José Quintero (born October 15, 1924, Panama City, Panama—died February 26, 1999, New York, New York, U.S.) was a theatrical director and cofounder of Circle in the Square Theatre in New York City’s Greenwich Village. This theatre’s productions sparked the growth of off Broadway into a nationally important theatre movement. Quintero’s stagings of the plays of Eugene O’Neill brought about a worldwide rebirth of interest in O’Neill’s work.
Quintero spent his youth in Panama. He moved to New York after graduating from the University of Southern California (B.A., 1948) and training at the Goodman Theatre School in Chicago (1948–49). His first directorial effort was a production of Tennessee Williams’s The Glass Menagerie at the Woodstock (N.Y.) Summer Theatre in 1949, and in 1951 he began directing at Circle in the Square. In 1952 Quintero established his reputation and that of actress Geraldine Page with a revival of Summer and Smoke, a Tennessee Williams play that had failed on Broadway. With that work, interest in off-Broadway productions was ignited. In May 1956 Quintero directed his first O’Neill play, a revival of The Iceman Cometh with Jason Robards, who would star in a number of Quintero-directed O’Neill works. Later that year he directed the original Broadway production of Long Day’s Journey Into Night, a notable success that earned the director his first Tony Award.
Other O’Neill works directed by Quintero include Strange Interlude (1963), A Moon for the Misbegotten (1973; Tony Award for best director), and Anna Christie and A Touch of the Poet (both 1977). He directed the film adaptation of Williams’s The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone (1961), a number of operas, and television specials. After surgery in 1987 to remove his cancerous larynx, he returned to stage directing, using a mechanical voice box, with a revival (1988) of Long Day’s Journey Into Night. He also lectured and taught university classes. His autobiography, If You Don’t Dance They Beat You, appeared in 1974.