Los Angeles Times

Long shots eclipse safe bets in a season in which even known quantities stretched.

- CHARLES McNULTY THEATER CRITIC

“Nobody knows anything.”

William Goldman’s refrain in “Adventures in the Screen Trade,” his classic dissection of the movie business, has always held true for Broadway, but never more so than in a season in which long shots overshadow­ed safe bets.

The Tony nomination­s, announced in New York on Tuesday morning, paint a portrait of another year of transition on Broadway. Artistic frustratio­n with the status quo continues to bump up against unyielding economic realities. Yet the old producing playbooks no longer reap dependable harvests.

Not even touted London imports, such as the Eddie Redmayne-led revival of “Cabaret,” or “Patriots,” Peter Morgan’s historical drama about the rise of Vladimir Putin, can count on Americans rolling out the red carpet. Reviews for both production­s were mixed to the point that the Tony nomination­s for these shows (nine for “Cabaret,” one for “Patriots”) carry all the euphoria of a consolatio­n prize.

On paper, “Stereophon­ic,” a three-hour, 20-minute drama by an experiment­al off-Broadway playwright in a production lacking marquee names, doesn’t scream Broadway hit. Yet David Adjmi’s play is the most celebrated new work of the season, nominated for 13 Tonys and considered the heavy favorite for best play.

The shoo-in for the musical revival award, “Merrily We Roll Along,” offers another tale of unlikely triumph. Stephen Sondheim and George Furth’s 1981 musical was a notorious flop when it

premiered on Broadway. The experience was such a blow that Sondheim and director Hal Prince decided to take an extended break from a storied collaborat­ion that had brought forth such landmark works as “Company,” “Follies,” “A Little Night Music,” “Pacific Overtures” and “Sweeney Todd.”

The few times I’ve seen “Merrily,” including Michael Arden’s glossy 2016 production at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills, I’ve come away with a sense of futility. The backward chronology of the book, tracing the friendship of three artists from cynical middle age to the idealistic innocence of young adulthood, is part of the musical’s trickiness. But the bigger hurdle is the sour taste the characters can leave.

That queasy, curdling feeling has finally been conquered. With the perfect trio of actors in New York, director Maria Friedman found the heart and soul of “Merrily” in a revival that proves that Sondheim and Furth knew what they were doing all along.

Jonathan Groff, Daniel Radcliffe and Lindsay Mendez, exuding the chemistry of best chums, were justly nominated for their work along with Friedman, who deserves a medal for pulling off what many, me included, feared might be impossible. Groff’s portrayal of Franklin, the emotional key to this revival’s success, is for me the standout performanc­e of the year.

There has been no clear best musical front-runner, but “Hell’s Kitchen” has moved to the front of the pack with 13 nomination­s, the most of any musical. I fell under the spell of the show when I saw it at the Public Theater last fall. The energy of the production rivals “Hamilton,” which also began at the Public before moving to Broadway. It’s the one show I tell friends wanting an exuberant night on the town to see.

The fire in “Hell’s Kitchen” emanates from the way Alicia Keys and her team reimagined her musical catalog to infuse an autobiogra­phically inspired New York tale with the freedom of jazz. In one of the performanc­es of the year (made even more mind-blowing when you realize it’s her Broadway debut), Maleah Joi Moon plays Ali, Keys’ surrogate, in an ensemble that’s ablaze with incredible voices and astonishin­g musical knowhow. (Shoshana Bean, Kecia Lewis and Brandon Victor Dixon, all rapturousl­y good, also received well-deserved nomination­s.)

“Hell’s Kitchen” reveals that even tried-and-true Broadway offerings have to update the formula. Perhaps that’s why the production, directed by the exceptiona­lly busy Michael Greif (who received a nomination for his work here) enlisted the services of playwright Kristoffer Diaz, a 2010 Pulitzer Prize finalist for his play “The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Deity.”

“Hell’s Kitchen” wasn’t the only musical to recognize the need for a bold dramatic sensibilit­y. Craig Lucas, an award-winning playwright drawn to musicals, took on the challenge of adapting with composer and lyricist Adam Guettel “Days of Wine and Roses,” which I saw last year offBroadwa­y at the Atlantic Theater Company’s Linda Gross Theater. Lucas wasn’t nominated but should have been for one of the most dramatical­ly ambitious books since Lisa Kron’s for “Fun Home.” (Guettel’s score and the crushing performanc­es of Brian d’Arcy James and Kelli O’Hara were thankfully remembered in a Broadway production that didn’t last as long as it should have.)

“Illinoise,” a dance-musical hybrid directed and choreograp­hed by Justin Peck, is anything but a traditiona­l book musical. But the propected duction, based on Sufjan Stevens’ 2005 concept album, brought in the pathbreaki­ng dramatic imaginatio­n of Jackie Sibblies Drury, author of the Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng drama “Fairview” and numerous other paradigm-shattering plays. The book by Drury and Peck is more of a rippling scenario than a fully elaborated plot, one reason that it probably wasn’t nominated (the production itself received four nomination­s overall, including best musical). But even a show as dreamlike as “Illinoise” can benefit from a playwright’s storytelli­ng instincts.

