Tony Awards 2019: Bryan Cranston beats Adam Driver, but hit show Hadestown dominates the ceremony
All the latest updates from the 2019 ceremony
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Your support makes all the difference.Hadestown triumphed during the 2019 Tony Awards, picking up the title of best musical among a long list of wins.
The brooding musical about the underworld, by singer-songwriter Anais Mitchell, intertwines the myths of Orpheus and Eurydice, and Hades and Persephone. It marks Mitchell’s Broadway debut.
Hadestown began as a series of songs presented in a community centre in Vermont in 2006. In 2010, it was a concept album; then, in 2016, it was presented at the New York Theatre Workshop. It went to Edmonton’s Citadel Theatre in 2017 and to London’s National Theatre in 2018.
Mitchell, who grew up on a sheep farm in Vermont, has put out the albums Hymns for the Exiled, The Brightness and the collaboration with fellow singer/songwriter Rachel Ries on Country EP.
Hadestown beat out Ain’t Too Proud – The Life and Times of the Temptations, Tootsie, Beetlejuice and The Prom.
It also won the awards for best original score, best featured actor, best scenic design of a musical, best lighting design of a musical, best sound design of a musical, best direction of a musical, and best orchestrations. This comes to a total of eight wins out of 14 nominations. Click here to read the full list of winners.
Bryan Cranston beat Adam Driver when he won the Tony Award for best performance by an actor in a leading role in a play, for his performance in Network. Driver was nominated for Burn This. Elaine May, Santino Fontana and Stephanie J Block also all won leading actor and actress awards.
Sam Mendes picked up his first directing Tony for The Ferryman, a vigorous family epic set in Northern Ireland in 1981 during the Troubles. The Ferryman, which requires a 21-person cast, plus a baby and animals, was also named best play.
James Corden handled hosting duties for the second time during the ceremony at the Radio City Music Hall in Manhattan.
The crowd erupted when Ali Stroker made history as the first actor in a wheelchair to win a Tony Award. Stroker, paralysed from the chest down due to a car crash when she was two, won for featured actress in a musical for her work in a dark revival of Oklahoma!
“This award is for every kid who is watching tonight who has a disability, who has a limitation or a challenge, who has been waiting to see themselves represented in this arena,” she said. “You are.”
Rachel Chavkin, the only woman to helm a new Broadway musical this season, won the Tony for best director of a musical for Hadestown. She told the crowd she was sorry to be such a rarity on Broadway.
“There are so many women who are ready to go. There are so many people of colour who are ready to go.” A lack of strides in embracing diversity on Broadway, she said, “is not a pipeline issue” but a lack of imagination.
Cranston seemed to tap into the vibe when he won the Tony for best leading man in a play award for his work as newscaster Howard Beale in a stage adaptation of Network.
“Finally, a straight old white man gets a break!” he joked. The star, who wore a blue pin on his suit to support reproductive rights, also dedicated his award to journalists who are in the line of fire. “The media is not the enemy of the people,” he said. “Demagoguery is the enemy of the people.”
The cheers for women also got a boost when The Ferryman playwright Jez Butterworth, who earlier asked the crowd to give his partner, actress Laura Donnelly, a round of applause for giving birth to their two children in two years while working on the ensemble drama, handed the best play trophy to Donnelly. A Donnelly family story inspired him to write the play.
Additional reporting by agencies.
Catch up on the 2019 Tony Awards as they happened:
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And here is presenter Regina King:
Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions
Bryan Cranston is up for Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Play for his part in Network tonight. Here he is on the red carpet with his wife Robin Dearden:
Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions
In addition to the best play and musical races, there are some intriguing and potentially history-making moments tonight.
Will Heidi Schreck, nominated for Best Actress in a Play and with her What the Constitution Mean to Me also up for best play, be the first to win both awards in a single year? Will Tootsie songwriter David Yazbek supply the music and lyrics to a second straight Tony Award-winning best musical? (Last year, his The Band's Visit won.)
Will three-time Emmy winner Laurie Metcalf become the first actress to win an acting Tony back-to-back-to-back? Can Jeremy Pope, in his Broadway debut, win two Tonys for his two roles in the shows Choir Boy and Ain't Too Proud? Will Ali Stroker make history as the first person in a wheelchair to win a Tony Award?
Such suspense!
(AP)
Whatever happens tonight, Broadway is in good shape. The shows this season reported a record $1.8bn in sales, up 7.8 per cent from last season. Attendance was 14.8m — up 7.1 per cent — and has risen steadily for decades.
(AP)
Tina Fey, everybody! She's a presenter tonight.
Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions
It really wouldn't be the Tonys without Kristin Chenoweth:
Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions
Jake Gyllenhaal and Tom Sturridge, the stars of Sea Wall / A Life, posing together:
Photo by Nicholas Hunt/Getty Images
Anna Wintour posing with her daughter Bee Shaffer Carrozzini, who – according to her mother – had the idea for tonight's rainbow backdrop on the red carpet:
Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions
Here is presenter Samira Wiley:
Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions
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