
Tony Awards 2025: Irish actor Laura Donnelly among the nominations
Laura Donnelly
has been nominated for a
Tony award
alongside Hollywood names including
George Clooney
,
Mia Farrow
,
Sarah Snook
and
Sadie Sink
on Thursday as Broadway began its celebration of an unusually starry season.
But a bevy of big stars did not get nods from the nominators, including Denzel Washington, Jake Gyllenhaal, Nick Jonas, Jim Parsons, Idina Menzel and Kit Connor.
Donnelly, from Belfast, was nominated for Best Leading Actress in a Play for her performance in
The Hills of California
alongside Farrow, Snook, Sink and LaTanya Richardson Jackson.
Audra McDonald
, a much-honoured stage veteran now starring in a revival of Gypsy, and Nicole Scherzinger, a former Pussycat Doll making her Broadway debut in Sunset Boulevard, were among five women nominated for Best Leading Actress in a Musical, and they are considered the frontrunners in that talent-rich category.
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In a robust season with 14 new musicals, the Tony nominators set up a five-way race for the coveted Best New Musical prize. The contenders are Buena Vista Social Club, about a group of beloved Cuban musicians; Dead Outlaw, which tells the strange story of a train robber whose corpse became an attraction; Death Becomes Her, a stage adaptation of the film about two frenemies who take an immortality potion; Maybe Happy Ending, about a relationship between two robots; and Operation Mincemeat, about a bizarre second World War British intelligence operation.
Oddly enough, three of the best musical contenders centre on dead people – Dead Outlaw and Operation Mincemeat are both about corpses, and Death Becomes Her is about two undead women.
Laura Donnelly in The Hills of California, directed by Sam Mendes. Photograph: Mark Douet
The race for best play also features five contenders: English, a Pulitzer-winning drama about a group of Iranians struggling to learn a new language; The Hills of California, about singing British sisters reuniting as their mother dies; John Proctor is the Villain, about Georgia high school students reading The Crucible and seeing parallels in their own lives; Oh, Mary! a hit comedy ahistorically spoofing Mary Todd Lincoln; and Purpose, a family drama about a politically active black family in Chicago.
The nominations were announced in New York by actors Sarah Paulson and Wendell Pierce. A few marquee categories were announced on CBS Mornings.
The announcement begins a five-week scramble in which the 840 Tony voters – mostly people who work in theatre or who help finance Broadway shows – will finish seeing the nominated shows so they can cast their ballots for the productions and performances they admired most.
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The Hills of California star Laura Donnelly: 'These days, being Northern Irish is seen for something in and of itself'
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]
The Tony Awards ceremony is set to take place on June 8th at Radio City Music Hall, hosted by
Cynthia Erivo
.
Broadway has lots to brag about this season: a bumper crop of 42 openings, an unusual number of movie stars treading the boards, several productions that are drawing young audiences, and a mix of quirky and original shows alongside big-brand spectacle. But there are big challenges too: ticket prices, especially for the hottest shows, have become out of reach for many, and profitability rates have plunged as the cost of producing has risen.
This year, there were 21 plays and 21 musicals eligible for awards, opening on Broadway between April 26th, 2024, and April 27th, 2025.
The nominees were chosen by a committee made up of people who have considerable knowledge about theatre, but who do not work on, or have a financial interest in, any of the season's shows. The committee started with 65 members, but because of recusals, 54 wound up participating in selecting the nominees.
TONY AWARDS NOMINATIONS 2025
Best New Musical
Buena Vista Social Club
Dead Outlaw
Death Becomes Her
Maybe Happy Ending
Operation Mincemeat
Best New Play
English
The Hills of California
John Proctor Is the Villain
Oh, Mary!
Purpose
Best Leading Actress in a Play
Laura Donnelly, The Hills of California
Mia Farrow, The Roommate
LaTanya Richardson Jackson, Purpose
Sadie Sink, John Proctor Is the Villain
Sarah Snook, The Picture of Dorian Gray
Best Leading Actor in a Play
George Clooney, Good Night, and Good Luck
Cole Escola, Oh, Mary!
John Michael Hill, Purpose
Daniel Dae Kim, Yellowface
Harry Lennix, Purpose
Louis McCartney, Stranger Things: The First Shadow
Best Leading Actress in a Musical
Jasmine Amy Rogers, Boop!
Megan Hilty, Death Becomes Her
Audra McDonald, Gypsy
Nicole Scherzinger, Sunset Boulevard
Jennifer Simard, Death Becomes Her
Best Leading Actor in a Musical
Darren Criss, Maybe Happy Ending
Andrew Durand, Dead Outlaw
Tom Francis, Sunset Boulevard
Jonathan Groff, Just in Time
Jeremy Jordan, Floyd Collins
James Monroe Iglehart, A Wonderful World: The Louis Armstrong Musical
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times
.