I never would have expected Adam Rapp, a prolific off-Broadway dramatist with an unconventi­onal sensibilit­y, to be working on a Broadway musical, but “The Outsiders,” which I reviewed at La Jolla Playhouse, sought a modern approach to S.E. Hinton’s classic young-adult novel. Rapp cowrote the book with Justin Levine, who collaborat­ed on the hypnotic folk score with Jamestown Revival in a production staged with bracing originalit­y by Danya Taymor, an Obie-winning director who has worked with such playwright­s as Jeremy O. Harris and Will Arbery. The combinatio­n of offbeat literary and musical styles resulted in a show with 12 nomination­s, the second most of any musical.

Tonys aside — and there’s far too much fixation on these awards for the health of the American theater — this fusion of plays and musicals is an encouragin­g sign. Rather than complain about who was left out of the nomination­s, I would like to applaud those producers who are thinking creatively about artistic pairings and the long-term vitality of the art form.

Another positive developmen­t is the way big-name Hollywood talents were put in the service of plays, classic and contempora­ry, too defiantly complicate­d to be reto star vehicles. Jessica Lange in Paula Vogel’s “Mother Play: A Play in Five Evictions,” Sarah Paulson in Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’ “Appropriat­e” and Rachel McAdams in Amy Herzog’s “Mary Jane” all were nominated for their performanc­es in work by three of our most intrepid dramatists.

Lange, whose performanc­e is a beautiful capstone to a stage career that has brought to life two canonical mothers, Amanda Wingfield in Tennessee Williams’ “The Glass Menagerie” and Mary Tyrone in Eugene O’Neill’s “Long Day’s Journey Into Night,” has lent her genius to the birth of a fearlessly autobiogra­phical drama that took Vogel a lifetime to write.

Jeremy Strong and Michael Imperioli are imbuing Herzog’s Tony-nominated adaptation of Henrik Ibsen’s “An Enemy of the People” with a crackling HBO intensity. The production, directed by Sam Gold, turns the stage of Circle in the Square Theatre into a town hall, where science and politics hash out their difference­s in a way that speaks directly to our pandemicsc­arred, climate-threatened world. Strong was nominated for his lead performanc­e as the play’s whistleblo­wing doctor.

Steve Carell might not be the first name that springs to mind when you think of Anton Chekhov, but he acquits himself well in the Lincoln Center Theater revival of “Uncle Vanya.” I was somewhat skeptical of the casting. But in an uneven revival by Lila Neugebauer (who was nominated for her direction of “Appropriat­e”), Carell proves that he’s more than capable of rising to the dramatic moment when his Vanya and a superb Alfred Molina in the role of the old pompous professor finally have their climactic showdown. (William Jackson Harper was the only actor nominated in an ensemble that struggled in the placeless purgatory of Neugebauer’s staging.)

The 2023-24 Broadway season won’t go down as one for the ages. But I’m heartened by the way playwright­s are being called upon to revitalize the commercial landscape with their uncompromi­sing art. There were fears at the start of the year that there was little room for serious plays on Broadway. But as this strong showing of dramatists attest, reports of the death of the American drama on the Great White Way are premature.

One of the highlights of the year, Kenny Leon’s vibrant revival of “Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederat­e Romp Through the Cotton Patch,” Ossie Davis’ 1961 satiric farce, was all the more welcome for being so unexduced and politicall­y trenchant. And I’m glad Tony nominators didn’t forget Jocelyn Bioh’s sensationa­lly entertaini­ng “Jaja’s African Hair Braiding,” which I caught via livestream and hope to see soon in Los Angeles.

There are plenty of worrying signs. The traffic jam of production­s all trying to open before the Tony Award deadline reflects a field that still sees these statuettes as a lifeline.

Another problem was concisely articulate­d in a theater website email subject line describing one of the new musicals that opened in April as “plodding” but “necessary.” I didn’t see the show so can’t comment on the accuracy of the appraisal. But such a formulatio­n — boring but good for you — will never draw theater audiences back to their pre-pandemic levels.

Art shouldn’t be devoid of nutritiona­l value, but delight should accompany enlightenm­ent for maximum effect, as Horace long ago instructed. “Merrily We Roll Along,” “Stereophon­ic,” “Mother Play,” “Hell’s Kitchen,” “Illinoise” and “Purlie Victorious,” to list the highlights of my own theatergoi­ng year, remind us that pleasure and complexity are mutually enhancing when traveling hand in hand.

 ?? Julieta Cervantes ?? THE CAST OF DAVID ADJMI’S “Stereophon­ic,” a three-hour, 20-minute drama that is the most celebrated new work of the season. It’s nominated for 13 Tonys and considered the heavy favorite for best play.
Julieta Cervantes THE CAST OF DAVID ADJMI’S “Stereophon­ic,” a three-hour, 20-minute drama that is the most celebrated new work of the season. It’s nominated for 13 Tonys and considered the heavy favorite for best play.
 ?? Matthew Murphy ?? LINDSAY MENDEZ, Jonathan Groff, center, and Daniel Radcliffe were nominated for their work in the Broadway revival of “Merrily We Roll Along.”
Matthew Murphy LINDSAY MENDEZ, Jonathan Groff, center, and Daniel Radcliffe were nominated for their work in the Broadway revival of “Merrily We Roll Along.”
 ?? Joan Marcus ?? NOMINEES Jim Parsons, Jessica Lange, center, and Celia Keenan-Bolger in “Mother Play.”
Joan Marcus NOMINEES Jim Parsons, Jessica Lange, center, and Celia Keenan-Bolger in “Mother Play.”

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