Thursday, June 13, 2024

My Procrastinated and Inaccurate Tony Predictions

Anthony Martinez-Briggs and Brenson Thomas in The Wilma
Theater's 2023 production of Fat Ham. Photo by Joanna Austin.
 Hi, this past year has been terrible for your friend Zelda. Like, objectively terrible and subjectively terrible and feeling like it got worse each month (bonus: I'm now on antidepressants and they're helping ... somewhat). Part of what this meant is I was very late to the game on getting tickets to see some of the shows. Some I skipped deliberately (The Heart of Rock and Roll, Spamalot; oh, and I guess I skipped the Broadway transfer of Days of Wine and Roses), some I didn't realize I missed the full run of (sorry, Doubt). Some I ended up seeing against my better judgement (Uncle Vanya, Cabaret). But yeah, here we are. I think my biggest excitement for this year's Tonys is the Regional Theatre award going to Wilma Theater, a fantastic Philly-based company who's been putting consistently good work online since 2020 so that those of us who aren't local can partake (I am a digital subscriber to their season). They're where the Pulitzer-winning Fat Ham started, and it's nice to see them get this big recognition.

Okay, let's do it!

What will win. Zelda's choice.

Best Play
Jaja's African Hair Braiding, Jocelyn Bioh
Mary Jane, Amy Herzog
Mother Play, Paula Vogel
Prayer for the French Republic, Joshua Harmon
Stereophonic, David Adjmi

This is such an unfair list. All five of these were great, both in the writing and the production. I think Stereophonic, with all its buzz, will probably win, but I'd rather Jaja's African Hair Braiding or Prayer for the French Republic win.

Sarah Pidgeon, Juliana Canfield, and Tom Pecinka as Diana, Holly, and Peter
in Stereophonic. Photo by Julieta Cervantes.

Best Musical
Hell's Kitchen
Illinoise
The Outsiders
Suffs
Water for Elephants

Honestly, none of these really won me over fully, but this should probably go to The Outsiders.

Sky Lakota-Lynch, Joshua Boone, and Brody Grant, center, as Johnny Cade,
Dallas Winston, and Ponyboy Curtis, with the cast of The Outsiders.
Photo by Matthew Murphy.

Best Revival of a Play
An Enemy of the People, new version by Amy Herzog
Appropriate
Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch

I think Appropriate will probably win, but I found Purlie Victorious to be so exuberant and free. I'd love to see it take home the prize (and perhaps it landing on PBS this month will help its chances?)

Michael Esper, Elle Fanning, Natalie Gold, Alyssa Emily Marvin, Corey
Stoll, and Sarah Paulson as Franz, River, Rachael, Cassidy, Bo, and Toni
in Appropriate. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Best Revival of a Musical
Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club
Gutenberg! The Musical!
Merrily We Roll Along
The Who's Tommy

I doubt this one is a big mystery. It's about time Merrily was a Broadway hit, and it sucks that its creators aren't alive to see its triumph. That being said, Tommy is a good time too.

Daniel Radcliffe, Jonathan Groff, and Lindsay Mendez as Charley, Frank,
and Mary in Merrily We Roll Along. Photo by Joan Marcus.



Best Book of a Musical
Hell's Kitchen, Kristoffer Diaz
The Notebook, Bekah Brunstetter
The Outsiders, Adam Rapp with Justin Levine
Suffs, Shaina Taub
Water for Elephants, Rick Elice

It feels super weird to write this, but I think The Notebook probably had the strongest book of these five. But I bet Shaina Taub wins (and to be fair, she showed her skill at rewriting ably, as the Broadway version of her show has grown leaps and bounds from its Off-Broadway iteration).

Shaina Taub as Alice Paul with the cast of Suffs. Photo by Joan Marcus.