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The Irish Sun
2 days ago
- The Irish Sun
Three Hollyoaks legends set to return after decades off-screen as soap brings back 90s stars for 30th anniversary
After decades off-screen these stars are coming back to celebrate the show's landmark birthday in style LOOK WHO'S BACK Three Hollyoaks legends set to return after decades off-screen as soap brings back 90s stars for 30th anniversary HOLLYOAKS is set to welcome back three iconic stars for its 30th anniversary – and it could mean something major in store for a fan favourite. The series is gearing up to mark its anniversary in style, and as part of it, familiar faces from the show's history will be popping up to check in on the village. 7 James Redmond is returning as Finn for the 30th anniversary Credit: Getty 7 Dom was last seen heading to Spain to get married in Hollyoaks Later Credit: Alamy Advertisement 7 Carol hasn't been seen in the village in decades after heading off on a cruise ship Credit: Getty - Contributor James Redmond, Natalie Casey and John Pickard – who played Rory 'Finn' Finnigan, Carol Groves and Dominic Reilly on the soap – have all been tapped to return to their old haunt. And all three have connections to long-standing resident, Tony Hutchinson (Nick Pickard). A source told The Sun Online: 'They were all hugely popular characters in the 90s and had to be a part of the anniversary. Advertisement 'Hollyoaks might have a lot of younger viewers now but bosses really wanted to remember the 90s roots, so there's set to be some real nostalgia coming up.' The stars have already begun filming their scenes. Hollyoaks declined to comment when approached by The Sun Online. During their time on Hollyoaks, all three became central to major storylines that defined the show as a soap for younger audiences – especially when it came to Tony. Advertisement It's been years since any of the characters have appeared in the Hollyoaks world, although Redmond has repeatedly reprised his role of Finn for guest stints to mark special occasions. Arriving on the show as a free-spirited heartthrob in 1998, Finn became close friends with Tony Hutchinson, even going into business together. While he left in 2002, he later returned for a stint in after-watershed spin-off Hollyoaks Later, the 20th anniversary in 2015, and again for Christmas in 2017. His last appearance was in 2018, when Finn left for Margate after taking the fall for Cindy Cunningham (Steph Waring) stealing £10,000 for the purchase of a restaurant. Natalie Casey's Carol arrived on the soap in 1996, but hasn't been seen since 2000. She also had close ties to both Finn and particularly Tony, with whom she had a will they/won't they relationship. Advertisement Eventually, she left to perform on cruise ships, confessing her feelings to Tony before she did so in special Hollyoaks: Boys Do Barca. Finally, Dominic (played by Nick Pickard's real-life brother, John) is Tony's half-brother, and appeared on screen from 2005 to 2010. 7 Tony is a long-standing favourite on the soap Credit: Lime Pictures 7 Finn is Tony's best friend and business partner Credit: Lime Pictures 7 Carol went abroad to live her dreams of being a singer Credit: Mersey Television Advertisement During that time, the character was seen trying to build a relationship with his estranged sibling. However, their relationship collapsed when he believed he burned down Tony's restaurant, Il Gnosh, at the request of gangster Warren Fox. While it was later revealed it was not him, he had already confessed and not believed, so was left to serve out his sentence. After prison, Dom appeared in a series of Hollyoaks Later alongside Tony and Finn, and was living in Spain – sending the trio on a wild adventure as they ran into a mobster The White Man, played by Danny Dyer. 7 Dom is played by John Pickard - the real life brother of Tony actor, Nick Pickard Credit: Getty


Irish Examiner
4 days ago
- Irish Examiner
Frank Grimes obituary: Dublin breakthrough led to long career on stage and screen in Britain
When he burst on to the stage of the new Abbey theatre in Dublin in 1967, Frank Grimes, who has died aged 78, was acclaimed as the finest young actor of his generation. That first impact was made as a 19-year-old in a revival of Frank O'Connor's The Invincibles, a controversial piece about the assassination of the then chief secretary of Ireland Lord Frederick Cavendish and his deputy Thomas Burke, in 1882. But it was as the young Brendan Behan in Borstal Boy (1967) that Grimes hit the big time. Behan's rollicking autobiographical novel was adapted by Frank McMahon, with Niall Toibín as the older Behan relating the story of the renegade roisterer on a bare stage. Frank Grimes and Sorcha Cusack as Barry and Helen Connor in 'Coronation Street' in 2008. Picture: ITV/Shutterstock It was a smash hit in Dublin and Paris, and then on Broadway in 1970, where Tomás Mac Anna's production won the Tony award and Grimes was voted most promising actor by 20 New York critics. In a sense, his