David Merrick

American theatrical producer
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Also known as: David Margulois
Quick Facts
Original name:
David Margulois
Born:
November 27, 1911, St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.
Died:
April 25, 2000, London, England (aged 88)

David Merrick (born November 27, 1911, St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.—died April 25, 2000, London, England) was a prolific American theatrical producer who staged many of the most successful plays in American theatre during the 1960s.

Though he earned a law degree from St. Louis University in Missouri, Merrick abandoned the practice of law after 1949 and became a full-time theatrical producer in New York City. His first independent production, Clutterbuck (1949), received mixed reviews but ran for some six months. In 1954 the musical Fanny became his first hit and was followed over the next 40 years by more than 85 other Broadway shows, including Look Back in Anger (1957), Gypsy (1959), A Taste of Honey (1960), Becket (1960), Hello, Dolly! (1964), Oh What a Lovely War! (1964), Cactus Flower (1965), Marat/Sade (1965), Play It Again, Sam (1969), 42nd Street (1980), and Loot (1986).

Merrick had a prickly personality that bordered on the misanthropic, and he was openly contemptuous of actors and critics alike. His private life was colourful—married six times, to five women—and he was legendary for his P.T. Barnum-like publicity stunts. He once hid an actress in the audience and paid her to jump onto the stage and disrupt the performance at a predetermined time, all in the hope of attracting media attention; the stunt worked. On another occasion he reportedly prevented a critic from watching a preview by canceling the performance because of a “loose” rat. In the eyes of some, Merrick was a mere packager, not a producer, of great art, someone who cheapened the product in the process; to others, he was a rare genius of the lost art of marketing art.

His niggling and outlandish ways notwithstanding, Merrick was one of the most talented producers of the American theatre who enjoyed both critical and commercial success. He frequently had several productions running on Broadway at the same time, and many of them also had successful runs in London.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.