Frontmezzjunkies reports: Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ed Harris, Allison Janney, Joe Keery, and Lily Rabe will lead Jon Robin Baitz’s acclaimed family drama this fall
By Ross
News that Julia Louis-Dreyfus will make her Broadway debut this fall in Jon Robin Baitz’s Other Desert Cities immediately became one of the most exciting announcements for next year’s theatrical season. Not only does it mark the long-awaited Broadway arrival of one of television’s most celebrated actors and comedians, but it also brings together an extraordinary company of celebrated actors to take on the first Broadway revival of a play that asks difficult, deeply human questions about family, memory, and truth.
Louis-Dreyfus will be joined by Ed Harris, Allison Janney, Joe Keery, and Lily Rabe in the production, which will be directed by Tony Award winner John Benjamin Hickey. The limited engagement will begin previews at the Hudson Theatre on September 29 ahead of an official opening night on October 18, with performances scheduled through January 17, 2027.
First seen Off-Broadway at Lincoln Center Theater in 2011 before transferring to Broadway later that year, Other Desert Cities quickly established itself as one of the most fascinating American plays of its era. Written by Jon Robin Baitz, the drama unfolds over a Christmas gathering in Palm Springs, where a daughter’s return home with a revealing memoir threatens to expose long-buried family secrets. What begins as a holiday reunion gradually transforms into a confrontation over memory, loyalty, and who has the right to tell a family’s story. I was fortunate enough to see the original Broadway production, featuring Stockard Channing, Rachel Griffiths, and Stacy Keach, and found myself completely mesmerized by it from every angle. Its emotional complexity and razor-sharp dialogue have stayed with me ever since, making the prospect of returning to it with a new company especially exciting.
For Baitz, revisiting the play also means recognizing that its central questions remain as urgent today as they were nearly two decades ago. In announcing the production, he reflected on how the play’s exploration of personal responsibility, division, and self-understanding continues to resonate through changing times. Director John Benjamin Hickey echoed that sentiment, describing the work as an unexpectedly timely portrait of an American family that remains funny, surprising, and heartbreaking.
The production will also feature an acclaimed creative team, including scenic designer Scott Pask, costume designer Tom Broecker, lighting designer Natasha Katz, sound designer and original music composer Mikaal Sulaiman, and hair and wig designer Robert Pickens.
What excites me most about this revival is not simply its extraordinary cast, but the play’s enduring willingness to wrestle with questions that every family confronts in one form or another. How do we live with the stories we inherit? What happens when competing versions of the past collide? And what price are we willing to pay for the truth? Those questions sit at the heart of Other Desert Cities, and they feel every bit as compelling now as they did when the play first captivated audiences. With this starry cast in place, I can’t wait to take that trip out to those Other Desert Cities to see how it all plays out this time around.

