Some Like It Hot, the musical re-imagining of the hit 1959 film from Billy Wilder that starred Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis and Marilyn Monroe, dominated the Tony Awards announcement this morning with 13 nominations, more than any other production.
The musical, about two band players in the 1920s on the run from the mob who disguise themselves as women and join a women’s band, earned nominations for Best Musical, Direction of a Musical, Best Book and Original Score of a Musical and four acting nods; two in lead actor (Christian Boyle and J. Harrison Ghee), Featured Actor in a Musical (Kevin Del Aguila) and Featured Actress in a Musical (NaTasha Yvette Williams).
Up next were & Juliet, Shucked and New York, New York, which scored nine nominations apiece and join eight-time nominee Kimberly Akimbo, the story of a teenager who has a medical condition that causes her to age rapidly, in the race for Best Musical. The revival of Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, starring Josh Groban and Annaleigh Ashford (both nominated) also earned eight nominations and the revival of Parade starring Tony winner Ben Platt (nominated again today) earned six.
Six nominations was the top count for three plays – The Jessica Chastain-led A Doll’s House, Tom Stoppard’s Leopoldstadt, and the political satire Ain’t No Mo’. The nomination haul for Ain’t No Mo’ is especially bittersweet as the show closed after just 28 performances last winter. Chastain, already an Oscar winner and potential Emmy winner later this summer, is working on the T part of her EGOT and is an early favorite here.
Speaking of EGOT, the opening up of the Best Musical, Best Play and Revivals to all levels of producers has made EGOTing a little bit easier. Jennifer Hudson completed hers last year with her Tony win for A Strange Loop (she was among the 30+ credited producers) and this year, superstar Mariah Carey could add a Tony to her Grammy wins if Some Like It Hot prevails.
J. Harrison Ghee and Alex Newell made history as the first gender non-binary performers nominated for the Tony Awards, in Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical and Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Musical, respectively. In an interview Newell said they submitted here because “Everyone who does acting is an actor. That is genderless.”
With six nominees, this is the largest pool the Lead Actor in a Musical category has ever had, just two ceremonies after there was only one nominee here (Aaron Tviet for Moulin Rouge!) that resulted in the very awkward scenario where voters had to vote for Tviet to either win or lose (he won).
With the nomination for Lerner & Loewe’s Camelot, Bartlett Sher and Lincoln Center continue their streak; every show Sher has directed there has received a nomination in the top category but this is the first time he hasn’t received a corresponding nomination for Best Director.
Oversized categories were a hit this morning with several pushing outside of the normal five slots. This is the second year in a row that there has been a super-sized nomination count of six for Best Costume Design of a Musical. This is the first time there have been six nominees for Best Direction of a Play since 1975. With seven nominees, Lighting Design of a Play is not only the largest category this year, but the most nominees in a design category ever.
Some surprising snubs included Bob Fosse’s Dancin’, which was completely shut out, Olivier Award winner Life of Pi and Prima Facie earned five and four nods apiece, respectively, but both missed out on Best Play. August Wilson’s The Piano Lesson was shockingly only nominated for two awards (Revival of a Play and Featured Actor in a Play for Samuel L. Jackson), with Danielle Brooks, John David Washington and director LaTanya Richardson Jackson all missing the cut.
Double nominations, however, were the name of the game today in several technical categories like Best Choreography where Jennifer Weber was nominated for both & Juliet and KPOP while Ben & Max Ringham earned two nominations apiece in Sound Design of Play for A Doll’s House and Prima Facie.
Nominations were announced by Lea Michelle and Tony Award winner Myles Frost. The American Theatre Wing’s 75th Annual Tony Awards will take place at United Palace in New York City on Sunday evening, June 11, 2023 and stream live at 6:30p ET on PlutoTV and 8p ET on CBS and Paramount+. The show will be hosted by Ariana DeBose and produced by Glenn Weiss and Ricky Kirshner of White Cherry Entertainment.
Here is the complete list of nominations.
Best Play
Best Musical
Best Revival of a Play
Best Revival of a Musical
Best Book of a Musical
Best Original Score (Music and/or Lyrics) Written for the Theatre
Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Play
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Play
Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical
Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Play
Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play
Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Musical
Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Musical
Best Scenic Design of a Play
Best Scenic Design of a Musical
Best Costume Design of a Play
Best Costume Design of a Musical
Best Lighting Design of a Play
Best Lighting Design of a Musical
Best Sound Design of a Play
Best Sound Design of a Musical
Best Direction of a Play
Best Direction of a Musical
Best Choreography
Best Orchestrations
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