Market64th Tony Awards
Company Profile

64th Tony Awards

The 64th Annual Tony Awards took place on Sunday, June 13, 2010, held again at Radio City Music Hall in New York City. The host was Sean Hayes. These awards paid tribute to Broadway productions during the 2009–2010 season. The cut off-date for Tony eligibility was April 29, 2010, and the nominations were announced on May 4.

Eligibility
Shows that opened on Broadway during the 2009–10 season before April 30, 2010 are eligible. ;Original plays • After Miss JulieA Behanding in SpokaneCollected StoriesEnronIn the Next Room (or The Vibrator Play)LoopedNext FallOleannaRaceRedA Steady RainSuperior DonutsTime Stands StillWishful Drinking ;Original musicals • The Addams FamilyAll About MeAmerican IdiotBurn the FloorCome Fly AwayEveryday RaptureFela!MemphisMillion Dollar QuartetSondheim on Sondheim ;Play revivals • Brighton Beach MemoirsFencesHamletLend Me a TenorThe Miracle WorkerPresent LaughterThe Royal FamilyA View from the Bridge ;Musical revivals • Bye Bye Birdie • ''Finian's Rainbow'' • La Cage aux FollesA Little Night MusicPromises, PromisesRagtimeWhite Christmas ==Ceremony==
Ceremony
Presenters Presenters included: • Paula AbdulBillie Joe ArmstrongAntonio BanderasJustin BarthaLaura BenantiCate BlanchettPatrick BreenLaura Bell BundyMichael CerverisKristin ChenowethBarbara CookMichael DouglasKelsey Grammer† • Rosemary Harris† • Patrick HeusingerKatie HolmesBrian d'Arcy JamesScarlett Johansson† • Nathan LaneAngela Lansbury† • Anthony LaPagliaLaura Linney† • Lucy LiuJan Maxwell† • Idina MenzelLea MicheleAlfred Molina† • Helen MirrenMatthew MorrisonChris NothBebe NeuwirthBernadette PetersDavid Hyde Pierce‡ • Daniel RadcliffeEddie Redmayne† • Mark SanchezTony ShalhoubLiev Schreiber† • Jada Pinkett SmithWill SmithStanley TucciDenzel Washington† • Raquel Welch † = 2010 nominee‡ = 2010 Isabelle Stevenson Award winner Performances The show opened with a medley from most of the musicals that opened during the season, and included, as described by The New York Times, punk music, Frank Sinatra songs, Afrobeat rhythms, and early rock ’n’ roll. There were performances by the casts of the musicals nominated for both Best Musical and Revival: American Idiot, Fela!, Memphis, Million Dollar Quartet, La Cage aux Folles, A Little Night Music, Everyday Rapture and Ragtime. Other performers were Lea Michele, who sang "Don't Rain On My Parade" and Matthew Morrison, who sang "All I Need Is the Girl", and punk rock band Green Day who performed "Know Your Enemy/Holiday". The casts of Come Fly Away and Promises, Promises were included in a presentation of choreography. Additionally, the nominees for Best Play and Best Play Revival were presented by the performers from their respective plays. Creative Arts Tony Awards Some of the Tony Awards, dubbed "The Creative Arts Tony Awards" were awarded prior to the CBS telecast. The presentation was shown on a live webcast. Hosts for this portion of the ceremony were Karen Olivo and Gregory Jbara. Awards presented at this special ceremony included Best Book of a Musical, Best Original Score, Best Orchestrations, Special Tony Awards and the eight design prizes. ==Ineligibility rulings==
Ineligibility rulings
The Tony Administration Committee decided on April 30, 2010 that the scores of American Idiot and Fela! were ineligible for Tony Award nominations because fewer than 50% of their scores were written for the stage productions. On May 14, 2010, the Tony Award committee announced a disqualification of a nomination in the "Best Costume Design in a Musical" category for Ragtime, stating that "...Santo Loquasto's designs for the revival of Ragtime are predominantly those from the original 1998 production, and therefore do not meet the Tony rule which states, work that 'substantially duplicate(s)' work from a prior production is ineligible." ==Competitive awards==
Competitive awards
Source: Tony Awards Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface. ==In Memoriam==
In Memoriam
• Shirley Rich • David Powers • Douglas WattShelly GrossLynn RedgraveCorin RedgraveBudd Schulberg • Quentin Easter • Rue McClanahan • Max Eisen • Larry GelbartDixie CarterGeorge MartinConard Fowkes • Michael Frazier • Torrie ZitoJoseph WisemanMichael KuchwaraDoris EatonMorton GottliebDonal DonnellyJohn KenleyZakes MokaeJune Havoc • Everett King • Ron Konecky • Gene BarryPierre Cossette • M. Edgar Rosenblum • Claude Purdy • Lena Horne ==Non-competitive awards==
Non-competitive awards
Most of the non-competitive awards were announced on April 21, 2010. They are: • Lifetime Achievement in the Theatre to Sir Alan Ayckbourn and Marian Seldes. • Isabelle Stevenson Award to David Hyde Pierce. Pierce is receiving the Isabelle Stevenson Award "for his work in the fight against Alzheimer's disease." • The Midtown North and South New York City Police Precincts. • The Regional Theatre Tony Award to The Eugene O'Neill Theater Center, Waterford, Connecticut. ==Summary of awards==
Summary of awards
The musical Fela! and the revival of La Cage aux Folles, each received eleven nominations, the most of any production, with each winning three awards. The musical Memphis won four awards, including Best Musical. The revival of Fences earned ten nominations, the most nominations ever received by a play revival, and won three awards. The new play Red received seven nominations and won six awards, the most of any play or musical this season. Film actors won an unusual number of awards this season, with Denzel Washington, Scarlett Johansson, Viola Davis, Eddie Redmayne and Catherine Zeta-Jones among the winners. Isherwood called the proliferation of Hollywood stars on Broadway "ominous", claiming that projects from last season featuring film actors such as Jude Law's Hamlet and A Steady Rain monopolized the box office, causing "superior" plays to fail. On the other hand, Isherwood felt, it is possible that "welcoming [film] stars on Broadway – the talented ones, anyway – [could help] New York theater to reassert its importance to the culture, and maybe even to tilt the balance of the entertainment business at least a little back toward the East Coast". ==Multiple nominations and awards==
Multiple nominations and awards
These productions had multiple nominations: • 11 nominations: Fela! & La Cage aux Folles10 nominations: Fences8 nominations: Memphis7 nominations: Red6 nominations: Ragtime & A View from the Bridge5 nominations: The Royal Family4 nominations: Enron, A Little Night Music & Promises, Promises3 nominations: American Idiot, ''Finian's Rainbow, In the Next Room (or The Vibrator Play), Lend Me a Tenor & Million Dollar Quartet'' • 2 nominations: The Addams Family, Come Fly Away, Everyday Rapture, Hamlet, Next Fall, Sondheim on Sondheim & Time Stands Still The following productions received multiple awards. • 6 wins: Red4 wins: Memphis3 wins: Fela!, Fences & La Cage aux Folles2 wins: American Idiot ==See also==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com