| Bug | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Written by | Tracy Letts |
| Characters | Peter Evans Agnes White Jerry Goss Dr. Sweet R.C. Pizza Harris |
| Date premiered | 20 September 1996 |
| Place premiered | London, England |
| Original language | English |
| Subject | |
| Genre | Black comedy |
| Setting | Oklahoma, USA |
Bug is a play by American playwright Tracy Letts. Exploring themes of paranoia and conspiracy theories, the play tells the story of a woman who, as she spends time with a newly acquainted man in her motel room, starts sharing more and more of his paranoias. It premiered in London in 1996, and was also performed around the United States between 2000 and 2004.
The play was adapted into a film of the same name directed by William Friedkin in 2006, with Letts writing the screenplay and Michael Shannon, who had played the male lead role of Peter in the original London production and in some American versions, reprising his role.
Most of the play takes place in a seedy motel room. Lonely cocktail waitress Agnes lives there, hiding from her violent ex-husband Jerry Goss, an ex-con. One night, her lesbian biker friend R.C. introduces her to Peter, a Gulf War veteran who might be AWOL. She gets involved with Peter, who grows increasingly paranoid about the war in Iraq, UFOs, the Oklahoma City bombing of the federal building, cult suicides, and secret government experiments on soldiers. He eventually draws Agnes into his delusions. The play explores issues of love, paranoia, conspiracy theories, and Agnes's slow descent into insanity under Peter's influence.
The play originally premiered at the Gate Theatre in Notting Hill, London, on September 20, 1996. [1] The rehearsals were at A Red Orchid Theatre in Chicago, Illinois. [2] It starred Shannon Cochran and Michael Shannon.
Following its London run, the play made its U.S. debut in Ithaca, New York. In Washington, D.C., the play underwent a series of revisions and received an American premiere at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company in March/April 2000. [3] Directed by Wilson Milam, the cast featured Deborah Hazlett, Eric Sutton, Steve Schmidt, Kate Eastwood Norris, and Brian Hemmingsen. It opened March 18, 2000 and closed April 16, 2000.
The play's Chicago premiere was at A Red Orchid Theatre, where the play first rehearsed prior to its world premiere in London. [2] Directed by Dexter Bullard, the cast featured Kate Buddeke, Michael Shannon, Guy Van Swearingen III, Robin Witt, and Troy West. It opened August 20, 2001 and closed October 28, 2001.
Bug opened off-Broadway at the Barrow Street Theatre on February 29, 2004 and closed January 30, 2005. [4] The cast featured Shannon Cochran, Michael Shannon, Michael Cullen, Amy Landecker, and Reed Birney. Cochran replaced Amanda Plummer, who resigned from the Off-Broadway premiere just days before its February 21 start date due to artistic differences with its director, Dexter Bullard. [5] [6] [7] A notice in the theater box office warned that the show contained nudity, violence and cigarette smoking. [8]
The play premiered at The SBW Stables Theatre in Kings Cross, Sydney, in May 2010, as part of Griffin Theatre Company's Independent Season 2010, [9] in conjunction with Picture This Productions. It opened 12 May 2010 and closed 5 June 2010. Directed by Anthony Skuse, it featured Jeanette Cronin, Matthew Walker, Jonny Pasvolsky, Catherine Terracini, and Laurence Coy.
On August 20, 2025, it was announced that Bug would make its Broadway premiere at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre, with opening night set for January 8, 2026. Directed by David Cromer, it starred Carrie Coon, Letts' wife, as Agnes and Namir Smallwood as Peter. The production previously played at the Steppenwolf Theatre Company in 2020 and 2021. [10] [11]
| Character | London | Washington, D.C. | Chicago | Off-Broadway | Australia | Broadway |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1996 | 2000 | 2001 | 2004 | 2010 | 2026 | |
| Agnes White | Shannon Cochran | Deborah Hazlett | Kate Buddeke | Shannon Cochran | Jeanette Cronin | Carrie Coon |
| Peter Evans | Michael Shannon | Eric Sutton | Michael Shannon | Matthew Walker | Namir Smallwood | |
| Jerry Goss | Marc A. Nelson | Steve Schmidt | Guy Van Swearingen III | Michael Cullen | Jonny Pasvolsky | Steve Key |
| R.C. | Holly Wantuch | Kate Eastwood Norris | Robin Witt | Amy Landecker | Catherine Terracini | Jennifer Engstrom |
| Dr. Sweet | Jeff Still | Brian Hemmingsen | Troy West | Reed Birney | Laurence Coy | Randall Arney |
A film version of the play was released in 2006 from Lionsgate. It was directed by William Friedkin, and starred Ashley Judd, Harry Connick Jr. and Michael Shannon. Friedkin had watched and then re-watched the play at the Barrow Street Theatre with Shannon and Cochran, who had replaced Amanda Plummer at short notice. [6] Friedkin then contacted Tracy Letts and together they cooperated on a screen adaptation. Friedkin described the film as "the most intense piece of work I've ever done". [12] Michael Shannon had played the part on stage. Lionsgate wanted to cast an actor with more name recognition, but Friedkin was determined to have Shannon perform in the film, saying he brought a unique quality to the part.
| Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | Lucille Lortel Awards | Outstanding Play | Won | |
| Outstanding Director | Dexter Bullard | Won | ||
| Outstanding Lighting Design | Tyler Micoleau | Won | ||
| Outstanding Sound Design | Brian Ronan | Won | ||
| Obie Awards | Best New American Play | Bug | Won | |
| Outstanding Performance | The acting company of Bug - Shannon Cochran, Michael Shannon, Michael Cullen, Amy Landecker, Reed Birney | Won | ||
| Outstanding Design Team | The design team of Bug - Lauren Helpern (sets), Tyler Micoleau (lights), Brian Ronan (sound), Kim Gill (costumes), Faye Armon (props) | Won | ||
| Theatre World Award | Shannon Cochran | Won | ||
| Drama Desk Awards | Outstanding Actress in a Play | Shannon Cochran | Nominated | |
| Outstanding Director of a Play | Dexter Bullard | Nominated | ||
| Outstanding Sound Designer | Brian Ronan | Nominated | ||
Bug at the Internet Off-Broadway Database (archived)