laurence Connor and James Powell with set design by Matt Kinley costumes by Andreane Neofitou and Christine Rowlands lighting by Paule Constable sound by Mick Potter and projections by Fifty Nine Productions Cameron Mackintosh once again produced the show On 22 October 2013 it was announced that Ramin Karimloo Will Swenson Caissie Levy and Nikki M James would be headlining the revival cast as Jean Valjean Javert Fantine and Eponine respectively 66 Andy Mientus and Samantha Hill also starred as Marius and Cosette respectively 67 68 Angeli Negron and McKayla Twiggs share the role of Young Cosette 69 On 30 August 2015 Karimloo ended his run of the show and was replaced by Alfie Boe After Boe s final performance on 28 February the role of Valjean was played by John Owen Jones beginning 1 March 2016 until the production closed on 4 September 2016 after 1 026 performances over two and a half years 70 The revival recouped its entire initial investment and grossed 109 million 71 The 2014 Broadway revival was nominated for 3 Tony Awards Best Revival of a Musical Best Leading Actor in a Musical for Karimloo and Best Sound Design for Potter Touring productions Edit US national tours Edit The show had three national touring companies of the original Broadway production in the US all of which shared the Broadway producer and manager creative teams as well nearly identical sets costumes and lighting While the touring production and the New York production were running simultaneously the staff cast members crew and musicians of the two productions interchanged often which contributed to keeping both companies of the show in form When the New York production closed in 2003 the Third National Tour continued for another three years and enjoyed the influx of many members from the original and subsequent New York companies The First National Tour opened at Boston s Shubert Theatre on 12 December 1987 and continued to play major cities until late 1991 The Second National Tour called The Fantine Company opened at Los Angeles Shubert Theatre on 1 June 1988 The production played for fourteen months then transferred to San Francisco s Curran Theatre where it enjoyed a similar run The Third National Tour of Les Miserables called The Marius Company was one of the longest running American touring musical productions Opening on 28 November 1988 at the Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center in Florida and closing on 23 July 2006 at the Fox Theatre in St Louis Missouri 72 the tour ran for seventeen years and 7 061 performances The tour played in 145 cities in 43 states The same touring company also frequently performed in Canada made a 1994 diversion to Singapore and another diversion in 2002 to be the first Western musical production to visit China opening in Shanghai s Grand Theatre for a three week engagement All US productions including Broadway and its revival were visually identical in scale and design but the third national tour was notable for its portability without sacrificing the Broadway caliber experience Thanks to innovative touring techniques borrowed from the pop rock concert industry the 4 5 million dollar production was adaptable to smaller and larger venues and traveled complete in all of 8 semi tractor trailers It was set up and ready to go in less than 24 hours and broken down and packed up in about 16 hours This allowed it to reach many cities and venues in its acclaimed original Broadway form A new national tour began on 21 September 2017 at the Providence Performing Arts Centre PPAC It starred Nick Cartell as Valjean Josh Davis as Javert Melissa Mitchell as Fantine J Anthony Crane as Thenardier Allison Guinn as Madame Thenardier Joshua Grosso as Marius Phoenix Best as Eponine Matt Shingledecker as Enjolras and Jillian Butler as Cosette The roles of young Cosette and Eponine were shared by Zoe Glick and Sophie Knapp while the role of Gavroche was shared by Jordan Cole and Julian Lerner It uses much of the staging and technical work of the 2014 Broadway revival 73 Another tour launched on 7 October 2022 at the State Theatre Cleveland with Nick Cartell as Jean Valjean Preston Truman Boyd as Javert Haley Dortch as Fantine Matt Crowle as Thenardier Christina Rose Hall as Madame Thenardier Addie Morales as Cosette Gregory Lee Rodriguez as Marius Christine Heesun Hwang as Eponine Devin Archer as Enjolras and Randy Jeter as Bishop of Digne 74 UK and Ireland tours Edit 1992 1993 tour Edit The first tour of the UK and Ireland opened at the Palace Theatre Manchester 14 April 1992 75 with Jeff Leyton Jean Valjean Philip Quast Javert later replaced by Michael McCarthy 76 Ria Jones Fantine Meredith Braun Eponine Mike Sterling Marius later replaced by Richard Burman 76 Tony Timberlake Thenardier Louise Plowright Mdme Thenardier Sarah Ryan Cosette and Daniel Coll Enjolras 77 78 The production then moved on to the Point Theatre Dublin Ireland opening 30 June 1993 79 and then to Playhouse Edinburgh Scotland opening 23 September 1993 80 1997 2000 tour Edit In 1997 a second tour began at the Theatre Royal Plymouth running from 6 May until 14 June 81 the cast featured Stig Rossen Jean Valjean Michael McCarthy Javert Julia Worsley Fantine Gemma Sandy Eponine Norman Bowman Marius Cameron Blakely Thenardier Cathy Breeze Mdme Thenardier Rebecca Vere Cosette and Mark O Malley Enjolras 82 The tour then continued as detailed in the table below Venue Date Cast detailsBirmingham Hippodrome 19 June 1997 to 4 October 1997 83 The cast remained unchanged from the Plymouth run of the show 84 Opera House Manchester 9 October 1997 to 20 December 1997 85 Peter Corry replaced Michael McCarthy as Javert 86 Bristol Hippodrome 29 December 1997 to 28 March 1998 87 Mayflower Theatre Southampton 1 April 1998 to 6 June 1998 88 Alhambra Theatre Bradford 25 June 1998 to 5 September 1998 89 John Owen Jones Jean Valjean left the cast two weeks before the end of the show s run at the Alhambra 90 Edinburgh Playhouse 16 September 1998 to 12 December 1998 91 Jeff Leyton Jean Valjean Peter Corry Javert Carmen Cusack Fantine and Alex Sharpe Eponine 92 Liverpool Empire Theatre 16 December 1998 to 20 February 1999 93 Point Theatre Dublin 25 February 1999 to 29 May 1999 94 Colm Wilkinson Jean Valjean Michael McCarthy Javert Carmen Cusack Fantine Alex Sharpe Eponine Matt Rawle Marius John Kavanagh Thenardier Anita Reeves Mdme