`A Strange Loop' makes history
NEW YORK >> “A Strange Loop,” an irreverent, sexually frank work about Blackness and queerness took home the best new musical crown at the Tony Awards on Sunday, as voters celebrated Broadway's most racially diverse season by choosing an envelope-pushing Black voice.
Michael R. Jackson's 2020 Pulitzer Prize drama winner is a theater metajourney — a tuneful show about a Black gay man writing a show about a Black gay man. Jackson also won for best book. Many of the night's other Tonys were spread over several productions.
The victory of a smaller, more offbeat musical against more commercial offerings continues a recent trend, as when the intimate musical “The Band's Visit” beat the big brand-musicals “Frozen,” “Mean Girls” and “SpongeBob SquarePants” in 2018 or when “Hadestown” bested “Tootsie,” “Beetlejuice” and “Ain't Too Proud” a year later.
“A Strange Loop” beat “MJ,” a bio musical of the King of Pop's biggest hits, for the top prize, although the other Jackson musical nabbed four Tony Awards including for best choreography. Myles Frost moonwalked away with the award for best lead actor in a musical for playing Michael Jackson.
“MJ” represents the 22-year-old Frost's Broadway debut as he plays Jackson with a high, whispery voice, a Lady Diana-like coquettishness and a fierce embrace of Jackson's iconic dancing and singing style.
Joaquina Kalukango won the Tony for best leading actress in a musical for her work in “Paradise Square,” a show about Irish immigrants and Black Americans jostling to survive in New York City around the time of the Civil War.
A gender-swapped revival of Stephen Sondheim's “Company” rode the fondness Broadway has for the late iconic composer by earning five statuettes, including best musical revival.
Marianne Elliott made Tony history by becoming the only woman to have won three Tonys for directing, the latest for “Company.”
Patti LuPone won best featured actress in a musical for her work in the revival.