Best Original Score (Music and/or Lyrics) Written for the Theatre
Days of Wine and Roses, Music and Lyrics by Adam Guettel
Here Lies Love, Music by David Byrne and Fatboy Slim, Lyrics by David Byrne
The Outsiders, Music and Lyrics by Jamestown Revival (Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance) and Justin Levine
Stereophonic, Music and Lyrics by Will Butler
Suffs, Music and Lyrics by Shaina Taub

It'll be interesting (if a bit of a kick in the teeth for the musicals) if Stereophonic walks off with Best Score, but it's got all this momentum. Then again, I know other people were bigger fans of Guettel's and Taub's work this season than I was (to say nothing of the trio behind The Outsiders). It feels weird not really having a horse in this race, but I keep thinking about how much I love listening to the album for Here Lies Love. Long closed, but not forgotten.

The cast of Stereophonic. Photo by Julieta Cervantes.

Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Play
Betsy Aidem, Prayer for the French Republic
Jessica Lange, Mother Play
Rachel McAdams, Mary Jane
Sarah Paulson, Appropriate
Amy Ryan, Doubt: A Parable

Going off the Drama Desk wins this week, it looks like either Lange or Paulson are the frontrunners here. I wouldn't mind seeing an upset from Betsy Aidem (this play was so good and I hate that it's been forgotten so quickly), but I think this is probably Lange's or Paulson's to lose.

Sarah Paulson as Toni in Appropriate. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Play
William Jackson Harper, Uncle Vanya
Leslie Odom, Jr., Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch
Liev Schreiber, Doubt: A Parable
Jeremy Strong, An Enemy of the People
Michael Stuhlbarg, Patriots

My vote is for Stuhlbarg, who is electric onstage in Patriots.

Michael Stuhlbarg as Boris Berezovsky in Patriots. Photo by Matthew Murphy.

Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical
Eden Espinosa, Lempicka
Maleah Joi Moon, Hell's Kitchen
Kelli O'Hara, Days of Wine and Roses
Maryann Plunkett, The Notebook
Gayle Rankin, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

I wouldn't mind seeing it go to Maryann Plunkett, who's doing wonderful work in The Notebook, but Kelli O'Hara or Maleah Joi Moon are probably the favorites to win.

Brian d'Arcy James and Kelli O'Hara as Joe Clay and Kirsten Arnesen in
Days of Wine and Roses. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical
Brody Grant, The Outsiders
Jonathan Groff, Merrily We Roll Along
Dorian Harewood, The Notebook
Brian d'Arcy James, Days of Wine and Roses
Eddie Redmayne, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

Probably Groff, right? Probably Groff. But I wouldn't mind a BDJ win, even if I didn't care for his show. The man is so full of talent, and it'd be nice to see him honored with this at last.

Lindsay Mendez, Jonathan Groff, and Daniel Radcliffe as Mary, Frank, and
Charley in Merrily We Roll Along. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play
Quincy Tyler Bernstine, Doubt: A Parable
Juliana Canfield, Stereophonic
Celia Keenan-Bolger, Mother Play
Sarah Pidgeon, Stereophonic
Kara Young, Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch

I missed Doubt, but the performances from the other four in this category were all fantastic. I'm going to lean slightly toward CKB for her fantastic work playing a range of ages in Paula Vogel's memory play. That being said, other prognosticators are guessing either Sarah Pidgeon or Kara Young to win this, and I won't mind even a little if they do, as they're both fantastic.

Celia Keenan-Bolger and Jim Parsons as Martha and
Carl. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Play
Will Brill, Stereophonic
Eli Gelb, Stereophonic
Jim Parsons, Mother Play
Tom Pecinka, Stereophonic
Corey Stoll, Appropriate

I guess the question here is, will the three Stereophonic actors cancel each other out? If they don't, my vote is for Will Brill, who always surprises. But I'll make the bet they cancel each other out, and maybe Corey Stoll will walk off with it.

Corey Stoll as Bo in Appropriate. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Musical
Shoshana Bean, Hell's Kitchen
Amber Iman, Lempicka
Nikki M. James, Suffs
Leslie Rodriguez Kritzer, Monty Python's Spamalot
Kecia Lewis, Hell's Kitchen
Lindsay Mendez, Merrily We Roll Along
Bebe Neuwirth, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

No offense to anyone else in this category, but I really really want Kecia Lewis to win and I think she should. Word on the street is Lindsay Mendez is the frontrunner though, along with DanRad for Featured Actor, so the three Merrily leads can win. We'll see what happens!