Thenardier Poppy Tierney Cosette and David Bardsley Enjolras 95 Sheffield Arena 21 May 1999 to 19 June 1999 96 Alexandra Theatre Birmingham 2 July 1999 to 9 October 1999 97 Telewask Arena Newcastle 15 October 1999 to 13 November 1999 98 Jeff Leyton Jean Valjean Martin Fisher Javert Ria Jones Fantine Alex Sharpe Eponine Adrian Lewis Morgan Marius Jimmy Johnson Thenardier Cathy Breeze Madame Thenardier Amanda Leigh Smith Cosette and Loren Greeting Enjolras 99 Bristol Hippodrome 17 November 1999 to 29 January 2000 100 Palace Theatre Manchester 2 February 2000 to 25 March 2000 101 25th anniversary tour Edit A tour to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the show began performances on 12 December 2009 at the Wales Millennium Centre in Cardiff Differences from the original production included a new set new costumes new direction and alterations to the original orchestrations The scenery was inspired by the paintings of Victor Hugo Locations have included Manchester Norwich Birmingham and Edinburgh The tour also played a special engagement in Paris From September through October the show returned to the Barbican Centre London site of the original 1985 production The tour cast featured John Owen Jones as Valjean Earl Carpenter as Javert Gareth Gates as Marius Ashley Artus as Thenardier Lynne Wilmot as Madame Thenardier Madalena Alberto as Fantine Rosalind James as Eponine Jon Robyns as Enjolras Katie Hall as Cosette with Samara Clarke as Young Cosette and David Lawrence as the Bishop of Digne The tour ended on 2 October 2010 at the Barbican Theatre 102 103 104 In the fall of 2010 the tour moved to the US with a new company presented by Broadway Across America to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the show opening on Broadway The tour had its opening on 19 November 2010 at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn New Jersey running until 19 December 2010 This tour originally starred Lawrence Clayton as Valjean Andrew Varela as Javert Betsy Morgan as Fantine Jenny Latimer as Cosette Justin Scott Brown as Marius Chasten Harmon as Eponine Michael Kostroff as Thenardier Shawna Hamic as Madame Thenardier Jeremy Hays as Enjolras Josh Caggiano and Ethan Paul Khusidman as Gavroche Maya Jade Frank Faith Perez and Juliana Simone alternating as Young Cosette and Young Eponine J Mark McVey s daughter Kylie McVey was the understudy for Young Cosette and Young Eponine Clayton left the tour in April 2011 Ron Sharpe later took over as Valjean until June 2011 J Mark McVey was then Valjean McVey previously played the role on Broadway but McVey and his daughter left the tour on 1 April 2012 Peter Lockyer replaces him as Valjean Betsy Morgan left the tour on 2 December 2012 She was replaced by Genevieve Leclerc The tour ran until 11 August 2013 closing at the Smith Center for the Performing Arts in Las Vegas The tour s final cast included Peter Lockyer as Valjean Andrew Varela as Javert Genevieve Leclerc as Fantine Lauren Wiley as Cosette Devin Ilaw as Marius Briana Carlson Goodman as Eponine Timothy Gulan as Thenardier Shawna Hamic as Madame Thenardier Jason Forbach as Enjolras Ava Della Pietra and Erin Cearlock alternating as Little Cosette and Young Eponine with Mia Sinclair Jenness as Little Girl 105 106 In 2011 it was reported that the tour is one of six US national Broadway tours that are grossing over 1 000 000 per week 107 2018 present tour Edit A new UK and Ireland tour similar to the 25th anniversary production began at the Curve Leicester on 3 November 2018 starring Killian Donnelly Jean Valjean Nic Greenshields Javert Katie Hall Fantine Tegan Bannister Eponine Bronwen Hanson Cosette Harry Apps Marius Martin Ball Thenardier Sophie Louise Dann Madame Thenardier and Will Richardson Enjolras 108 After a hiatus due to the COVID 19 pandemic the tour resumed performances on 23 November 2021 at the Theatre Royal Glasgow 109 2014 Australian tour Edit In mid 2013 a brand new Australian tour was announced with Simon Gleeson as Valjean Hayden Tee as Javert Patrice Tipoki as Fantine Trevor Ashley and Lara Mulcahy as the Thenardiers Kerrie Anne Greenland as Eponine Emily Langridge as Cosette Euan Doidge as Marius and Chris Durling as Enjolras and Nicholas Cradock as Gavroche 110 The production premiered on 4 July at Her Majesty s Theatre Melbourne 111 Additional stops for the Australian tour included the Crown Theatre in Perth 112 the Capitol Theatre in Sydney 113 and the Lyric Theatre QPAC in Brisbane 114 The Australian revival production transferred to Manila Philippines in March 2016 becoming an international tour 115 2016 International tour Edit On 16 September 2015 it was announced that the Australian tour would launch its international tour in Manila Philippines at the Theatre at Solaire from March 2016 until 1 May 2016 and proceeded to the Esplanade Theatre in Singapore from May 2016 115 116 It then had its GCC premiere at the Dubai Opera in Dubai United Arab Emirates from November 2016 117 The Manila and Singapore productions featured Simon Gleeson as Valjean Earl Carpenter as Javert Helen Walsh as Madame Thenardier Cameron Blakely as Thenardier Kerrie Anne Greenland as Eponine Emily Langridge as Cosette Chris Durling as Enjolras and Paul Wilkins as Marius 118 Rachelle Ann Go played the role of Fantine in the Manila production and Patrice Tipoki returned the role in the Singapore production after her stint in the original London production The Dubai production features John Owen Jones as Valjean Hayden Tee as Javert Patrice Tipoki as Fantine Peter Polycarpou as Thenardier Jodie Prenger as Madame Thenardier Carrie Hope Fletcher as Eponine Alistair Brammer as Enjolras Emily Langridge as Cosette and Paul Wilkins as Marius 119 Concert productions Edit10th Anniversary Concert Edit Main article Les Miserables The Dream Cast in Concert On 8 October 1995 the show celebrated the tenth anniversary of the West End production with a concert at the Royal Albert Hall This 10th Anniversary Concert was nearly complete missing only a handful of scenes including The Death of Gavroche The Robbery and the confrontation between Marius and the Thenardiers at the wedding feast Sir Cameron Mackintosh hand selected the cast which became known as the Les Miserables Dream Cast assembled from around the world and engaged the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra The concert