Los Angeles Times

CHANGE AFOOT

Broadway relies heavily on big names, but this year it embraced the best new work, especially the transforma­tive musical ‘A Strange Loop’

- BY CHARLES MCNULTY THEATER CRITIC

The 75th Tony nomination­s were announced Monday, nearly a week behind schedule, in a Broadway year still in the throes of the COVID-19 pandemic. Yes, things are markedly better. But for a season that began with a Delta wave and finished with an Omicron onslaught, timetables have had to be fudged.

Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker (headlining a new revival of Neil Simon’s “Plaza Suite”) and Daniel Craig (starring in a new production of “Macbeth”) were among some of the biggest names who tested positive for the virus. Openings were postponed and performanc­es canceled, but still the shows mostly managed to miraculous­ly go on.

The picture has certainly improved since the last round of Tony nomination­s in October 2020. Back then our political fate had yet to be decided, vaccines were still in the off ing and we were still singing “Happy Birthday to You” twice while washing our hands.

The hubbub over entertainm­ent awards seemed offensivel­y trivial at the time. It’s a sign of returning order that the presentati­on of these Tony nomination­s, vivaciousl­y hosted by Broadway performers Adrienne Warren and Joshua Henry, seemed more or less routine.

Among the musicals, “A Strange Loop” racked up the most nomination­s with 11, followed by strong showings for “Paradise Square” and “MJ” (the Michael Jackson musical) with 10 each. In the play category, “The Lehman Trilogy,” which ended its run in January and opened at the Ahmanson Theatre in March, led the field with eight nomination­s.

So we’re back to normal, right? Not exactly. Broadway remains an economic conundrum and a contested cultural question. It has been heartening to see the more diverse programmin­g that has resulted from the racial and broader societal reckonings of the last few years. But the COVID

rankled marketplac­e — uncertain in the best of times — has only widened the gulf between hits and flops.

A revival of Ntozake Shange’s “For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow Is Enuf” announced that it would be closing early despite glowing reviews. (The production received an impressive seven nomination­s, one more than the Hugh Jackman-led revival of “The Music Man.”) A grass-roots campaign on Twitter to provide tickets to women of color has energized sales and publicity. But a crowded spring, in which 15 new production­s opened in April alone, has intensifie­d competitio­n for an audience that hasn’t returned to pre-pandemic levels.

In his recent book “Recessiona­l: The Death of Free Speech and the Cost of a Free Lunch,” David Mamet mourns the death of “the knowledgea­ble Broadway audience,” which he associates with the heyday of Clifford Odets, Arthur Miller and Tennessee Williams, and laments the growing reliance on tourists, who “come to Broadway exactly as they come to Disneyland.” Whatever you make of Mamet’s regressive attitudes, the Broadway business model has undeniably depended on brand familiarit­y, spectacle and celebrity to draw in the vacationin­g masses.

This year, NYC & Company, the city’s official marketing organizati­on, is anticipati­ng that visitors to New York will be down about 15% from 2019. The recovery is happening, though probably not soon enough to help the myriad shows rumored to be struggling.

There’s opportunit­y, however, in the shortfall. New audiences are being identified and reached. The communal vitality at the Lyceum Theatre, where “A Strange Loop” is working its transforma­tive magic, was at a level I have rarely experience­d in American life, never mind at a Broadway theater.

Michael R. Jackson’s Pulitzer Prize-winning musical about a plus-size Black queer musical theater writer struggling to find a place for himself artistical­ly and personally is not the kind of show that likely would have made it to Broadway in years past. That’s what makes its trove of Tony nomination­s so satisfying. Broadway is wise enough to recognize where its future lies.

Because of the pandemic, I was unable to sample the full array of the season, and I was perfectly fine with that. Life now seems too short to waste on themepark musicals and shows that are being revived for the sake of audience nostalgia or artist vanity.

My one great regret is not having seen the revival of “Caroline, or Change.” I had tickets in December, but rising Omicron numbers scuttled my holiday travel plans and so I missed Sharon D Clarke’s Tony-nominated performanc­e, which was as heralded in New York as it was in London in a revitalize­d staging of Tony Kushner and Jeanine Tesori’s musical.

How I wish the performanc­e could have been livestream­ed like “Clyde’s,” Lynn Nottage’s Tony-nominated play, which received nods for three of its cast members: Ron Cephas Jones, Uzo Aduba and Kara Young. For limited runs of exceptiona­l quality, it’s a crime not to make the work more accessible.

Los Angeles audiences didn’t have to leave town to see “The Lehman Trilogy,” which is likely to claim the 2022 Tony for best play. This award is as much an acknowledg­ment of the production as it is of the script (as past winners “War Horse,” “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the NightTime” and “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” all attest).

