Call & Times

‘Dear Evan Hansen’ wins best score, book at Tonys Awards

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NEWYORK (AP) — "Dear Evan Hansen," the touching, heartfelt musical about young outsiders, has won three big Tony Awards – best book, score and orchestrat­ions.

Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, who recently won Oscars for the song "City of Stars" from the movie "La La Land," added to a remarkable year by earning Tony Awards on Sunday for best score for writing the songs for "Dear Evan Hansen." Moments later, the show's story writer, Steven Levenson, won the Tony for best book, and Alex Lacamoire earned one for best orchestati­ons.

"Dear Evan Hansen" came into the night as the second-leading Tony nominee. The show centers on a profoundly lonely 17-year-old who fabricates a prior friendship with a classmate who has just committed suicide. It has a passionate following and is triggering cheers whenever it is mentioned in Radio City Music Hall.

There were also two first-time winners early on – Michael Aronov took home the trophy for best featured actor in a play for his work on "Oslo." And Gavin Creel won his first Tony for featured actor in a musical in Bette Midler's big return to Broadway in "Hello, Dolly!"

Cynthia Nixon won her second Tony, this time for her work in Lillian Hellman's "The Little Foxes." Nixon, the Sex and the City" star, struck a defiant political tone, saluting those who refuse to stand around and watch bad things happen in the world.

Kevin Kline won his third Tony Award playing an egomaniaca­l matinee idol in the midst of personal turmoil in the play "Present Laughter." He thanked, among others, The National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Kevin Spacey kicked off his first-ever Tony Award hosting gig with grace and self-deprecatin­g wit on Sunday, dancing, singing and joking his way through an opening number that linked all four best new musical nominees and doing his best Glenn Close impersonat­ion.

Spacey, who was named Tony host after several other celebritie­s turned down the job, laughed at himself in the 10-minute opening song, in which he gradually grows comfortabl­e with hosting duties despite what he fears will be nasty tweets crashing down.

The telecast opened on a mournful host dressed like the title character in "Dear Evan Hansen" – complete with arm cast – before he soon showed up in a bed to mock "Groundhog Day The Musical" with an assist with Stephen Colbert, and then donning a fake beard as if he was in "Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812."

Spacey got advice from former Tony host Whoopi Goldberg (live) and Billy Crystal (taped.) The Rockettes arrived to dance with the cast of "Come From Away." Spacey even had fun with rumors about his sexual orientatio­n while singing the Andrew Lloyd Webber song "As If We Never Said Goodbye" from "Sunset Boulevard." Spacey, dressed as Close, sang "I'm coming out..." and then paused, tantalizin­gly. "Of makeup..."

Then Spacey led a line of high-kicking, tap dancers in a top hat, a white tie, tuxedo and a cane. "I'm Broadway bound," he sang. "Your next host is found." After the hectic number, he requested that his cardiologi­st be nearby.

The year after "Hamilton" took many prizes, Spacey jokingly pointed out that the subjects on Broadway this season included infidelity, suicide, greed, 9/11 and economic upheaval.

The show at New York's Radio City Music Hall featured musical numbers from nine new and revival musicals, "Bandstand," ''Come From Away," ''Dear Evan Hansen," ''Falsettos," ''Groundhog Day The Musical," ''Hello, Dolly!" ''Miss Saigon," ''Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812" and "War Paint." The four playwright­s vying for the best play Tony each took the stage as well.

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