subsequent stage career, mainly in London in the 1980s, was something of a deflation, though he invariably cleaned up the best reviews in plays by David Storey and Chekhov, and, in 1984, as a mercurial Christy Mahon in JM Synge's Playboy of the Western World on the Edinburgh fringe — all of these directed by Lindsay Anderson, who was Grimes's mentor when he first moved to London in the 1970s. Fair City and Coronation Street Latterly, Grimes was best known for his roles as Fr Lawlor in Fair City, and as the unpredictable Barry Connor on ITV's Coronation Street. Between 2008 and 2015, Grimes appeared in 55 episodes of the ITV soap opera, with his wife, Helen, played in the first season by Sorcha Cusack and in later episodes by Dearbhla Molloy. Frank Grimes as Fr Lawlor and TP McKenna as Tom Mitchell in RTÉ's 'Fair City' in 2004. Picture: RTÉ Photographic Archive He also appeared in episodes of Casualty, The Bill, Doctors and Mrs Brown's Boys. Grimes's best performance on television, however, came in RTÉ's Strumpet City (1980), adapted by Hugh Leonard from James Plunkett's novel, in which he played a beautifully-modulated, mild-mannered Fr O'Connor, a Catholic curate in a chaotic Dublin under British rule around the time of the 1913 Dublin lockout. The wonderful cast included Donal McCann, Cyril Cusack, David Kelly, and Peter O'Toole. Dublin upbringing Born in Dublin, the youngest and seventh child of Evelyn (nee Manscier) and Joseph Grimes, a train driver, Frank was educated at St Declan's secondary school by the Christian Brothers, where he excelled at basketball, algebra, and geometry. He trained at the Abbey and, after his success there, moved to London. He began his collaboration with Lindsay Anderson and David Storey in two plays at the Royal Court — The Farm (1973), as the feckless only son returning to an outraged family gathering with news of his impending marriage to a divorced, middle-aged woman; and as an art student in Life Class (1974), with Alan Bates as the art teacher and Rosemary Martin the model. Frank Grimes won a Jacob's Award for his portrayal of Fr O'Connor in RTÉ's acclaimed television 1980 adaptation of James Plunkett's 1969 novel, 'Strumpet City'. Both of Grimes's performances were luminous, truthful and technically adroit. He played the young Seán O'Casey for RTÉ in The Rebel (1973), a documentary drama by John Arden and Margaretta D'Arcy, and made his only appearance at the Royal Shakespeare Company in O'Casey's masterpiece, Juno and the Paycock; Trevor Nunn's 1980 revival at the Aldwych featured a mostly Irish cast headed by Judi Dench and Norman Rodway as Juno and Captain Boyle. Shakespeare and Chekhov Grimes's Hamlet in 1981, directed by Anderson, was the first Shakespeare at the Theatre Royal, Stratford East, since 1957, but it seemed tame and tight-lipped after Jonathan Pryce's electrifying Royal Court version in the previous year. He was back on track, though, in Anderson's all-star cast in The Cherry Orchard at the Haymarket in 1983 (with Joan Plowright as Ranevskaya, Leslie Phillips as Gaev), stuttering out Trofimov's revolutionary rhetoric before apologetically concluding that, when the day dawns, he would be there — 'or … I shall show others the way'. In 1987 at the Old Vic, in Anderson's revival of a 1928 American comedy, Holiday, by Philip Barry, with Malcolm McDowell and his then wife Mary Steenburgen alongside, Grimes was another memorably reluctant rabble-rouser, drunkenly excoriating the American rich, said Michael Billington, with 'a felt-tipped dagger'. Two years later, at the National Theatre, he was a friendless academic in psychological meltdown as Colin Pasmore in The March on Russia, David Storey's adaptation of his 1972 novel, Pasmore. Another minefield of a domestic drama, it was directed by Anderson in the manner of one of his and Storey's earlier family reunion collaborations, In Celebration (1969). In an impeccably-acted production, Grimes was both participant and observer at the celebratory rites of a family at odds, if not war. Supporting roles on the big screen Grimes played supporting roles in several notable films, including Richard Attenborough's A Bridge Too Far (1977), and in Anderson's The Whales of August (1987), starring Bette Davis and Lillian Gish as two elderly sisters on the Maine coast. He also appeared in Britannia Hospital (1982), the third of Anderson's blistering 'Mick Travis' trilogy. Grimes wrote several plays. Anderson directed his first, The Fishing Trip, at the Croydon Warehouse in 1991 and, before the director died in 1994, was helping him prepare his own one-man show, The He and the She of It, expressing a lifelong obsession with, and devotion to, James Joyce. Grimes married the actor Michele Lohan in 1968, and they had two sons, David and Andrew. After he and Michele divorced, he married the actor and art teacher Ginnette Clarke in 1984. Frank and Ginnette lived in New York from 1982 to 1987, after which they settled in Barnes, west London. His son David died in 2011. Grimes is survived by Ginnette and their daughter, Tilly, by Andrew, and by seven grandchildren, Emily, Hedy, Martha, Reuben, Toby, Monti and Oskar, and two siblings, Eva and Laura. Frank (Francis Patrick) Grimes, March 9, 1947 - August 1, 2025 The Guardian


