This
seems like it was kind of a weak Broaday season overall, as well as a fairly
commercial one, but despite that, I did enjoy the Tony Awards last night. A big part of that was the one-two punch of
our hosting duo, Josh Groban and Sara Bareilles. The rookie hosts did a terrific job – they
were both charming and funny, had good banter, and seemed comfortable playing
off of each other. Over the course of
the night, they performed several songs (which, from the end credits, it looks
like they wrote themselves) which were all fun, my favorite being their opening
number dedicated to the “losers” who would make up the majority of the
night. It was a song in which they poked
fun at themselves – having both expressed shock that neither had ever won a
major award – and it was a cheeky way to celebrate everyone there, rather than
just the winners.
Every
year, I take note of how many Best Musical nominees have both an original story
and an original score (i.e., not based on a movie/book/whatever and not a
jukebox musical,) and while it’s usually a very small minority, this year, the
grand total was zero. Three of the nominees were based on movies –
although The Band’s Visit, the
eventual Best Musical winner, is based on an artsy foreign film, so not exactly
a commercial cash grab – while one was based on a cartoon. On the plus side, though, most of them had
original scores; Frozen was the only
one with a lot of previously-known songs, and like all Disney musicals, it
added new ones to its score.
Honestly,
with many of the performances, I came away sort of ho-hum. Some of them were outright unimpressive –
nothing about this telecast made me want to hear more of Mean Girls – while others I think could’ve made better song choices
– Alex Newell undeniably killed it performing “Mama Will Provide” from Once on This Island and I’m 100% pumped
to see the show in NYC at the end of the month, but I greatly would’ve
preferred more of a group number, or a medley that would’ve shown off more of
the cast. I will freely admit that one
of my favorite performances of the night from a nominated show was SpongeBob Squarepants. I’d heard that it was a lot better than
people would think, and this was the proof – not only was the song entertaining
and the performance lively, but the costuming was really vibrant, innovative,
and impressive.
As for
the awards themselves, we didn’t quite get clean sweeps, but on both the play
and musical sides, there were clear themes.
For musicals, The Band’s Visit
won nearly all the major awards, with the exception of Best Revival (duh,)
which went to Once on This Island, and Best Featured Actress, which went
to Carousel. Given the show’s subject matter, about
Egyptians and Israelis who are thrown together unexpectedly and end up making
close connections, much was said in the speeches about Muslims, immigration,
representation, and the American ideal of welcoming others, even if the
American people haven’t often borne that out in practice. Best Lead Actor winner Tony Shaloub had a
lovely speech looking back on his father’s arrival in the States from Lebanon,
while Best Featured Actor winner Ari’el Stachel apologized for the celebrations
he missed with his parents for years because, after 9/11, he wanted his
Arabness to go unnoticed and didn’t want to be seen with his immigrant parents.
For
plays, the revivals were big winners, with both Actor awards going to Angels in America (along with Best
Revival) and Three Tall Women picking
up both Actress trophies. But what about
the new plays, you ask? That slot was
claimed by Harry Potter and the Cursed
Child, which took home Best Director and Best Play, as well as most of the design
awards for plays that weren’t given out during the telecast. I don’t know how I feel about the Best Play
win. I’ve heard that the play is a
technical masterpiece and an undoubted thrill of a theatrical experience, but
while Best Musical looks at the production as a whole (with individual writers
being credited separately with Best Book and Best Original Score,) Best Play
looks at the production and the play
itself, and I’m still trying to get through reading The Cursed Child. As
impressive and amazing as I’m sure it is onstage, did playwright Jack Thorne
really write the best play of the year?
I have a hard time believing that.
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