Tomorrow is Tony Day, which will mark the end of the 2011-2012 awards
season. And it’s been a good one because there’s been no monster hit to suck
all the oxygen—
and the suspense—out of the race the way The Book of Mormon did
last year. Plus the nominees are
all so worthy in some categories that I’d be happy with a five-way tie.
The awards leading up to the Tonys often shed some light on who the
frontrunners might be. But since many
of the other groups that give out prizes consider shows both on and off
Broadway, there’s still room for those back in the pack to hold on to their
hopes for a last-minute surge.
The New York Drama Critics’ Circle, which announced its picks back at the
beginning of May, only gives out four awards and gave its top prize for Best
Play to Sons of the Prophet, the terrific play by Stephen Karam that ran
off-Broadway at the Roundabout Theatre Company’s Laura Pels Theatre. But that
group’s choice for Best Musical is Once, which, although it began as an off-Broadway
production, is now playing on Broadway at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre. The critics are totally transparent about their voting process and you can check it out here.
The group also liked Death of a Salesman and Follies for
Outstanding Revivals of a play and a musical. But it managed to spread the love around choosing James
Corden from One Man, Two Guvnors for Outstanding Actor in a Play, Tracie
Bennett of End of the Rainbow for Outstanding Actress in a Play and Audra
McDonald for her performance in The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess for Outstanding
Actress in a Musical.
Danny Burstein scored a second Drama Desk win for Follies by
taking the prize for Outstanding Actor in a Musical. But Gore Vidal’s The Best
Man, Nice Work If You Can Get It, Other Desert Cities, Newsies The Musical, and
even the poorly-reviewed Ghost The Musical all walked away with at least one
prize during last Sunday’s black-tie ceremony at Town Hall. Click here for the entire list.
So while we, like the New York Drama Critics, were so taken with Sons
of the Prophet that we named it Outstanding New Off-Broadway Play, we also celebrated One
Man, Two Guvnors as Outstanding
New Broadway Play. And although we awarded Once the title of Outstanding
New Broadway Musical, we were also able to recgnize Michael John LaChiusa’s Queen
of the Mist as Outstanding New Off-Broadway Musical.
But we spread around our approbation too. Over a dozen shows won at least one
award, including Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark, which got recognized for its
sets and costumes. Click here to see all our winners.
The OCC awards ceremony is a fun event because we voters sit
at tables with the winners. Last
year, my husband K and I got to sit with Frances McDormand who won the Best Actress
prize for her performance in Good People; she was a hoot.
K, who is still
mending slowly from a back injury, couldn’t make it this year so my
theatergoing buddy Bill took his place. Our tablemates included the very
amusing Enda Walsh, who wrote the book for Once, and a very sweet Christopher
Gattelli, who choreographed Newsies, the other main contender in the Best
Musical category. Bill and I had a great time.
Winning that award is, in effect, an official welcome to the New York theater community and past winners include everyone
from the legendary Betty Comden, who was in the first group, to the
up-and-coming Bobby Steggert, who won just two years ago.
A seven-member committee of theater critics and writers now
decides who should get the awards and past winners come back to present them. Both
winners and presenters are encouraged to tell entertaining anecdotes and you
can get high on all the comity in the air. Or at least I did.
This year’s winners included five actors who are also Tony
nominees. They include the now
ubiquitous Tracie Bennett; Phillip Boykin who plays the villainous Crown in Porgy
and Bess; Jessie Mueller, the standout in the short-lived On A Clear Day You
Can See Forever; Josh Young, who plays Judas in Jesus Christ Superstar and Jeremy
Jordan, nominated not for his starring role in Newsies but for his starring
role in the earlier but short-lived Bonnie & Clyde. You can see the entire list by clicking
here.
I’m not going to burden you with my thoughts on who will win or
should win on Sunday night because there are already plenty of those predictions out
there, including this one from yesterday’s New York Times. You can also click here for a downloadable ballot with the names of all the Tony nominees, courtesy of Playbill.
However I do want to point you to two pre-Tony pieces that
you may have missed but that are definitely worth your while. In the first, longtime theater writer
David Rooney offers “Ten Good Reasons to Watch the Tonys.” If you’re reading this—and have read this far—you don’t need any convincing but the piece is still a great all-you-need-to-know guide to
tomorrow night’s show (click here to find it).
In the second, the always entertaining Lucky and the Mick at The Craptacular blog channel their inner Joan Rivers and provide a visual
guide to some of the best and worst in Tony runway fashion from the past few
years (click here to see them).
And, finally, below are the winners of one more award, the
Patrick Lee Theater Blogger Awards.
It’s given out by The Independent Theater Bloggers Association, or ITBA,
the group of theater watchers who express their opinions online and
of whom I’m also a proud member.
The awards (the Patricks for short) are named
in honor of our late colleague Patrick Lee, a founding member of the group and
our first awards director. You’ll see some now-familiar names on our list but
some surprises too:
OUTSTANDING NEW BROADWAY MUSICAL
Once
OUTSTANDING NEW BROADWAY PLAY
Peter and the Starcatcher
OUTSTANDING BROADWAY MUSICAL
REVIVAL
Follies
OUTSTANDING BROADWAY PLAY REVIVAL
Death of a Salesman
OUTSTANDING NEW OFF BROADWAY
MUSICAL
Now. Here. This.
OUTSTANDING NEW OFF-BROADWAY PLAY
Sons of the Prophet
OUTSTANDING OFF-OFF-BROADWAY PLAY
Samuel & Alasdair: A Personal
History of the Robot War, by The Mad Ones, at The New Ohio Theatre
&
She Kills Monsters at the Flea
Theatre
OUTSTANDING ENSEMBLE PERFORMANCE
Peter and the Starcatcher
CITATIONS FOR EXCELLENCE BY
INDIVIDUAL PERFORMERS (Across Off-Off Broadway, Off-Broadway, and Broadway)
Nina Arianda, Venus in Fur
Christian Borle, Peter and the
Starcatcher
Philip Boynkin, The Gershwins'
Porgy and Bess
Danny Burstein, Follies
James Corden, One Man, Two Guvnors
Santino Fontana, Sons of the
Prophet
Judy Kaye, Nice Work If You Can
Get It
Judith Light, Other Desert Cities
Jan Maxwell, Follies
Lindsay Mendez, Godspell
Terri White, Follies
OUTSTANDING SOLO SHOW/PERFORMANCES
(Across Broadway, off- Broadway and Off-Off Broadway
Hugh Jackman, Back on Broadway
Denis O'Hare, An Iliad for New
York Theatre Workshop
Zoe Caldwell, Elective Affinities
for Soho Rep
Juan Francisco Villa, Empanada for
a Dream for The Barrow Group
Stephen Spinella, An Iliad for New
York Theatre Workshop
Daniel Kitson, It's Always Right
Now Until It's Later
Lorinda Lositza, Triumphant Baby
UNIQUE OFF-OFF BROADWAY EXPERIENCE
The Tenant by Woodshed Collective
CITATION FOR EXCELLENCE IN OFF-OFF
BROADWAY THEATRE
The Flea Theatre
2 comments:
Thank you for not giving Tony predictions. Moreso this year than previously (because I have two friends among the nominees, and because it's a presidential election year), I've become more aware of the parallel between theater pundits and political pundits, and how little each ultimately know.
And thank you for taking the time (particularly on Tony day!) to leave a comment. I hope this evening goes well for your nominated friends. Cheers, jan
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