The Borneo Post (Sabah)

'Mean Girls", 'Spongebob', 'Harry Potter' lead Tony nods

- By Peter Marks

NEW YORK: The boxoffice magic of Tony glory was bestowed on Tuesday morning on “Mean Girls,” “The Band’s Visit,” “Spongebob Squarepant­s” and “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child,” as these new musicals and plays led their categories in nomination­s for Broadway’s highest honours, to be bestowed June 10.

Tina Fey’s “Mean Girls” and the stage version of “Spongebob,” led all eligible production­s with 12 nomination­s each, followed by “The Band’s Visit,” the elegiac musical about an Egyptian military orchestra showing up in the wrong Israeli town, with 11. “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child,” the twopart stage sequel to the popular J.K. Rowling franchise, led all new plays with 10 nomination­s, including an unusual one, for best choreograp­hy, a category normally reserved for musicals.

The revival of Tony Kushner’s two-part “Angels in America,” meanwhile, also harvested a bushel of nods — 11 — including recognitio­n for Andrew Garfield as lead actor, Nathan Lane, as supporting actor for his portrayal of lawyer Roy Cohn, and Susan Brown and Denise Gough as supporting actress. (The production also gathered up a nomination for best score, by Adrian Sutton, a rare citation for a play.)

A revival of Rodgers and Hammerstei­n’s “Carousel” also rounded up 11 nomination­s, with Joshua Henry and Jessie Mueller earning lead acting slots, and Alex Gemignani, Lindsay Mendez and opera star Renee Fleming chosen in the supporting categories.

In the awards in two dozen categories announced by Leslie Odom Jr. and a giggly Katharine McPhee — who had a strange problem with the pronunciat­ion of “Spongebob” — two special Tonys, to Bruce Springstee­n and John Leguizamo, were revealed. “Springstee­n on Broadway” is one of the season’s biggest hits, and Leguizamo, who appeared this season in his solo show, “Latin History for Morons,” is a well-liked return visitor to Broadway.

“Mean Girls” and “The Band’s Visit” will vie with Disney’s “Frozen” and Nickelodeo­n’s Broadway version of “Spongebob Squarepant­s” for best musical, while “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” will be up against Claire van Kampen’s “Farinelli and the King,” Lucy Kirkwood’s “The Children,” Ayad Akhtar’s “Junk” and Leguizamo’s “Latin History for Morons” for the title of best play.

Surprises were few

The high number of nomination­s concentrat­ed among several musicals suggests a tight race among “Mean Girls,” “Spongebob” and “The Band’s Visit” for best musical and between “Carousel” and Lincoln Center Theatre’s “My Fair Lady” — which picked up 10 nomination­s — in the separate category of best musical revival. Even the third and only other show selected for best musical revival, “Once on This Island,” scooped up an impressive eight nomination­s.

“Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” is the clear front-runner, though, for best play. Among the nominees for best play revival, which include “Angels in America,” Kenneth Lonergan’s “Lobby Hero,” Tom Stoppard’s “Travesties,” Edward Albee’s “Three Tall Women” and Eugene O’Neill’s “The Iceman Cometh,” the early favourite would have to be “Angels.”

The surprises were few, but the nomination for Amy Schumer for best actress in a play for her performanc­e in Steve Martin’s “Meter Shower” — that show’s sole nod — was unexpected. She will vie in that category with Condola Rashad of “Saint Joan,” Lauren Ridloff of “Children of a Lesser God” and the formidable Glenda Jackson, making her first Broadway appearance in 30 years in “Three Tall Women.” Ethan Slater, the amazingly elastic Spongebob of the musical version, was named a best-actor nominee for his Broadway debut.

For pure artistic achievemen­t, “The Band’s Visit,” with its luscious score by best music and lyrics nominee David Yazbek and lead performanc­e by Tony nominated Katrina Lenk, has to be considered the leading candidate for best musical. But if “Mean Girls” were to win — certainly a possibilit­y, given Fey’s witty book for the production, and the bevy of excellent comic performanc­es it showcases — the victory would be the second in a row for a musical that began life in Washington, D.C. (at the National Theatre). Last year’s Tony winner, “Dear Evan Hansen,” took its first public bows at Arena Stage.

The ceremony will be broadcast live on CBS from Radio City Music Hall on June 10 and will be hosted by Josh Groban and Sara Bareilles.— WP-Bloomberg

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 ??  ?? Grey Henson (left to right), Barrett Wilbert Weed and Erika Henningsen in ‘Mean Girls’. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Grey Henson (left to right), Barrett Wilbert Weed and Erika Henningsen in ‘Mean Girls’. — WP-Bloomberg photo
 ??  ?? Odom Jr. and McPhee speak onstage at the 2018 Tony Awards Nomination­s Announceme­nt at The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Tuesday in New York City. — AFP photo
Odom Jr. and McPhee speak onstage at the 2018 Tony Awards Nomination­s Announceme­nt at The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Tuesday in New York City. — AFP photo

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