concluded with seventeen Valjeans from various international productions singing Do You Hear the People Sing in their native languages The concert cast included Colm Wilkinson as Jean Valjean Philip Quast as Javert Paul Monaghan as the Bishop of Digne Ruthie Henshall as Fantine Hannah Chick as Young Cosette Jenny Galloway as Madame Thenardier Alun Armstrong as Thenardier Adam Searles as Gavroche Michael Maguire as Enjolras Michael Ball as Marius Judy Kuhn as Cosette Lea Salonga as Eponine and Anthony Crivello as Grantaire The concert was staged by Ken Caswell and conducted by David Charles Abell 25th Anniversary Concert Edit Main article Les Miserables in Concert The 25th Anniversary The 25th Anniversary Concert of the West End production was held at The O2 in North Greenwich South East London United Kingdom on Sunday 3 October 2010 at 1 30 pm and 7 00 pm It featured Alfie Boe as Jean Valjean Norm Lewis as Javert Lea Salonga as Fantine Nick Jonas as Marius Katie Hall as Cosette Jenny Galloway as Madame Thenardier Ramin Karimloo as Enjolras Samantha Barks as Eponine Matt Lucas as Thenardier Mia Jenkins as Young Cosette Rob Madge as Gavroche Hadley Fraser as Grantaire Cameron Blakely as Bamatabois and Earl Carpenter as the Bishop of Digne Casts of the current London international tour original 1985 London and several school productions took part comprising an ensemble of three hundred performers and musicians The concert was directed by Laurence Connor amp James Powell and conducted by David Charles Abell 120 121 The All Star Staged Concert Edit Main article Les Miserables The Staged Concert From 10 August to 2 December 2019 the musical was performed as a staged concert version at the Gielgud Theatre in the West End during the refurbishment of the adjacent Sondheim Theatre where the original London production had been running and would be home to the new production from December 2019 onwards Featuring a cast and orchestra of over 65 the 16 week concert run starred Michael Ball as Javert Alfie Boe as Jean Valjean Carrie Hope Fletcher as Fantine Matt Lucas and Katy Secombe as the Thenardiers and John Owen Jones played Jean Valjean for some performances during the run Further leads included Rob Houchen Marius Bradley Jaden Enjolras Shan Ako Eponine and Lily Kerhoas Cosette Also featured was Earl Carpenter playing Bamatabois and understudying Javert Simon Bowman played the Bishop of Digne for eight days after which Carpenter took over the role alongside his other two parts The final concert was filmed and broadcast live to cinemas on 2 December and has since been released on home video and album with a tour planned 122 In October 2020 on the final of Britain s Got Talent it was confirmed that the stage concert would return for a limited six week run at the Sondheim Theatre from 5 December 2020 to 17 January 2021 It was subsequently extended twice and was due to play until 28 February 2021 123 124 Due to the COVID 19 pandemic the audience were socially distanced and capacity was limited to 50 Due to local COVID restrictions the show was suspended from 16 December 2020 after just 10 performances in which Boe had performed as Jean Valjean on eight occasions and Owen Jones on two occasions It reopened on 20 May 2021 and ran until 5 September Ball Boe Fletcher Lucas and Owen Jones did not reprise their roles at reopening The new cast featured Jon Robyns as Valjean Jaden as Javert Lucie Jones as Fantine Gerard Carey and Josefina Gabrielle as the Thenardiers Shan Ako as Eponine Harry Apps as Marius Jamie Muscato as Enjolras Charlie Burn as Cosette Carpenter as the Bishop of Digne and understudy Javert Cameron Blakely as Bamatabois Babet and at certain performances Dean Chisnall playing the role of Valjean 40 Other concert performances Edit The musical has also been performed in concert at Cardiff Castle and several venues in southern England produced by Earl Carpenter Concerts A concert version starring Jeff Leyton Carmen Cusack Annalene Beechey and Joanna Ampil was also performed at the Odyssey Arena Belfast in 2001 In 1989 a one night concert performance was performed at SkyDome Toronto and the largest concert production attracted an audience of approximately 125 000 as part of the Australia Day celebrations in Sydney s Domain Park The Scandinavian concert tour produced by Cameron Mackintosh in association with Noble Art starred Danish musical icon Stig Rossen in the leading role and commemorated author Victor Hugo s 200th birthday Venues on the tour included the Stockholm Globe Arena Oslo Spektrum the Helsinki Hartwell Areena and the Gothenburg Scandinavium with audiences totalling over 150 000 for the complete tour In November 2004 to celebrate the centennial of the Entente Cordiale the Queen invited the cast of Les Miserables in the West End to perform for French President Jacques Chirac at Windsor Castle It was the first time the cast of a West End musical had performed at a Royal residence The part of Jean Valjean was played by Michael Ball the original 1985 London and 1995 Dream Cast Marius and the part of Javert was played by Michael McCarthy Joanna Ampil as Fantine Gemma Wardle as Eponine Julia Moller as Cosette Gary Tushaw as Marius and Ramin Karimloo as Enjolras The rest of the cast was the same as in the West End supplemented by several guest singers and a choir of former performers In February 2008 Les Miserables was performed at the Bournemouth International Centre England with a cast of West End stars accompanied by the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra In August 2008 a concert version directed by Richard Jay Alexander was performed at the Hollywood Bowl The cast included veteran Les Miserables star J Mark McVey as Valjean The Office star Melora Hardin as Fantine Broadway star and Bowl veteran Brian Stokes Mitchell as Javert Spring Awakening and Glee star Lea Michele as Eponine Tony winning Jersey Boys star John Lloyd Young as Marius West End star Tom Lowe as Enjolras Michael McCormick as Thenardier Ruth Williamson as Madame Thenardier Michele Maika as Cosette Maddie Levy as Young Cosette and Sage Ryan as Gavroche In September 2008 it was performed at the St John Loveridge Hall in Guernsey with a cast of West End performers the first time that it had been professionally performed on the Island where Victor Hugo wrote the novel Former London Valjean Phil