Lethbridge Herald

‘The Band’s Visit’ leads Tony Awards

Musical captures 10 statuettes

- Mark Kennedy

The American, grown-up musical “The Band’s Visit” outmuscled the acclaimed and sprawling British import “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” for the most Tony Awards on Sunday, capturing 10 statuettes, including best musical, on a night where the theme of acceptance flowed through the telecast.

“The Band’s Visit” is based on a 2007 Israeli film of the same name and centres on members of an Egyptian police orchestra booked to play a concert at an Israeli city who accidental­ly end up in the wrong town. Its embrace of foreign cultures working together found a sweet spot with Tony voters.

“In ‘The Band’s Visit,’ music gives people hope and makes borders disappear,” producer Orin Wolf said upon accepting the best new musical crown, saying it offers a message of unity in a world that “more and more seems bent on amplifying our difference­s.”

Tony Shalhoub, the “Monk” star who won as best leading man in a musical for his work on “The Band’s Visit,” connected the win to his father’s 1920 immigratio­n from Lebanon to New York’s Ellis Island at age eight. “Tonight, I celebrate him and all of those in his family who journeyed before him and with him and after him,” he said.

The show’s Katrina Lenk, who won best actress in a musical, said the production “filled her stupid little heart with so much joy.” She dedicated her award in part to the iconic Egyptian singer Umm Kulthum.

“The Band’s Visit” also won statuettes for best direction, orchestrat­ion, sound design, best book and score, lighting and featured actor Ari’el Stachel, who gave a heartfelt speech about his past.

“For so many years of my life I pretended I was not a Middle Eastern person,” he said, addressing his parents in the audience. He thanked the creators of the show “for being courageous for telling a small story about Arabs and Israelis getting along at a time that we need that more than ever.”

The show’s director, David Cromer, said the musical is also about loneliness and despair, and asked everyone to reach out to anyone for whom “despair is overwhelmi­ng.”

The two-part spectacle “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” captured six Tonys, including best play, book, lighting, sound design, orchestrat­ions and director for John Tiffany, who asked the crowd to sing “Happy Birthday” to his boyfriend. They obliged.

A British revival of “Angels in America,” Tony Kushner’s monumental, two-part drama about AIDS, life and love during the 1980s, grabbed three big awards, including best play revival and acting trophies for Andrew Garfield and Nathan Lane.

Kushner took the stage and pointed out there were 21 weeks until the midterm elections in the United States: “Twentyone weeks to save our democracy, to heal our country and to heal our planet.”

Garfield won his first Tony, for best leading actor in a play, and dedicated the win to the LGBTQ community, who he said fought and died for the right to love. He said the play is a rejection of bigotry, shame and oppression.

“We are all sacred and we all belong,” Garfield said. He then referenced last week’s U.S. Supreme Court decision which ruled in favour of a baker’s right to deny a gay couple a wedding cake based on his beliefs.

“(Let’s) just bake a cake for everyone who wants a cake to be baked,” he said, to rousing applause. Lane, who won for best featured actor in a play, said “Angels” still speaks to society in the midst of “political insanity.”

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? Brooke Adams, left, and Tony Shalhoub pose in the press room at the 72nd annual Tony Awards at Radio City Music Hall on Sunday. Shalhoub won for leading actor in a musical for “The Band's Visit.”
Associated Press photo Brooke Adams, left, and Tony Shalhoub pose in the press room at the 72nd annual Tony Awards at Radio City Music Hall on Sunday. Shalhoub won for leading actor in a musical for “The Band's Visit.”

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