We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Broadway and West End Casting
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
- Format:
-
25 January 2027
A Theatre Lover’s Look at Broadway and West End Casting: Roles, Race and Gender explores the politics and cultural significance of “non-traditional” casting through a wide-ranging examination of theatre in the United States and the United Kingdom. Combining theatre spectatorship, performer histories, interviews, and cultural analysis, the book considers how race, gender, representation, and access continue to shape contemporary performance cultures on Broadway and in the West End.
Dolores Beasley asks how audiences interpret productions in which Black actors or women perform roles historically associated with white or male identities, and whether such casting should be understood as representational inclusion, aesthetic intervention, or political statement. Across a range of Broadway and West End productions, it explores the extent to which casting practices reshape theatrical meaning, audience reception, and cultural expectations surrounding race, gender, and performance.
Ranging through musical theatre, Shakespeare, contemporary drama, criticism, and audience reception, the study examines the ways casting choices influence not only who appears on stage, but how theatrical meaning itself is constructed and received. Productions including Hamilton, Oklahoma!, Company, Othello, and Emilia are situated within broader conversations about racial justice, representation, spectatorship, and institutional change in contemporary theatre industries.
At the centre of the book is a sustained engagement with Black theatre histories and the experiences of Black performers, audiences, and creative workers. The manuscript connects contemporary casting debates to longer histories of exclusion, opportunity, and artistic negotiation, while also reflecting on the role of critics, audiences, and theatrical institutions in shaping cultural legitimacy and visibility.
Written in an accessible and personal style, the book combines critical reflection with lived theatre-going experience, offering a perspective that moves between scholarship, cultural commentary, and performance criticism. The result is a study that speaks both to theatre enthusiasts and to wider discussions about race, identity, representation, and cultural power in contemporary performance culture.
PERFORMING ARTS / Theater / General, Theatre studies, PERFORMING ARTS / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, Society and culture: general, Performing arts
Dolores Beasley began critiquing plays at the age of five. A lifetime of theatre attendance was only interrupted for three tours as a Peace Corps Volunteer and pandemic shut downs. After a 20-year career in NASA communications she left the US to obtain a MA in Creative Writing, pursue a PhD at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London, and to attend plays to her heart’s content.
Dedication
List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Act One: The Backstory
Prologue
1 Introduction
Broadway and the West End: Comparisons and Contrasts
Chapter Outline
2 Casting Definitions, Terms, and Conditions
3 Historical Perspective
Shakespeare to Ira Aldridge
Ira Aldridge and Nineteenth-Century Pioneers
1930s–1960s: The Rise of Black Actors and Creatives
The Influence of Joseph Papp
Blackface
Act Two: Musicals and Dramas
Musicals Introduction
4 Oklahoma!
Origins
A ‘Boundary-busting’ Oklahoma!
Oklahoma! With Racial Overtones?
Dream Baby!
Conclusion
5 Hamilton
Hamilton’s Backstory
Hamilton and the Political Scene
Race and Deracialisation
A Game Changer?
Hamilton’s Legacy
6 Sondheim Swaps: Company and Forum
Company: Origins and Overview
Company and Intersectionality
Whoopi Goldberg and Forum
Drama: Introduction
7 ‘Non-Traditional’ Shakespeare
Richard II and Henry V
Unconventional Shrews
Emilia
Othello
Red Velvet and 8 Hotels: Representation and Power
Black Iagos and Desdemonas?
2024: Othello and His ‘Other’
Conclusion
8 August Wilson and Death of a Salesman
The Ground on Which Wilson Stood
The ‘Great Debate’
Death of a Salesman
Conclusion
Interval / Intermission
Act Three: Conflict, Criticisms, and Conclusions
9 The Untouchables
Who’s Afraid?
10 Critics and Criticism
11 Efforts Towards Change
Audiences
Beyond Statistics
Advocacy
12 Conclusion
More Areas to Explore
Concluding Thoughts
Bibliography
List of Plays Attended
Index