Cavill reprised his role alongside veteran Michael McCarthy as Javert In March 2009 the Guernsey production was remounted at Fort Regent in Jersey and in July 2009 the musical was performed in concert at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight International productions EditThe show has been produced in forty two countries and translated into twenty one languages English French re translated from the English version clarification needed German Austria and Germany Spanish six versions two from Spain two from Mexico one from Argentina and one from Venezuela Japanese Hebrew Hungarian Icelandic Norwegian Bokmal and Nynorsk Polish Swedish in Sweden and in Finland Dutch Netherlands and Belgium Danish Finnish Brazilian Portuguese Estonian Czech Mauritian Creole Basque Catalan and Korean Including singles and promos there have been over seventy official recordings from worldwide productions 125 The first full West End Broadway production in Europe mainland was set up in Oslo Norway at Det Norske Teatret and opened on 17 March 1988 126 The production was in Norwegian and starred Norwegian singer actor Oystein Wiik as Jean Valjean Paul Age Johannessen as Javert Oivind Blunck as Thenardier Kari Gjaerum as Fantine Amund Enger as Enjolras and Guri Schanke as Eponine The first Oslo production was hugely successful and some 10 of Norway s entire population saw the show in the first 6 months Oystein Wiik went on to also star as Jean Valjean in the productions in Vienna and London in 1989 1990 The stage show which had changed so significantly since its Parisian conception as a stadium concert in 1980 was translated back into the language of Victor Hugo for its French world premiere in Montreal Quebec Canada in 1991 This production had a cast that presented five shows a week in French and three a week in English In 1998 a concert version in English was produced in Malta at the Mediterranean Conference Centre Valletta This production was staged by a company called Act React and featured talents like Ray Mangion as Jean Valjean Roger Tirazona as Javert Julie James as Fantine Leila Benn Harris as Eponine Claire Debono as Cosette Fabrizio Faniello as Marius Lawrence Gray as Enjolras Rennie Vella as Thenardier Doreen Galea as Madame Thenardier Dean Zammit as Gavroche and Hannah Schembri as Little Cosette North American productions Edit In September 2008 a mini tour produced by Atlanta s Theater of the Stars played Eisenhower Hall at the United States Military Academy 127 failed verification in West Point New York the Filene Center at the Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts in Vienna Virginia Kansas City Starlight Theatre and the Fox Theater in Atlanta The show featured a new set of original pictures painted by Victor Hugo himself Robert Evan played Valjean returning to the role he played in the mid nineties on Broadway Also featured were Nikki Rene Daniels as Fantine and Robert Hunt as Javert both reprising their roles from the Broadway revival Fred Hanson directed the production The creative team included Matt Kinley as Scenic Designer Ken Billington as Lighting Designer Peter Fitzgerald and Erich Bechtel as Sound Designers Zachary Borovay as Projection Designer and Dan Riddle as musical director and Conductor 128 In 2008 the Signature Theatre in Arlington Virginia staged a small venue black box version of the play Signature received Mackintosh s special permission for the production One of the great pleasures of being involved with the creation of Les Miserables is seeing this marvelous musical being done in a completely different and original way Having seen many shows brilliantly reimagined at Signature I have no doubt that Eric and his team will come up with a revolutionary new take on Les Miz unlike anything anyone has seen before Viva la difference 129 The production officially opened on 14 December 2008 after previews from 2 December and ran through 22 February 2009 extended from 25 January 2009 130 131 A 2014 production at the Dallas Theater Center modernized the staging in a way rarely attempted in productions of this play set visually in the modern day United States rather than 1830s France The concept was thought to be refreshing as a change from typical production styles and effective as a commentary on modern inequality Though much controversy surrounded their unauthorized depart from the authors libretto and score 132 133 In Panama Les Miserables was staged in 2014 in Spanish at the famed National Theatre of Panama for a short sold out run directed by Aaron Zebede 134 School edition Edit The school edition cuts a considerable amount of material from the original show It is divided into thirty scenes and although no critical scenes or songs have been removed it runs 25 30 minutes shorter than the official version making the total running time about 2 1 2 hours 135 A few subtle changes of vocal pitch have been made What Have I Done Valjean s Soliloquy Stars by Javert A Little Fall of Rain by Eponine and Marius Turning and Castle on a Cloud lose a verse each During Fantine s Arrest Bamatabois loses two verses The song Fantine s Death Confrontation is edited and the counterpoint duel between Javert and Valjean is lost as well as a verse by Fantine Dog Eats Dog by Thenardier is heavily truncated Beggars at the Feast is shortened with Thenardier losing a verse and the song before it Wedding Chorale is excluded entirely although the rest of the wedding remains in place Also the drinker s introduction to Master of the House is cut completely 136 Film adaptation EditMain article Les Miserables 2012 film Cast recordings EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Les Miserables musical news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message English Edit The following recordings of Les Miserables are available in English the Original London Cast the Original Broadway Cast the Complete Symphonic Recording the 10th Anniversary London Concert The 25th Anniversary UK Tour Cast and The 25th Anniversary London Concert Original London Cast recording Edit The Original London Cast recording was the first English language album of the musical Recorded in 1985 when the show premiered it is closest to the original French concept album For example Stars appears before Look Down and shortly after the original version of Little People plays which was later