Baltimore Sun

Fey’s ‘Mean Girls,’ ‘SpongeBob’ musical lead Tony nominees

- By Mark Kennedy

NEWYORK — Tina Fey’s musical “Mean Girls,” which she adapted from her much-beloved and oft-quoted 2004 high school comedy movie, and the goofy undersea adaptation from the cartoon “SpongeBob SquarePant­s: The Musical” lead the Tony Award nomination­s with a dozen nods each.

Fey and her husband, Jeff Richmond, who wrote the “Mean Girls” music, both admitted they awaited the announceme­nt with bated breath. “We’re new to this whole Broadway thing and this whole musical thing, so it was hard to tell which way everything could swing,” Richmond said.

A British revival of “Angels in America,” Tony Kushner’s monumental, two-part drama about AIDS, life and love during the 1980s, grabbed 11 nomination­s — the most for any play this season — 25 years after it first appeared on Broadway. The shimmering, grown-up musical “The Band’s Visit” also earned 11 nods.

J.K. Rowling’s “Harry Potter” franchise extended its magical touch to Broadway, with the two-part stage play “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” featuring the bespectacl­ed wizard earning 10 nomination­s, as did a revival of “My Fair Lady.”

The best new musical category is filled by “The Band’s Visit,” “Frozen,” “Mean Girls” and “SpongeBob SquarePant­s: The Musical.” Those musicals that failed to make the cut were the Hal Prince revue “Prince of Broadway,” the Jimmy Buffet musical “Escape to Margaritav­ille” and “Summer,” about disco diva Donna Summer.

Taylor Louderman, a veteran of such musicals as “Bring It On: The Musical” “Mean Girls,” a musical that Tina Fey adapted from her 2004 film, received 12 Tony Award nomination­s. and “Kinky Boots,” earned her first nomination for playing a high school queen bee who is laid low in “Mean Girls.”

“I really haven’t sat back and thought about the young version of me and how she would be freaking out right now,” she said. “I’m from a small town where people don’t really get out and dream big. I just really thought I would never be here.”

She faces competitio­n from Lauren Ambrose of “My Fair Lady,” Hailey Kilgore of “Once On This Island,” LaChanze of “Summer: The Donna Summer Musical,” Katrina Lenk from “The Band’s Visit” and Jessie Mueller of “Carousel.”

This is Tony winner Mueller’s fourth nomination, but she said it never gets old. “It’s still exciting. It always feels different because every show means something different, and is very personal in its own way. I just keep thinking of all the happy faces I’m going to see tonight when I go to work,” she said.

The two-part “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” won nine Olivier Awards in London before coming to the U.S. and bewitching critics and audiences alike. It now will face “The Children,” “Farinelli and The King,” “Junk” and “Latin History for Morons” for best new play.

Anthony Boyle is nominated for best featured actor for his work in “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.” He played Scorpius Malfoy in London and now on Broadway. He said he’s having a ball with Broadway audiences. “They’re so vocal, it’s like having an extra cast member onstage,” he said. “You hear audible gasps and sobs.”

Nominees for best male acting in a play include Denzel Washington, starring in a revival of Eugene O’Neill’s epic “The Iceman Cometh.” The 2010 Tony winner for “Fences” faces off against Andrew Garfield in “Angels in America,” Tom Hollander of “Travesties,” Jamie Parker of “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” and Mark Rylance in “Farinelli and The King.”

Amy Schumer, who made her Broadway debut in Steve Martin’s comedy “Meteor Shower,” is a nominee for best actress in a play, along with Glenda Jackson from “Three Tall Women,” Condola Rashad in “Saint Joan” and Lauren Ridloff in “Children of a Lesser God.”

“Carousel,” “My Fair Lady” and “Once on This Island” fill the best musical revival category.

Nominees for best play revival are “Angels in America,” “Three Tall Women,” “Lobby Hero,” “Travesties” and “The Iceman Cometh.”

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JOAN MARCUS PHOTO

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