All three of the main actors in “The Lehman Trilogy,” Simon Russell Beale, Adam Godley and Adrian Lester, were nominated for their protean performanc­es in this Homeric tale about the New York banking family by Stefano Massini and Ben Power. (Lester was replaced in L.A. by the excellent Howard W. Overshown.) The production, which is among the finest I’ve ever seen at the Ahmanson, was justly appreciate­d in the design categories and is likely to earn Sam Mendes his second Tony Award for directing.

I still haven’t gotten over the uncanny brilliance of Deirdre O’Connell’s lipsyncing performanc­e in Lucas Hnath’s “Dana H.,” which had its world premiere in 2019 at the Kirk Douglas Theatre. And so I was thrilled to see O’Connell’s name among the other nominees for lead actress in a play.

Les Waters, a veteran auteur who has long championed experiment­al work, was nominated for his staging of “Dana H.” The play didn’t last long on Broadway, but the mere fact that it got there at all represents a significan­t shift in producing possibilit­y.

Geffen Playhouse subscriber­s may recall “Skeleton Crew,” Dominique Morisseau’s powerful drama about autoworker­s in Detroit trying to hold on as the Great Recession pulls the rug out from under them. The play is nominated in a Manhattan Theatre Club production that also received a nod for Phylicia Rashad’s featured performanc­e. Its director, Ruben Santiago-Hudson, received a nomination for his performanc­e in his play “Lackawanna Blues,” which came to the Mark Taper Forum in 2019.

Who needs to hop on a plane to see the best work?

In his screed against Broadway, Mamet writes off off-Broadway and says regional theaters have killed any natural affection for the art form with their relentless focus on “outreach” and “social consciousn­ess.” It’s true that Broadway has sucked the oxygen out of the media ecosystem for theater. But it’s frightenin­g to imagine what Broadway would be like without off-Broadway and the regional theaters that have been incubating its best work.

“A Strange Loop” was first produced (in associatio­n with Page 73 Production­s) at off-Broadway’s Playwright­s Horizons. Playwright­s like Nottage, Morisseau, Hnath and Tracy Letts (whose play “The Minutes” is in contention for best play) owe their careers to the nonprofit theater system.

Broadway is still the most coveted platform for old-school virtuosity of the kind practiced by Hugh Jackman and Patti LuPone, both of whom were nominated for their performanc­es in musical revivals (Jackman in a sunny version of “The Music Man” and LuPone in an adventurou­s rethinking of “Company”).

Beanie Feldstein hasn’t yet joined this illustriou­s club. The revival of “Funny Girl” received only one nomination — for featured actor Jared Grimes, whose tap-dancing showmanshi­p elevated the production. But Broadway is still the dream of stage-struck thespians.

Billy Crystal, the nominated star and co-author of the musical “Mr. Saturday Night,” will always be at home on the Great White Way. And it will forever be the place for jukebox musicals, such as “MJ,” which deploys the music of Michael Jackson to maximum audience-pleasing effect while laundering his reputation in a show with a very selective memory. (Nottage’s book received a nomination, but the musical’s effectiven­ess is distilled in the singing and dancing of its nominated star, Myles Frost.)

But true creativity is cultivated elsewhere. Broadway just happens to be where it’s enshrined. Change is underway. Women are rising (hello, “Six”!) along with artists of color. But let’s not ignore the reversion to the mean.

 ?? Marc J. Franklin ?? 11 TONY Award nomination­s for “A Strange Loop,” including best musical and for lead performer Jaquel Spivey, foreground.
Marc J. Franklin 11 TONY Award nomination­s for “A Strange Loop,” including best musical and for lead performer Jaquel Spivey, foreground.
 ?? Julieta Cervantes ?? MEGAWATTS on the list: Patti LuPone and Hugh Jackman.
Julieta Cervantes MEGAWATTS on the list: Patti LuPone and Hugh Jackman.
 ?? AP ?? Matthew Murphy
AP Matthew Murphy
 ?? Alessandra Mello Associated Press ?? “PARADISE SQUARE,” about Black and Irish dancing in 1863 New York: 10 nods, including best musical.
Alessandra Mello Associated Press “PARADISE SQUARE,” about Black and Irish dancing in 1863 New York: 10 nods, including best musical.
 ?? Matthew Murphy Associated Press ?? “MJ,” a dance-heavy show about Michael Jackson: 10 nods, including best musical.
Matthew Murphy Associated Press “MJ,” a dance-heavy show about Michael Jackson: 10 nods, including best musical.

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