incorporated into the revealing of Javert It also features a song titled I Saw Him Once sung by Cosette which was later incorporated into the first part of In My Life The album has sold 887 000 copies in the US 137 Chart 1987 PeakpositionAustralia Kent Music Report 138 38Original Broadway Cast recording Edit The Original Broadway Cast recording was produced in 1987 It included several changes to the songs that are still evident in today s performances As with its predecessor it is incomplete and leaves out songs or parts that are more important narratively than musically e g Fantine s Arrest The Runaway Cart The Final Battle The album has sold 1 596 000 copies in the US 137 Chart 1987 88 PeakpositionAustralia Kent Music Report 138 89Complete Symphonic Recording Edit Recorded in 1988 and released in 1989 the Complete Symphonic Recording features the entire score The Czech Revival Recording is the only other album in any language to feature the entire score on the other hand the four 2003 Japanese recordings feature the entire score after the cuts first made on Broadway at the end of 2000 Cameron Mackintosh s original plan was to use the Australian cast 139 but the scope was expanded to create an international cast featuring performers from the major performances of the musical The cast was recorded in three different places 140 The album produced by David Caddick and conducted by Martin Koch won the Best Musical Cast Show Album Grammy Award in 1990 141 The cast includes Gary Morris as Valjean Philip Quast as Javert Debra Byrne as Fantine Gay Soper as Mme Thenardier Barry James as Thenardier Kaho Shimada as Eponine Ross McCall as Gavroche Michael Ball as Marius Anthony Warlow as Enjolras Tracy Shayne as Cosette and Marissa Dunlop as Young Cosette 142 10th Anniversary Concert Edit Main article Les Miserables The Dream Cast in Concert The 10th Anniversary recording was of a concert version of Les Miserables performed at the Royal Albert Hall in October 1995 featuring full orchestra and choir All parts were sung live giving the performance a different mood from other recordings The score was recorded consecutively without pauses or multiple recordings The concert s encores are also included As with the original recordings however they differed from the stage versions by excluding some songs e g those vital to plot such as Fantine s Arrest and The Runaway Cart were kept while unnecessary or complex songs such as At the Barricade were left out 25th Anniversary UK Tour Cast Edit Recorded live at the Palace Theatre in Manchester this recording was released to commemorate 25 years of Les Miserables and features new arrangements and reinspired orchestrations 25th Anniversary Concert Edit Main article Les Miserables in Concert The 25th Anniversary The 25th Anniversary Concert was recorded live at The O2 Arena on 3 October 2010 and is available on DVD in the UK while the Blu ray was released worldwide It was shown in select US theaters via NCM Fathom Events The release for the DVD and Blu ray in the United States was 22 February 2011 to promote the film adaptation Awards and nominations EditOriginal West End production Edit Year Award Category Nominee Result1985 Laurence Olivier Award 143 Best New Musical NominatedBest Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical Colm Wilkinson NominatedAlun Armstrong NominatedBest Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical Patti LuPone Won2012 Laurence Olivier Award 144 Audience Award for Most Popular Show Won2014 Laurence Olivier Award 145 Audience Award for Most Popular Show WonOriginal Broadway production Edit Year Award Category Nominee Result1987 Tony Award 146 Best Musical WonBest Book of a Musical Alain Boublil and Claude Michel Schonberg WonBest Original Score Claude Michel Schonberg music and Herbert Kretzmer amp Alain Boublil lyrics WonBest Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical Colm Wilkinson NominatedTerrence Mann NominatedBest Actor in a Featured Role in a Musical Michael Maguire WonBest Actress in a Featured Role in a Musical Frances Ruffelle WonJudy Kuhn NominatedBest Direction of a Musical Trevor Nunn and John Caird WonBest Scenic Design John Napier WonBest Costume Design Andreane Neofitou NominatedBest Lighting Design David Hersey WonDrama Desk Award Outstanding Musical WonOutstanding Actor in a Musical Colm Wilkinson NominatedOutstanding Featured Actor in a Musical Michael Maguire WonOutstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Judy Kuhn NominatedOutstanding Orchestrations John Cameron WonOutstanding Music Claude Michel Schonberg WonOutstanding Set Design John Napier Won2013 Toronto revival Edit Year Award Category Nominee Result2014 Dora Award 147 148 Outstanding Production NominatedOutstanding Male Performance Ramin Karimloo NominatedMark Uhre NominatedAiden Glenn NominatedOutstanding Female Performance Melissa O Neil WonOutstanding Direction Laurence Connor and James Powell NominatedOutstanding Scenic Design Matt Kinley NominatedOutstanding Costume Design Andreane Neofitou and Christine Rowland WonOutstanding Lighting Design Paule Constable NominatedOutstanding Choreography James Dodgson NominatedOutstanding Ensemble Entire ensemble Nominated2014 Broadway revival Edit Year Award Category Nominee Result2014 Tony Award Best Revival of a Musical NominatedBest Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical Ramin Karimloo NominatedBest Sound Design of a Musical Mick Potter NominatedDrama Desk Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Nominated2014 Australian revival Edit Year Award Category Nominee Result2014 Green Room Awards Production NominatedActor in a Leading Role Simon Gleeson NominatedHayden Tee WonDirection James Powell and Laurence Connor NominatedMusical Direction Geoffrey Castles NominatedDesign Lighting Paule Constable NominatedDesign Sound Mick Potter NominatedDesign Set and Costume Matt Kinley Set and Image Design Nominated2015 Helpmann Awards 149 150 Best Musical WonBest Male Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical Simon Gleeson WonHayden Tee NominatedBest Male Actor in a Supporting Role in a Musical Trevor Ashley NominatedChris Durling NominatedBest Female Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical Patrice Tipoki NominatedBest Female Actor in a Supporting Role in a Musical Kerrie Anne Greenland WonBest Direction of a Musical