logo
Tonys 2025 Live Updates: ‘Sunset Boulevard' Named Best Musical Revival, While Cole Escola Wins for ‘Oh, Mary!'

Tonys 2025 Live Updates: ‘Sunset Boulevard' Named Best Musical Revival, While Cole Escola Wins for ‘Oh, Mary!'

New York Times09-06-2025
A radically reimagined production of Andrew Lloyd Webber's 'Sunset Boulevard,' with no turban and lots of technology, won the Tony Award for best musical revival on Sunday night.
The production, which began performances at Broadway's St. James Theater last September and is scheduled to run only until July 13, is the brainchild of its director, Jamie Lloyd, a 45-year-old British auteur who prioritizes dialogue and psychological depth over furniture and props. Lloyd's production first ran in London's West End, where it won last year's Olivier Award for best musical revival.
The show proved to be a star vehicle for its leading lady, Nicole Scherzinger, who in her 20s achieved fame as the lead singer of the Pussycat Dolls, and then spent years as a judge on television talent shows before landing this role, which has reintroduced her, at age 46, as a powerhouse performer.
In the musical, Scherzinger plays Norma Desmond, a onetime star of silent films who has vanished from the limelight but delusionally dreams of returning to the big screen. The show, set in Los Angeles in 1949 and 1950, is based on a 1950 Billy Wilder film; Lloyd Webber wrote the stage production's music, while the book and lyrics are by Don Black and Christopher Hampton.
The original Broadway production won seven Tony Awards, including best musical, in 1995. That production starred Glenn Close, who returned to play the role again in 2017 in the only previous Broadway revival of the show.
The current production is characterized by its heavy use of technology adapted from filmmaking and its minimalist, modern aesthetic. The actors are dressed mostly in black and white; Scherzinger performs much of the show barefoot, and she and her co-star, Tom Francis, end the show drenched in blood.
Because the story is about, and set in, Hollywood, Lloyd opted to integrate and interrogate cinematic devices — much of the onstage action is filmed by performers holding movie cameras and is projected onto a huge screen behind the actors. One of the production's highlights is a coup de théâtre at the top of the second act, when Francis, playing a writer named Joe Gillis, performs the title number while walking through Shubert Alley and along 44th Street, with the action visible to audience members onscreen.
The revival is being produced on Broadway by companies controlled by Lloyd (the Jamie Lloyd Company) and Lloyd Webber (Lloyd Webber Harrison Musicals), and by ATG Productions, which operates the theater where the show is playing, and by Gavin Kalin Productions. The show was capitalized for up to $15 million, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission; it has been selling more than $1 million worth of tickets most weeks, but it is not yet clear whether it will recoup its capitalization costs.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Awesome JAWS Poster Art From Artist Tyler Stout Pays Tribute To Quint — GeekTyrant
Awesome JAWS Poster Art From Artist Tyler Stout Pays Tribute To Quint — GeekTyrant

Geek Tyrant

time7 minutes ago

  • Geek Tyrant

Awesome JAWS Poster Art From Artist Tyler Stout Pays Tribute To Quint — GeekTyrant

I had to share this great Jaws print with you that was created by artist Tyler Stout. This was a limited edition Comic-Con exclusive of only 150 prints. They sold out at the event, but I managed to score one, and this is a beautiful peice! The poster was created for CODA Gallery. Quint, the rugged shark hunter from, is one of the most unforgettable characters in cinematic history. Played masterfully by Robert Shaw, Quint is the epitome of grit and resilience, an old-school seaman with a weathered exterior and a deep-rooted trauma that fuels his obsession. What makes Quint such a powerful character isn't just his fearlessness or bravado, but the depth of his past, especially the haunting USS Indianapolis monologue that reveals the true horror he's lived through. He's not just a shark hunter; he's a man shaped by survival, driven by vengeance, and unwilling to back down. His intensity, gruff charm, and unwavering determination make him a compelling force in the story and the emotional anchor of the film's tension.

Jenna Ortega's Bad Plastic Surgery Makeover Might Be The Right Career Move
Jenna Ortega's Bad Plastic Surgery Makeover Might Be The Right Career Move

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jenna Ortega's Bad Plastic Surgery Makeover Might Be The Right Career Move

Celebrities have been destroying their faces with plastic surgery for as long as Hollywood has existed, but it's never been dumber and more unnecessary than it is now. This is the week Sydney Sweeney is being celebrated for her natural genes, and Pam Anderson is making a comeback in her 50s by, shockingly, just looking like a woman in her 50s who is aging naturally. That current cultural direction makes it particularly bad timing for Wednesday star Jenna Ortega to show up on the red carpet looking like she hired a plastic surgeon to dump bleach on her face and take a chisel to her cheekbones. People were going to notice. Accounts on X, who claim to be doctors, are accusing her of getting Buccal fat removal done. This cosmetic surgery reduces cheek fullness by extracting fat pads from the lower face. However, it is entirely possible that she hasn't used a hatchet on her head and that this new look is the temporary work of a highly talented makeup artist with a vendetta against her. We don't know whether it's actual bad plastic surgery or just fake bad plastic surgery, but you have to wonder what's going on to make someone willingly walk out the front door looking this way. That said, if this creepy look will work for anyone, it'll be Jenna Ortega. While Sydney Sweeney has been building a career out of being a natural beauty, Ortega has been building her brand around playing the weirdest-looking member of the Addams family. I'm not saying Jenna Ortega isn't pretty; she is, emphasizing that it is just not the path her career has led her in. Instead, like Christina Ricci before her, thanks to the Addams Family association, she's always going to be thought of as that weird girl. What better way to embrace it than by emphasizing it with freaky plastic surgery? Wednesday Addams would approve. Solve the daily Crossword

New Haight-Ashbury record store aims to revive San Francisco punk scene
New Haight-Ashbury record store aims to revive San Francisco punk scene

CBS News

time38 minutes ago

  • CBS News

New Haight-Ashbury record store aims to revive San Francisco punk scene

In Haight-Ashbury, where counterculture echoes through the streets, a new record store is turning up the volume on punk. More than just a shop for vinyl, tapes and CDs, I Hate Records is carving out a space for the city's punk community. Run by artists Cody Azumi and Pretty Sims, the store stays as unapologetically raw and DIY as the music on its shelves. "One of my favorite things about punk rock is the ability and freedom to question authority," Azumi said. The co-founders of I Hate Records say the store is more than a business, it's about building a space for real, face-to-face connection. "You know, you can order anything you want on the internet," Sims said. "But I think that actually having that face-to-face, real conversation about it, and learning what people in San Francisco think punk is, is really important." The shop, which also operates as an independent record label, aims to welcome those unfamiliar with punk, inviting them to learn and experience the scene. "I would love it if people came into the store and gave it a chance and learned about the ethos and whatnot," Azumi said. "Because it is very angry music. You know, I think a lot of people have reasons to be pissed off right now." That DIY ethos extends to the very walls of the store, with a lens toward social justice. "This shop means a lot to me," one customer said. "I think it's a capstone. It was built on a lot of hard work. And I think it's really a pillar of the punk community. Got a lot of cool records, and it just feels like home when I'm in here." That's exactly the experience Azumi and Sims hope to create. "It kind of just makes you feel a little bit better," Sims said. "Just to know that you have people around you who are supportive and who are into making art for a greater purpose, to just say what you feel, no matter what other people think." Each day, the shop stands as proof of punk's enduring roots in the Bay.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store