Alan Cumming and Kristin Chenoweth will host the Tony Awards this Sunday, June 7th, at 8 on CBS.
This season on Broadway was full—too full. Though there were only 37 new productions
(the fewest since 2007), quantity was valued over quality, and the recoupments
showed it. There were a few notable
flops, and still more productions that have become wildly successful (some if
not most undeservingly) on the strength of flash over substance. That being said, the true stars only shone
brighter against the darkness. Here are
my picks for this year’s Tonys race.
Best Play
I wrote back in September that The
Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time stood a good chance of
becoming a classic, and that I didn’t expect to see performances or staging
rivaling its feats of theatrical mastery any time in the coming theater
season. I was right. Curious
Incident should win this category easily.
Best
Musical
Of the four shows nominated in this category—or indeed, any show
nominated this year—The Visit is the
one whose presence confuses me most. It
is so bleak and unpleasant, with so little memorable music that one can only
conclude it was nominated out of deference to three very talented and very
venerated people: John Kander, Chita Rivera, and the late Fred Ebb. Similar deference to the past can be seen in
the nomination of two other shows, An
American in Paris (which is beautiful and worthy but essentially a revival)
and Something Rotten! (which harkens
back to an era of filthy musicals whose golden age began with Avenue Q in 2003 and ended with The Book of Mormon in 2011). Fun
Home is the only masterpiece in the category, and the only one which is
truly forward-thinking, innovative, and entirely new. By all rights the works of the genius Jeanine
Tesori, up to now egregiously Tony-less, should finally have their day.
Best
Revival of a Play
Oddly, this is probably the most competitive category this year. From my point of view the two best contenders
were This is Our Youth and Skylight, and making a choice between
the two is nearly impossible—both plays are the greatest works of their illustrious
playwrights and are re-staged impeccably for the first time. But, though it almost upsets me to decide, it
seems to me This is Our Youth ought
to win the trophy, especially because it was, obscenely, shut out of every
other category. Skylight is marvelous, but the pulsing, present reality of, well,
youth ran through the Cort Theater during This
is Our Youth’s run. Honestly, Skylight most likely will win, but if I
were in charge I’d give the (non-British) kids a turn at bat.
Best
Revival of a Musical
The King
and I. No question. Director Bartlett Sher turns anything he
touches to gold. Perfect
performances. Perfect set design. Perfect orchestrations. Perfect music. This is one for the ages.
Best Book
of a Musical
Another easy one. This category
contains the puerile (Something Rotten),
the inexpert (An American in Paris
and The Visit), and Lisa Kron, a
wonderful playwright who applies her skills to Fun Home to create a libretto so real, so engaged with the score,
as to be unmatched in recent seasons.
Bravo to more women on Broadway if they’re like her.
Best Score
Fun Home
again. Get used to it. Not just because of a lack of decent
competition, but because of the incredible range of composer Tesori and
lyricist Kron, who go from Jackson 5-pastiche number (“Come to the Fun Home”)
to painfully true familial revelations (“Telephone Wire”) with a skill and
dexterity that would leave most teams with whiplash. Anyone who can stand as an obvious choice
next to Sting and Kander and Ebb deserves a Tony in my book. (As a side note, now is probably the time to
mention that shutting Jason Robert Brown’s Honeymoon
in Vegas out of the nominations entirely, and especially in this category,
is a travesty akin to nineteenth-century Paris society’s refusal to buy Van
Gogh’s paintings. Okay. Rant over.)
Best
Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Play
Michael Cera was robbed of a nomination in this category, and thus we
are faced with another, nearly impossible to decide matchup between the
performances in two magnificent plays—Alex Sharp in Curious Incident and Bill Nighy in Skylight. (Stephen Boyer is
fantastic in a dual performance as a teenager and his demonic hand puppet in Hand to God, but his time has not yet
come.) Once again, painfully, Skylight’s competition squeaks by. I wrote in my review of Curious Incident, “In this still-young season [Mr. Sharp]
is a shoo-in for the Best Actor in a Play Tony—I cannot imagine a performance
that might surpass his.” I am beginning
to seem almost prescient.