Laurence Connor and James Powell NominatedBest Choreography in a Musical Michael Ashcroft and Geoffrey Garratt NominatedBest Lighting Design Paule Constable WonBest Scenic Design Matt Kinley NominatedBest Sound Design Mick Potter WonSee also Edit Music portal Theatre portalLes Miserables Les Miserables British TV series Lists of musicals Adaptations of Les MiserablesNotes EditReferences Edit Behr 1989 p 49 Behr 1989 p 51 Billington Michael 21 September 2010 Twenty five years on they ask me if I was wrong about Les Miserables London The Guardian Newspaper Online Retrieved 31 January 2013 Kehe Jason Theater Review Les Miserables At The Ahmanson USC Annenberg Archived from the original on 19 June 2013 Retrieved 31 January 2013 The Fantasticks website Retrieved 4 November 2012 Craig Zoe 13 April 2011 Top 10 Longest Running London Theatre Shows londonist com Retrieved 4 November 2012 a b c Masters Tim 1 October 2010 Bon Anniversaire 25 Facts About Les Mis BBC News Retrieved 5 March 2011 Les Miserables on Broadway Lesmis com Archived from the original on 24 October 2007 Retrieved 19 December 2007 Lefkowitz Andy 28 October 2019 Wicked Surpasses Les Miserables as Fifth Longest Running Show in Broadway History Broadway Buzz Elaine Paige on Sunday 1300 1500 BBC Radio 2 Retrieved 5 March 2011 a b Sternfeld 2006 p 369 372 Les Miserables UK Tour Version 2009 Music Theatre International Archived from the original on 5 July 2020 Retrieved 5 June 2019 Les Miserables Stage Agent Archived from the original on 22 February 2011 Retrieved 9 March 2011 Kayes amp Fisher 2002 p 39 Jean Valjean Retrieved 24 June 2022 Clements Carly Ann Les Mis Everything you need to know Official London Theatre 19 December 2019 Archived from the original on 5 July 2020 Retrieved 5 July 2020 a b Simonson Robert 23 March 2014 One Day More A History of Les Miserables Playbill 23 March 2014 Archived from the original on 5 July 2020 Retrieved 5 July 2020 Les Miserables US Tour Original Cast BroadwayWorld Retrieved 2 January 2021 Les Miserables Concert Full Cast Announced BeyondTheCurtain Behr 1989 p 50 Title unknown piano vocal selections Alain Boublil Music Ltd a b c Vermette Margaret 2006 The Musical World of Boublil amp Schonberg The Creators of Les Miserables Miss Saigon Martin Guerre and The Pirate Queen Hal Leonard Corporation ISBN 978 1 55783 715 8 Retrieved 29 July 2010 Les Miserables Show History Archived from the original on 23 April 2010 Retrieved 15 May 2010 Walnut Street Theatre Les Miserables Creation of the Musical Retrieved 15 May 2010 a b Dans l attente des Miserables du Chatelet souvenons nous de la creation en 1980 in French Retrieved 22 May 2010 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Les Miserables The first one in PARIS 1980 MES Robert HOSSEIN ABC Arc RLBaron YouTube Retrieved 19 May 2010 Waifs and urchins around the world Paris Retrieved 19 May 2010 unreliable source Les Miserables NOW Magazine nowtoronto com 21 March 2013 Retrieved 2 December 2014 The Official Roger Allam Fan Site Archived from the original on 26 November 2009 Les Miserables johncaird com Retrieved 13 March 2011 Les Miserables Show Listing and Production details London Theatre Archived from the original on 29 March 2016 Retrieved 3 October 2014 via londontheatre co uk Les Miserables 10 000th Performance in West End London Theatre Guide 5 January 2010 Retrieved 9 February 2011 Davies Serena 9 October 2015 Les Mis at 30 original London cast reunite to celebrate The Telegraph Archived from the original on 23 February 2019 Retrieved 16 June 2019 The Committee Office House of Commons House of Commons Culture Media and Sport Minutes of Evidence publications parliament uk Retrieved 23 January 2010 a b Les Miserables to move to Gielgud Theatre in July 2019 8 January 2019 Retrieved 8 January 2019 Les Miserables to move to Gielgud Theatre in July 2019 WhatsOnStage www whatsonstage com 8 January 2019 Retrieved 5 June 2019 Perks Daniel 17 January 2020 Les Miserables cast and creative team celebrate Sondheim Theatre West End production opening WhatsOnStage www whatsonstage com Retrieved 17 January 2020 Exciting new cast announced for Sondheim Lesmis com Retrieved 30 November 2019 Les Miserables Mary Poppins Hamilton and The Phantom of the Opera won t reopen in the West End before 2021 WhatsOnStage www whatsonstage com 17 June 2020 Retrieved 23 June 2020 a b Wood Alex 10 March 2021 Les Miserables concert to return in May with new cast announced WhatsOnStage www whatsonstage com Retrieved 10 March 2021 Richards David 29 December 1986 Les Miserables The Musical Heavy on the Spectacular Beneath the Dazzle Few Insights The Washington Post p D1 a b c d e Les Miserables Internet Broadway Database Retrieved 27 August 2010 a b Bennetts Leslie 6 December 1986 Les Miserables Ready For Its American Debut The New York Times p 11 Behr 1993 p 144 sfn error no target CITEREFBehr1993 help Kwiatkowski Jane 23 March 2003 Musical Chairs The Buffalo News p F1 a b Cox David 20 May 2003 Broadway Curtain Closes On Les Mis The Scotsman p 7 Kuchwara Michael 19 May 2003 Broadway Says Au Revoir to Les Miz Associated Press Long Runs on Broadway Playbill 22 December 2010 Retrieved 4 November 2012 Andress Nigel 20 April 2000 The Arts Bloodless American Psycho on the Loose Financial Times Les Mis Original AU Production Brantley Ben 10 November 2006 Didn t We Just See This Revolution The New York Times Retrieved 5 March 2011 Les Miserables Internet Broadway Database Retrieved 16 July 2019 Les Miserables superbly revised review The Star thestar com 9 October 2013 Retrieved 5 June 2019 Brand new Les Miserables coming to Toronto stage CBC News Brand new Les Miserables coming to Toronto stage Retrieved 13 February 2013 LES MISERABLES ONCE ALADDIN amp More Set for Mirvish s 50th Season Retrieved 13 February 2013 Toronto s New Les Miserables Starring Ramin Karimloo Will Begin in September Complete Casting Announced Archived 6 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine Playbill Retrieved 14 September 2013 Toronto Production of Les Miserables Starring Ramin Karimloo Ends 2 Feb Archived 19 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Playbill Retrieved 2 February 2014 Earl Carpenter joining Ramin Karimloo in LesMis Toronto Retrieved 14 June 2013 Toronto s New Les Miz Will Star Ramin Karimloo Genevieve Leclerc Samantha Hill Lisa Horner Cliff Saunders Playbill