Kecia Lewis and Maleah Joi Moon as Miss Liza Jane and Ali in Hell's Kitchen.
Photo by Marc J. Franklin.

Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Musical
Roger Bart, Back to the Future: The Musical
Joshua Boone, The Outsiders
Brandon Victor Dixon, Hell's Kitchen
Sky Lakota-Lynch, The Outsiders
Daniel Radcliffe, Merrily We Roll Along
Steven Skybell, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

Much as I love DanRad (and much as I love Steven Skybell, who starred as Tevye in the best Fiddler I've ever seen), I think this is Sky Lakota-Lynch's, for his fantastic performance as Johnny Cade.

Sky Lakota-Lynch and Joshua Boone as Johnny Cade and Dallas Winston in
The Outsiders. Photo by Matthew Murphy.

Best Scenic Design of a Play
dots, An Enemy of the People
dots, Appropriate
Derek McLane, Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch
David Zinn, Jaja's African Hair Braiding
David Zinn, Stereophonic

This is a very alliterative list of nominees ... and a repetitive one. And I'm kind of bummed Mary Jane wasn't nominated, considering how the space transformation in that production will stick with me for a long long time.

The full cast of Stereophonic on David Zinn's scenic design. Photo by
Julieta Cervantes.

Best Scenic Design of a Musical
Robert Brill and Peter Nigrini, Hell's Kitchen
AMP featuring Tatiana Kahvegian, The Outsiders
Takeshi Kata, Water for Elephants
David Korins, Here Lies Love
Riccardo Hernández and Peter Nigrini, Lempicka
Tim Hatley and Finn Ross, Back to the Future: The Musical
Tom Scutt, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

While I want to recognize the achievements of both David Korins and Tom Scutt, in transforming proscenium theaters into non-proscenium spaces, I still think the choices and stage pictures for The Outsiders were more interesting. That's the winner for me.

The cast of The Outsiders against the scenography of AMP featuring
Tatiana Kahvegian. Photo by Matthew Murphy.

Best Costume Design of a Play
Dede Ayite, Appropriate
Dede Ayite, Jaja's African Hair Braiding
Enver Chakartash, Stereophonic
Emilio Sosa, Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch
David Zinn, An Enemy of the People

Jaja's should really win for best wig and hair design (Nikya Mathis did win a Drama Desk for it, at least). Let's face it, Jaja's was so good, it needs to win for something. Please? But as we know, I'm almost always wrong on my design predictions, and I've come to terms with that. I gotta vote my heart, and Dede Ayite's work here was fantastic.

Andrew W. Butler, Sarah Pidgeon, Tom Pecinka, and Juliana Canfield as
Charlie, Diana, Peter, and Holly in Enver Chakartash's costume design for
Stereophonic. Photo by Julieta Cervantes.

Best Costume Design of a Musical
Dede Ayite, Hell's Kitchen
Linda Cho, The Great Gatsby
David Israel Reynoso, Water for Elephants
Tom Scutt, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club
Paul Tazewell, Suffs

I'm pretty stumped on this one, but I do kind of want to give it to Paul Tazewell's impeccable design for Suffs. So I will.

Nadia Dandashi, Shaina Taub, Kim Blanck, Ally Bonino, and Hannah Cruz as
Doris Stevens, Alice Paul, Ruza Wenclawska, Lucy Burns, and Inez Milholland
in Paul Tazewell's costume design for Suffs. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Best Lighting Design of a Play
Isabella Byrd, An Enemy of the People
Amith Chandrashaker, Prayer for the French Republic
Jiyoun Chang, Stereophonic
Jane Cox, Appropriate
Natasha Katz, Grey House

Dark horse! Voting for Grey House. But, you know, probably Stereophonic.