Irish Daily Mirror
6 days ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Snapper behind the Liam Gallagher/Bono kiss pic says it turbo-boosted his career
A photographer who took the iconic picture of Liam Gallagher kissing Bono said the incredible snap "turbo boosted" his career. Tony Kelly explained he just asked the rockers to pose together outside an old Dublin nightclub called The Pod on Harcourt Street - and never expected what would unfold. The snogging snap is believed to have been in 1996. Speaking about the events which led up to the photo being taken, he told the Irish Mirror: "Back in the day, I was in my early 20s. I was working as a photographer in Dublin. "I was doing some of the showbiz stuff - where'd we'd be following celebs around when they got here." He continued: "Bono was in town and Liam Gallagher was playing a gig down at the Point Depot if I remember correctly. "Bono was out with them, and so was Michael Hutchence from Inxs and three of them were all out together (after the gig). "I think they were in one of the boozers in South Anne Street, and basically we followed them up to The Pod. "They were in separate cars, and Liam arrived first. We were like, 'Bono's coming, will you wait and do a picture?' And he said 'yeah, no problem - he was super cool.' "Next Bono arrived and Liam basically stuck the head on Bono in front of the cameras, and that was it. He stuck his tongue into his mouth." The "Wonder Wall" bucket hat portraits of Oasis members Noel and Liam Gallagher by Welsh artist Nathan Wyburn ahead of the band's tour on June 28, 2025 in Cardiff (Image:) Tony said he's still not 100 per cent sure what Gallagher had on his tongue but believes it was a guitar pick. He continued: "That was the start of my career, it was really like a stepping stone … I never expected that, I just thought they'd do a shot with their arms around each other. "But Liam was animated on the night and he just kind of stuck the head on Bono. He just stuck his tongue into his mouth and Bono played along with it. The picture became really well-known. "It was a momentous night in my life and in my career." He said he was working for the Evening Herald newspaper at the time and went back to their offices to develop the images. Tony said there was one other person in the office at the time and they were both in awe after seeing the snap for the first time. The picture first appeared on the front page of the Evening Herald - the following day before it went around the world. He added: "Everybody was talking about it, there was great hype about it. There was a buzz about it. "I went to the concert in the days that followed and I thought to myself it doesn't really matter what pictures I take, I've already done my thing. "It was just a beautiful feeling that lasted for a while." Top snapper Tony Kelly When asked if he made any money off the snap, Tony quipped: "It paid for a few holidays." Tony said at the time, Ireland didn't really have "paparazzi" like in other countries such as the UK and the US - which attracted celebs to the Irish capital. The top photographer, who is now based in the US and works on big budget commercial shoots, said working as a news snapper was a hard slog but the skills he learned have stood to him. He explained: "You'd be photographing celebs one day, soccer the next day, junior soccer even, it was a brilliant training and a brilliant grounding. "Because you were on your own and you had to make things work. Now I do big production stuff. "Back then, you did everything yourself. If your camera broke, you fixed it. If it was pissing rain at the side of a soccer pitch - you just had to deal with it. I think that really stood to me as my career developed. "It was always something that you'd remember. You had to be self sufficient because back then you were out on your own." Tony said he met Liam years later at a GQ event in London and they discussed the famous snap. He said: "It was a great buzz. I said to him 'Liam, I want to thank you for that picture you did years ago with Bono' and he was like 'oh yeah I remember that picture, that was a good one.' "He straight away acknowledged it, and I said it really helped put me on the map as a 20-year-old out snapping around. It really helped. He was appreciative of that. "He was very cool and eloquent in his way." The Dubliner said he's on the hunt for a ticket for the rockers' gig in Croke Park this weekend - but said he was lucky to get to watch them perform last month in Manchester. He explained: "I don't have a ticket, I went to the concert last month in Manchester. I went two nights in a row - because I am a huge Oasis fan because they were a soundtrack to my 20s." Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest news from the Irish Mirror direct to your inbox: Sign up here.