Love Letters: Change in cast performance schedule

Tom Millward
Tom Millward


Producers of the Broadway revival of A.R. Gurney's Love Letters, directed by Gregory Mosher, have announced a slight change to the cast performance schedule. The show currently stars Alan Alda and Candice Bergen and they will now extend their limited engagements through to 18 December 2014. They had originally been scheduled to perform only to 5 December.

This also means that Stacy Keach and Diana Rigg, who were originally scheduled to assume the roles from 06 December 2014, will now begin their limited engagement on the 19 December 2014.

The remaining cast schedule for the production is as follows:

Alan Alda and Candice Bergen from 9 November 2015 to 18 December 2014

Stacy Keach and Diana Rigg from 19 December 2014 to 9 January 2015

Anjelica Huston and Martin Sheen from 10 January 2015 to 15 Febuary 2015

The rotating cast for Love Letters originally featured Brian Dennehy and Golden Globe winner Mia Farrow. Emmy Award winner and Tony nominee Carol Burnett took over from Ms. Farrow on 11 October 2014.

A.R. Gurney's Love Letters opened at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre on 18 September 2014, following previews from 13 September, where it is scheduled to close on 15 February 2015.

The play opened to good reviews: Sweet, elegant and touching (NY Daily News); Craftily written (NY Post); Both seasoned actors slide easily into their carefully shaded roles (NY1/Time Out); Surprisingly affecting (The Record).

Love Letters features an all-star rotating cast of Broadway and Screen veterans, bringing the two-hander to life, each in a different way. The production also features scenic design by John Lee Beatty, costumes by Jane Greenwood and lighting by Peter Kaczorowski, and is produced on Broadway by Nelle Nugent, Barbara Broccoli, Frederick Zollo, Olympus Theatricals, Colleen Camp and Kenneth Teaton.

The play centres on a pair of friends, rebellious Melissa Gardner and straight-arrow Andrew Makepeace Ladd III. The pair have exchanged notes, cards and letters with each other for over 50 years - from grade school, through summer vacations, to college, and well into adulthood. Throughout their lives they have discussed their dreams, hopes, failures, successes and difficulties. Once the letter are finished - the real question remains. Does the real love of their live exist a mere letter away?

Love Letters originally opened off-Broadway in March 1989 in a production which starred Kathleen Turner and John Rubinstein. The play changed its cast every week, and included performers such as Victor Garber, Julie Harris, Christopher Reeve and Christopher Walken. The show transferred to Broadway in October 1989 and featured further guest appearances from Lynn Redgrave and Stockard Channing.

- by Tom Millward

Alan AldaCandice Bergen

Originally published on

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