Best Performance
by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Play
In many ways, this choice is tougher, as it includes one performance I
missed (Ruth Wilson in Constellations)
and one I’ve yet to see (Helen Mirren in The
Audience). That being said, I’d be less
than surprised if Dame Helen walked away with the Tony, but going off what I’ve
seen it’s only fair to award my fictional version to Carey Mulligan in Skylight. (Finally, a victory for this splendid
production!) Ms. Mulligan is a live wire
in the play, but doesn’t use pure energy as a substitute for dramatic talent
(like some other actors I could mention).
She is a beacon of stability, almost comforting in her own comfort
onstage.
Best Actor in a
Leading Role in a Musical
Maybe I flatter myself, but I imagine this pick will generate at least
some controversy. I’m (evidently) one of
the few who adored Ken Watanabe in The
King and I. His was one of the few
true actorly turns in a musical this
year—he put just as much of his energy and methodic ability into playing the
King of Siam as he did into his celebrated work as Hamlet in Japan. For me, he ekes his way past the competition
by being more interesting than the blow-your-mind song and dance men (Robert
Fairchild in An American in Paris and
Tony Yazbeck in On the Town) and a
better dramatic actor than the traditional charismatic Broadway leads (Brian
d’Arcy James in Something Rotten and
Michael Cerveris in Fun Home). So saying, this is probably the strongest
all-around category, and I’d be satisfied with a win from any of these
enormously talented men.
Best
Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical
A few samples from my review of The
King and I: “It is asking too much to imagine any better Anna Leonowens than Kelli
O’Hara.” “[She] has with this production
proved herself definitively the best musical stage actress since Julie Andrews.” “Too damned talented for words.” “A singer and actress of astounding talent.” “The stage glows gold wherever she steps.” I may have gone a little overboard. You get the point. The Tony goes to Kelli O’Hara.
Best
Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Play
Matthew Beard, Skylight. His manic mobile intelligence as an actor
dominates the stage, plus he’s really the only game in town in this
category. This season, we were gifted
with a beautifully loathsome performance by Kiernan Culkin as the drug dealer
we loved to hate in This is Our Youth,
but nominated instead is the talentless newcomer Micah Stock in the schlocky It’s Only a Play. This is what quantity over quality gets you.
Best
Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play
Director Scott Ellis’ You Can’t
Take it With You was probably the purest, happiest play on Broadway this
season, and no one exemplified its batty optimism more than Annaleigh Ashford
as the confectioner and wannabe ballerina Essie Sycamore. No comic performance on Broadway this season
utilized movement more intelligently (except perhaps Kristen Chenoweth in On the 20th Century, also
directed by Mr. Ellis). It would be a
relief to see comedy given its due in a category split between laughs and dour
dramatic performances.
Best
Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Musical
This category is made up mostly actors punching either slightly or
significantly below their weight. Two
nominations each went to Something Rotten
and An American in Paris, rightly,
since each has a large and talented ensemble cast. In terms of talent and joy in performance,
the award should go to the latter musical, and since I won’t dignify the
character played by Brandon Uranowitz (a ‘50s-era caricature of a Jew) with a
response, the faux-Tony goes to Max von Essen as the French aspiring showman
Henri Baurel. “I’ll Build a Stairway to
Paradise” is a difficult centerpiece number to inherit, especially from Georges
Guétary. Mr. von Essen nails it.
Best
Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Musical
With three extraordinarily talented Fun Home actresses (two playing the same character) are nominated
in one category, votes are bound to split.
But, to venture off the beaten track in terms of critical applause, I’ll
pick Emily Skeggs (Middle Alison) over Sydney Lucas (Small Alison), who won the
Obie. Ms. Lucas is a singer of
astounding talent considering her age, but her performance once or twice (but very infrequently) comes off as
astringent, while Ms. Skeggs, at twenty-five playing eighteen, is already a
full-fledged dramatic actress, who takes more advantage than any other cast
member in her show of Lisa Kron’s delicious dialogue.