Tom Pecinka, Will Brill, and Sarah Pidgeon as Peter, Reggie, and Diana under
Jiyoun Chang's lighting design for Stereophonic. Photo by Julieta Cervantes.

Best Lighting Design of a Musical
Brandon Stirling Baker, Illinoise
Bradley King and David Bengali, Water for Elephants
Isabella Byrd, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club
Natasha Katz, Hell's Kitchen
Brian MacDevitt and Hana S. Kim, The Outsiders

Another difficult list. *throws a dart while blindfolded*

The cast of The Outsiders under the lighting of
Brian MacDevitt and Hana S. Kim. Photo by 
Matthew Murphy.

Best Sound Design of a Play
Justin Ellington and Stefania Bulbarella, Jaja's African Hair Braiding
Leah Gelpe, Mary Jane
Tom Gibbons, Grey House
Bray Poor and Will Pickens, Appropriate
Ryan Rumery, Stereophonice

My vote is for Appropriate, which had an incredibly powerful sound design, but my guess is that frontrunner Stereophonic will take it (and which also has excellent sound design).

Juliana Canfield as Holly in Stereophonic (you can't see it, but that's Ryan
Rumery's sound design). Photo by Julieta Cervantes.

Best Sound Design of a Musical
Nick Lidster for Autograph, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club
Kai Harada, Merrily We Roll Along
Gareth Own, Hell's Kitchen
M.L. Dogg and Cody Spencer, Here Lies Love
Cody Spencer, The Outsiders

I vote Here Lies Love, which not only contended with transforming the sound design for a non-proscenium space, but allowed every lyric to be understood clearly.

The cast of Here Lies Love within the sound design of M.L. Dogg and Cody
Spencer. Photo by Billy Bustamante, Matthew Murphy, and Evan
Zimmerman.

Best Orchestrations
Timo Andres, Illinoise
Tom Kitt and Adam Blackstone, Hell's Kitchen
Will Butler and Justin Craig, Stereophonic
Justin Levine, Matt Hinkley and Jamestown Revival (Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance), The Outsiders
Jonathan Tunick, Merrily We Roll Along

Oh man, I don't know. My impulse is for Illinoise, but it could go to legend Jonathan Tunick, or to play favorite of the season, Stereophonic.

Andrew R. Butler and Eli Gelb as Charlie and Grover in Stereophonic.
Photo by Julieta Cervantes.

Best Choreography
Camille A. Brown, Hell's Kitchen
Jesse Robb and Shana Carroll, Water for Elephants
Rick Kuperman and Jeff Kuperman, The Outsiders
Annie-B Parson, Here Lies Love
Justin Peck, Illinoise

Great as the choreo is for The Outsiders, great as the acrobatics are for Water for Elephants, kinetic and electric as the Hell's Kitchen movement was, come on. This goes to Justin Peck's choreo for the dance piece Illinoise, and we all know it.

The company of Illinoise dancing Justin Peck's choreography. Photo by
Liz Lauren.

Best Direction of a Play
Daniel Aukin,Stereophonic
Anne Kauffman, Mary Jane
Kenny Leon, Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch
Lila Neugebauer, Appropriate
Whitney White, Jaja's African Hair Braiding

Another that will probably go to Stereophonic but I wouldn't mind seeing a former teacher of mine win for Mary Jane.

Susan Pourfar and Rachel McAdams as Brianne and Mary Jane in Mary Jane
under Anne Kauffman's direction. Photo by Matthew Murphy.

Best Direction of a Musical
Maria Friedman, Merrily We Roll Along
Michael Greif, Hell's Kitchen
Leigh Silverman, Suffs
Jessica Stone, Water for Elephants
Danya Taymor, The Outsiders

Maria Friedman seems to be the favorite for this, for rescuing Merrily and finally making it a Broadway hit. I ... still wanna give it to Danya Taymor for The Outsiders, whose stagecraft and muscularity transcend its weaker writing.

The ensemble of Merrily We Roll Along, as directed by Maria Friedman.
Photo by Matthew Murphy.



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