Archived from the original on 16 February 2013 Rehearsals Begin for Ramin Karimloo Led LES MISERABLES in Toronto Full Cast Announced Broadway World Retrieved 6 November 2013 Colm Wilkinson talks about Jan 11 return to Les Miz The Star thestar com 3 January 2014 Retrieved 22 May 2019 BWW Exclusive Interview Ramin Karimloo on His Toronto Homecoming in LES MISERABLES in Fall of 2013 Retrieved 13 February 2013 Les Miserables Will Return to Broadway s Imperial Theatre Re Imagined Revival Sets 2014 Dates Archived 8 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 30 May 2013 Les Miserables to Storm the Barricade on Broadway Again in 2014 Broadway com Ramin Karimloo making his Broadway debut Will Swenson Caissie Levy and Nikki M James Will Star in Broadway Return of Les Miserables Archived 23 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Playbill Retrieved 28 October 2013 Andy Mientus and Charlotte Maltby Will Make Broadway Debuts in 2014 Revival of Les Miserables Archived 11 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine Playbill Retrieved 11 November 2013 Breaking News Samantha Hill to Take Over as Cosette for Broadway s New LES MISERABLES broadwayworld com retrieved 12 May 2014 Filipponi Pietro 27 January 2014 Young Cosette Eponine amp Gavroche Roles Cast in the New Broadway Production of LES MISERABLES Gotham News archived from the original on 6 July 2014 retrieved 27 July 2014 Bring Down the Barricades Broadway s Les Miserables Announces Date of Final Performance Broadway com Broadway com Retrieved 2 December 2015 Andrew Gans 4 September 2016 Bring Down the Barricades Broadway s Les Miserables Announces Date of Final Performance Playbill com Playbill com Retrieved 4 September 2016 Jones Kenneth 10 March 2006 Les Miz Tour s Final Stop Announced Meet It in St Louis Playbill Archived from the original on 22 November 2013 Retrieved 22 November 2013 Les Miserables US Tour Schedule BroadwayWorld com BroadwayWorld com Retrieved 16 October 2017 Nick Cartell and Preston Truman Boyd to lead new U S tour of Les Miserables playbill com Retrieved 13 October 2022 What Happened on April 14th 1992 onthisday com 14 April 1992 Retrieved 12 August 2016 a b Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Manchester cast Jeff Leyton Jean Valjean Michael McCarthy Javert Richard Burman Marius Sarah Ryan Cosette Meredith Braun Eponine Daniel Coll Enjolras Tony Timberlake Thenardier Louise Plowright Mdme Thenardier 20 November 1992 BBC Children in Need regional North West One Day More Television Manchester Richard Burman YouTube Retrieved 12 August 2016 Schmidt Michael 18 April 1992 Les Miserables review Daily Telegraph Leyton Jeff Jean Valjean Quast Philip Javert Sterling Mike Marius Braun Meredith Eponine Jones Ria Fantine 1992 Highlights from Les Miserables Manchester Company Media notes First Night Records ASIN B000026YOI Barcode 5014636503427 What Happened on April 14th 1992 onthisday com 30 June 1993 Retrieved 12 August 2016 What Happened on September 23rd 1993 onthisday com 23 September 1993 Retrieved 12 August 2016 Les Miserables Theatre Royal Plymouth uktw co uk UK Theatre Web Retrieved 12 August 2016 Les Miserables programme Plymouth John Good Holbrook Ltd 1997 Les Miserables Birmingham Hippodrome uktw co uk UK Theatre Web Retrieved 12 August 2016 Birmingham Hippodrome Theatre Les Miserables 1997 Flyer theatrememorabilia co uk Theatre Memorabilia co uk Archived from the original on 11 August 2016 Retrieved 12 August 2016 Les Miserables Opera House Manchester uktw co uk UK Theatre Web Retrieved 12 August 2016 Les Miserables programme Manchester John Good Holbrook Ltd 1997 Les Miserables Bristol Hippodrome uktw co uk UK Theatre Web Retrieved 12 August 2016 Les Miserables Mayflower Theatre Southampton uktw co uk UK Theatre Web Retrieved 12 August 2016 Staff writer 18 September 1998 It s the business Telegraph amp Argus Newsquest Media Group Retrieved 12 August 2016 Greenhalf Jim 10 August 1998 Les Mis star summoned to the Palace Telegraph amp Argus Newsquest Media Group Retrieved 12 August 2016 Les Miserables Playhouse Edinburgh uktw co uk UK Theatre Web Retrieved 12 August 2016 Staff writer 24 September 1998 Les Miserables Playhouse Edinburgh Herald Scotland Newsquest Retrieved 12 August 2016 Les Miserables Liverpool Empire Theatre uktw co uk UK Theatre Web Retrieved 12 August 2016 Paller Rebecca 18 February 1998 Wilkinson returns to Les Mis in Dublin 1999 Playbill Retrieved 12 August 2016 Jones Kenneth Les Miserables Les Miserables May 15th 1999 Dublin whoisthatface weebly com Whose Is That Face in the Shadows Retrieved 12 August 2016 Les Miserables Sheffield Motorpoint Arena uktw co uk UK Theatre Web Retrieved 12 August 2016 Les Miserables Sheffield Motorpoint Arena uktw co uk UK Theatre Web Retrieved 12 August 2016 Les Miserables metroradioarena co uk Metro Radio Arena Retrieved 12 August 2016 Lost LESMIS audios help please musical exchange musicalexchange Musical Exchange Retrieved 12 August 2016 Les Miserables Bristol Hippodrome uktw co uk UK Theatre Web Retrieved 12 August 2016 Les Miserables Opera House Manchester uktw co uk UK Theatre Web Retrieved 12 August 2016 Les Mis Tour Visits Barbican for 25th Anniversary whatsonstage com 15 March 2010 Brown Peter Les Miserables 25th Anniversary touring production at Barbican londontheatre co uk 23 September 2010 Revamped Les Miserables To Begin 25th Anniversary Tour In UK In December broadwayworld com 11 December 2009 Tour Dates and Venues lesmis com Archived from the original on 25 October 2011 Retrieved 2 November 2011 LesMiserables tour broadwayacrossamerica com Archived from the original on 24 December 2010 Retrieved 2 January 2011 failed verification Voris Robert 25 June 2011 Six boost road grosses Variety Retrieved 26 June 2011 BWW News Desk LES MISERABLES UK And Ireland Tour Announced BroadwayWorld com Retrieved 27 February 2018 UK and Ireland tour of Les Miserables to recommence from November 2021 westendbestfriend co uk Retrieved 13 October 2022 Cast Les Miserables lesmis com au Archived from the original on 28 July 2014 Retrieved 2 December 2014 Les Miserables review Her Majesty s Theatre Melbourne Daily Review film stage and music reviews interviews and more dailyreview crikey com au Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 2 December 2014 Les Miserables Opens Tonight in Perth www lesmis com au Cameron