Another
Broadway season come and gone, another slightly giddy night sitting in front of
a TV in the Midwest watching snatches of the year in theatre. Some grumbles and eye rolls, as with any
award show, but when it comes down to it, I really love the Tony Awards.
Hugh
Jackman was back in the hosting seat after ceding his duties to Neil Patrick
Harris for several years. I always find
him to be a fun and engaging host, and he had some nice bits this year. His leading actress nominee songs were a
delight, and I loved his reenactment of his teenage theatre-geek days of
performing all the parts in The Music Man’s
“Rock Island.” (Very familiar for this
theatre geek – awkwardly singing all the parts in Broadway numbers is my bread
and butter.)
As
always, I’m woefully under-informed about plays, so I’ll stick with the musical
nominees for the most part. This year’s
telecast followed the trend of mostly featuring stuff we’ve seen before. There were two movie-turned-musical
performances that basically recreated famous scenes from their respective films
(Aladdin and Rocky,) After Midnight
and Beautiful featured actors playing
famous singers of the past and singing their famous songs, Wicked was brought out for its tenth anniversary, and two of the
revivals that performed (Les Misérables
and Cabaret) are pretty much exactly
the same as their previous productions.
Which
isn’t to say that everything was same old, same old. Idina Menzel performed a song from the new
Tom Kitt/Brian Yorkey show If/Then,
and best musical winner A Gentleman’s
Guide to Love and Murder positively tore it up, proving itself to be a very
funny, excellently-scored Edwardian-era drawing-room-murder comedy (is that
enough hyphens for you?) Though Violet and Hedwig and the Angry Inch are technically revivals, both are on
Broadway for the first time, so their performances felt a little more
novel. Also, for the first in my recollection, songs were performed
from shows that haven’t even opened yet – one written by Sting and the other an
adaptation of Finding Neverland.
Lots of
appreciative winners this year. On the
play side of things, I liked Bryan Cranston’s speech and Mark Rylance’s ode to
the man who brought the Globe back to London, and I love that, even after six
Tony wins, Audra McDonald still falls apart when they call her name; I adore
her. James Monroe Iglehart’s victory
dance was awesome, and I was very happy for both Neil Patrick Harris and Lena
Hall. Lena Hall’s speech was especially
great; she was just completely floored and excited, so much so that her notes
were actually shaking in her hands as she tried to read them. Everyone who won from A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder was also fantastic.
I am,
however, absolutely gutted that the final number wasn’t a recap of the evening.
I just love those – Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman always did a great job, as
did Lin-Manuel Miranda more recently. In
particular, last year’s closer with Neil Patrick Harris and Audra McDonald was
glorious, and I think seeing Audra McDonald do a mic drop was one of the most
awesome things I’ve ever seen.
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