Best Scenic
Design of a Play
Another strangely competitive category, with the work of the world’s
leading scenic designer, Bob Crowley, who revolutionized scenery with last
year’s Glass Menagerie revival and is
nominated this year for Skylight, up
against excellent work in Curious
Incident and You Can’t Take it With
You. Mr. Crowley is nominated 4
times this year, but it’s David Rockwell, You
Can’t Take it With You’s designer, who will really be cheated when Finn
Ross and Bunny Christie win for Curious
Incident. Mr. Rockwell created a
beautiful, eccentric Sycamore house unmatched in previous productions of the
play—one walks out of the theater feeling they’d like to hire him as an
interior designer. But a play designed
like Curious Incident comes around
rarely if ever. Describing it is a waste
of time. It only makes sense when
experienced live, and even then leaves you unsure you understand the import of
what you’ve just seen. Not in recent
memory has design so accurately reflected the inner thoughts of a play’s main
character.
Best Scenic
Design of a Musical
A face-off between a lone wolf known for dramatically imposing sets
and a team that captures the feeling of an era.
Bob Crowley, Benjamin Pearcy, and Leo Warner, for An American in Paris, have replicated the sets of an MGM soundstage
so perfectly they could fool Arthur Freed.
But Michael Yeargan, one of the troupe of collaborators employed by
Bartlett Sher, has matched or exceeded his work on 2008’s South Pacific with his set for The
King and I, which features an enormous mobile boat and a forty feet-deep
Siamese palace that draws the audience in with the full force of the Vivian
Beaumont’s proscenium. At the very least
he has made brilliant use of space, which in New York should always be worthy
of some sort of award.
Best
Direction of a Play
Most of the directors in this category move actors well and/or create
a veritable cavalcade of them for comedic purposes (see Marianne Elliott and
Scott Ellis for, respectively, Curious
Incident and You Can’t Take it With
You). Stephen Daldry, however, is
that rare thing—a true actors’ director.
You can feel his guidance in the brilliant performances of Ms. Mulligan,
Mr. Nighy, and Mr. Beard, in something close to a ballet of hurt feelings. His touch is gentle and unassuming. Directors show their talent either by
ostentation or restraint. Mr. Daldry is
a master of the latter.
Best
Direction of a Musical
Bartlett Sher is, as I wrote upon seeing The King and I in March, “the premier re-interpreter of classic
musicals… He has an unmatchable knack for bringing out the big in the great
scores and stories of the Golden Age.”
This fall he will complete his Golden Age trifecta with Fiddler on the Roof, but for now he
deserves recognition, as he did for South
Pacific in 2008, for his indelible directorial touch on one of the great
musicals of all time. He is a powerhouse,
a dynamo, a marvel. Goddamn it, just
give this man all the Tonys.
Best Choreography
In October, I wrote of Joshua Bergasse’s choreography in On the Town: “It flows like water across
the Lyric’s expansive stage, filling the room with fire and force, until it
finally expels the audience into the streets after two and a half glorious
hours, singing and jigging as they go.”
Mr. Bergasse is a worthy successor to Jerome Robbins, and though that
statement may seem something of an exaggeration for any choreographer, rest
assured that this revival has lost none of the magic Mr. Robbins instilled in
the production over seventy years ago, and that is partially thanks to Mr.
Bergasse’s stunning work.
Craft/Technical
Awards
Best
Orchestrations
Christopher Austin, Don Sebesky, and Bill Elliot, An American in Paris
Best
Costume Design of a Play
Jane Greenwood, You Can’t Take
it With You
Best
Costume Design of a Musical
Bob Crowley, An American in
Paris
Best
Lighting Design of a Play
Paule Constable, The Curious
Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Best
Lighting Design of a Musical
Natasha Katz, An American in
Paris
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