Mackintosh Overseas Limited Archived from the original on 8 September 2015 Retrieved 1 October 2015 Les Miserables arrives in Sydney www lesmis com au Cameron Mackintosh Overseas Limited Archived from the original on 2 October 2015 Retrieved 1 October 2015 Tongue Cassie 18 May 2015 Les Miserables is heading to Brisbane aussietheatre com Retrieved 1 October 2015 a b Les Miserables Asian Tour Confirmed to Open in Manila in March 2016 michaelcassel com Michael Cassel Group 16 September 2015 Retrieved 1 October 2015 Les Miserables Confirmed To Open in Singapore in May 2016 www michaelcasselgroup com Michael Cassel Group Pty Limited 20 October 2015 Retrieved 20 October 2015 Musical Phenomenon Les Miserables To Have GCC Premiere at Dubai Opera Press Release PDF 25 May 2016 Retrieved 20 August 2016 via dubaiopera com Cast Announced for Manila Production of LES MISERABLES Les Miserables Cameron Mackintosh Overseas Limited 28 January 2016 Archived from the original on 3 February 2016 Retrieved 29 January 2016 Cameron Mackintosh and Dubai Opera Announce Full Cast For The Legendary Production of Les Miserables at Dubai Opera From 10 November to 2 December 2016 Press Release PDF 13 August 2016 Retrieved 20 August 2016 via dubaiopera com LES MISERABLES IN CONCERT THE 25TH ANNIVERSARY LIVE THE O2 PG British Board of Film Classification Archived from the original on 5 July 2020 Retrieved 24 August 2018 PBS Presents U S Television Premiere of LES MISERABLES 25TH ANNIVERSARY CONCERT AT THE O2 PBS Press release 31 January 2011 Archived from the original on 6 April 2019 Retrieved 6 April 2019 Perks Daniel 1 November 2019 All star Les Miserables staged concert to be broadcast in cinemas Whats On Stage Archived from the original on 5 July 2020 Retrieved 30 November 2019 Wood Alex 30 November 2020 All star Les Miserables West End show extends run by a month WhatsOnStage www whatsonstage com Retrieved 30 November 2020 Editorial Staff 10 October 2020 All star Les Miserables concert production to run this Christmas in the West End WhatsOnStage www whatsonstage com Retrieved 14 October 2020 Facts and Figures from LesMis com Archived from the original on 11 January 2012 Retrieved 7 July 2007 Stage by Stage Les Miserables 1988 IMDb imdb com Retrieved 2 December 2014 Eisenhower Hall Theatre 09 10 Ikehall com Archived from the original on 13 July 2011 Retrieved 23 January 2010 Theater of the Stars Announces Full Les Miserables Casting broadwayworld com 11 August 2008 Retrieved 23 January 2010 Jones Kenneth 14 September 2008 Signature s Black Box Les Miz Will Put Audience in Middle of the Action Cast Announced Playbill Archived from the original on 16 October 2012 Retrieved 5 March 2011 Jones Kenneth 14 December 2008 Another Day Another Destiny Intimate Les Miz Opens in VA Dec 14 Playbill Archived from the original on 26 February 2011 Retrieved 5 March 2011 Jones Kenneth 18 December 2008 Intimate Les Miz Gets Good Reviews in DC and Extends Playbill Archived from the original on 17 April 2011 Retrieved 5 March 2011 Lowry Mark 10 July 2014 Theater review Les Miserables DFW com Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Churnin Nancy 6 July 2014 In Dallas and Hong Kong Do you hear the people sing Dallas Morning News Aplausos a la puesta de Los miserables La Prensa 23 September 2014 Retrieved 23 September 2014 Les Miserables School Edition Music Theatre International Archived from the original on 19 December 2010 Retrieved 6 March 2011 Music Theatre International Licensing Musical Theater Theatrical Performance Rights and Materials to Schools Community and Professional Theatres since 1952 mtishows com Archived from the original on 19 December 2010 Retrieved 2 December 2014 a b Paul Grein 9 January 2012 Week Ending Jan 6 2013 Albums Les Miz Takes Broadway To The Top Yahoo Music Chart Watch a b Kent David 1993 Australian Chart Book 1970 1992 illustrated ed St Ives N S W Australian Chart Book p 284 ISBN 0 646 11917 6 Complete Symphonic Recording Retrieved 7 July 2007 unreliable source Les Miserables Relativity Complete Symphonic Recording Answers com 2006 Retrieved 24 March 2007 unreliable source Grammy Awards 1990 33rd Annual grammy com retrieved 15 June 2019 les Miserable Complete Symphonic Recording castalbums org retrieved 15 June 2019 Olivier Winners 1985 Archive version from Olivier Awards Archived from the original on 19 April 2012 Retrieved 1 July 2020 Shenton Mark 15 April 2012 Matilda the Musical Sweeps Olivier Awards Benedict Cumberbatch Jonny Lee Miller Are Also Winners Playbill Archived from the original on 3 January 2013 Retrieved 4 November 2012 OLIVIERS 2014 The Full List Of Winners And Nominees Broadway World 13 April 2014 Archived from the original on 5 July 2020 Retrieved 6 May 2014 Tony Awards on IBDB Internet Broadway Database Retrieved 16 June 2020 Alan Henry 2 June 2014 Ramin Karimloo Receives Toronto Dora Award Nomination LES MISERABLES Earns a Total of 11 Nominations Broadway World Dora Awards 2014 A List Of All The Winners broadwayworld retrieved 18 July 2014 Cuthberson Debbie Rugendyke Louise 22 June 2015 Helpmann Awards 2015 nominations Opera Australia dominates as Les Miserables leads charge for musicals Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 29 June 2015 2015 Nominees Helpmann Awards Retrieved 29 June 2015 Les Miserables Reviews Box Office Theatre Ltd Retrieved 12 July 2016Bibliography Edit Behr Edward 1989 The Complete Book of Les Miserables New York Arcade Publishing pp 49 51 ISBN 1 55970 033 5 Evans Mike 2006 Musical Facts Figures amp Fun London AAPPL Artists and Photographers Press Ltd pp 39 40 ISBN 1904332382 Kayes Gillyanne Fisher Jeremy 2002 Successful Singing Auditions Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 87830 163 8 Retrieved 9 March 2011 Sternfeld Jessica 2006 The Megamusical Indiana University Press pp 363 364 ISBN 978 0 253 34793 0 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Les Miserables musical Official website Les Miserables at the Internet Broadway Database Les Miserables at the Playbill Vault An Archive of Performers from the Original Broadway Run of Les Miserables An Archive of Performers from the London Run of Les Miserables Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Les Miserables musical amp oldid 1155229777, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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