
Fonda made her Broadway debut in 1960 in There Was a Little Girl, Daniel Taradash's adaptation of the Christopher Davis novel "Lost Summer." Fonda played Toni Newton, an 18-year-old who is the victim of a rape and must deal with the ensuing psychological trauma. The cast included Whitfield Connor, Ruth Matteson and Dean Jones.
The play opened Feb. 29, 1960, at the Cort Theatre, where it ran for 16 performances. The New York Times' Brooks Atkinson praised 22-year-old Fonda's work: "As the wretched heroine of an unsavory melodrama, she gives an alert, many-sided performance that is professionally mature and suggests that she has found a career that suits her." Fonda received a Tony nomination for Best Featured Actress in a Play.
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Invitation to a March opened at the Music Box Theatre Oct. 29, 1960, and ran for 113 performances. The play marked Laurents' Broadway directorial debut.
See a Playbill from Invitation to a March here.
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The production opened Mar. 11, 1963, at the Hudson Theatre. The New York Times deemed it "a brilliant production of gargantuan drama," and critic Howard Taubman wrote that with this revival, the Actors Studio had taken what "may turn out to be a giant step forward for the good of the theater in America."
Read the Strange Interlude Playbill here.
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The play opened March 9, 2009, at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre, where it ran for a limited engagement of 85 performances. The production was nominated for five Tony Awards, including Best Play and Best Leading Actress in a Play for Fonda.