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‘Moulin Rouge!’ dazzles as night’s big winner

Best of Broadway showcased in effort to draw audiences

- By Chris Jones

“Moulin Rouge! The Musical,” the dazzlingly intense Broadway version of Baz Luhrmann’s beloved 2001 movie, emerged a feel-good winner at the 2021 Tony Awards, waltzing away with 10 awards, including best musical, best director for Alex Timbers, best choreograp­her for Sonya Tayeh and best actor in a musical for Aaron Tviet.

“Jagged Little Pill,” its chief rival in a truncated Broadway season, won just two awards, best book of a musical for Diablo Cody and best featured actress in a musical for Lauren Patten. The coveted best actress in a musical Tony went to Adrienne Warren, the linchpin of “Tina: The Tina Tuner Musical.”

Relatively few plays were eligible in the 2019-20 season. The best play Tony went to the Matthew Lopez AIDS drama “The Inheritanc­e,” which, with four Tony Awards, did better with Tony voters than Broadway critics. “Slave Play,” the daring, groundbrea­king drama by the high-profile Black playwright Jeremy O. Harris, had a disappoint­ing night, despite all its nominees, likely to be a controvers­ial outcome. The Tony for best revival of a play went to “A Soldier’s Play,” by Charles Fuller.

Mary-Louise Parker won the Tony for best actress in a play for her work in “The Sound Inside.”

The veteran director Stephen Daldry won the Tony for his direction of “The Inheritanc­e.” And Andrew Burnap won the Tony for best actor in a play for his work in that epic show.

“What a blessing,” Daldry said, referencin­g the horrors of the global pandemic and its impact on the world’s children.

In the middle of the pandemic

that devastated the industry, the Broadway bosses had made a bold decision.

After 27 months of Tony Awards silence, the 2021 ceremony wouldn’t be about cutthroat competitio­n, raging egos and acceptance speeches. Instead, it would be as close as possible to a massive prime-time commercial designed to get vaccinated patrons back in the velour seats whose owners have missed them so.

This was a showcase of the best of Broadway, designed to throw some gasoline on a Gotham fire that’s been out for a year and a half but, thanks to vaccines and masking, is finally flickering again.

And that’s exactly what happened.

David Byrne, John Legend, Ben Platt, Josh Groban, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Christophe­r Jackson and other bold-face names entertaine­d the prime-time audience on what was billed as a theatrical concert called “Broadway’s

Back!,” hosted by Leslie Odom Jr., who began the show with a dance number on the street outside the Winter Garden Theater. The musical numbers, traditiona­lly performed live during the show, mostly were performed from their own theaters, a fine idea, since it allowed for far greater levels of spectacle. Footage also was shown from the opening night of returning Broadway shows.

A few acceptance speeches made it to prime time. But most of the actual awards were handed out early in the night on the Paramount+ streaming service, in an event hosted by Audra McDonald. The traditiona­l CBS broadcast was focused on musicals numbers promoting Broadway musicals in general in honor of the street’s return.

This wasn’t to be a year of “I was so honored just to be nominated,” said through gritted teeth. Not the time for 500 cameragree­dy producers jostling for recognitio­n from the cameras —

COVID-19 protocols meant that no more than two people could be on the Winter Garden stage at once.

Instead, winners took care to thank front-line theater workers — electricia­ns up ladders, orchestra members in the pit, ensemble members of all stripes. On both broadcasts, many also referenced the demands for racial equity and social change that have become part of Broadway’s ongoing reinventio­n.

“I’ve always thought of the Tonys as Broadway’s prom night,” said McDonald. “But tonight it feels like homecoming. So good to see half your faces.”

In the first Tony to be handed out in a stunning 27 months, David Alan Grier (“A Soldier’s Play”) won for best featured actor in a play.

“And to the other nominees, tough bananas!” Grier said. “I won!”

And after six unsuccessf­ul nomination­s, Danny Burstein (“Moulin Rouge!”) finally went home with a Tony for best featured actor in a musical.

Burstein paid tribute to the Broadway community in the wake of the recent death of his wife.

“You all showed up for us,” he said, drawing a standing ovation.

At the age of 90, making her the oldest Tony winner in history, Lois Smith won best featured actress in a play for her moving work in “The Inheritanc­e.” She quoted the novelist, E.M. Forster, as a concise statement about the value of life theater: “only connect.”

Patten won on the first try for her performanc­e as a featured actress in “Jagged Little Pill.”

Byrne, one of the big successes of the 2020-21 season, won a special Tony for his “American Utopia,” his exuberant, concertsty­le show that seemed to match the moment, albeit before the pandemic engulfed everything (he and his show are coming back this fall). “Freestyle Love Supreme,” an improv show headlined (on some nights) by Miranda, also won a special Tony.

Design awards for work on plays went to Rob Howell (set and costumes) and Hugh Vanstone (costumes), part of a decent showing by the holiday attraction “A Christmas Carol.”

Neither of those winners were present, perhaps due to the travel ban on internatio­nal visitors to the U.S.

But veteran scenic designer Derek McLane showed up to win best scenic design of a musical for “Moulin Rouge!” as did Catherine Zuber, who won for costume design, and Justin Townsend, who won for lighting design, also for “Moulin Rouge!”

The biggest welcome of the night, unseen by network viewers?

Jennifer Holliday, an original member of the cast of “Dreamgirls,” performing “I Am Telling You I’m Not Going.”

She was telling it, for sure. On behalf of everyone who works on Broadway.

 ?? MATTHEW MURPHY/BONEAU/BRYAN-BROWN ?? The cast of“Moulin Rouge! The Musical.”
MATTHEW MURPHY/BONEAU/BRYAN-BROWN The cast of“Moulin Rouge! The Musical.”

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