‘Sunset Boulevard': Will Andrew Lloyd Webber break a 30-year Tony drought?
In 1995, the original Broadway staging of Sunset Boulevard won seven Tony Awards, including Best Musical. That marked the last time an Andrew Lloyd Webber show won a Best Production accolade from the American Theatre Wing. Exactly 30 years later, the current remounting is the frontrunner to win Best Musical Revival. If it prevails, it'd be quite a full-circle moment for the legendary composer.
In the years since Sunset Boulevard originally contended, four more Lloyd Webber titles were nominated for a Best Show award, but didn't prevail:
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Jesus Christ Superstar for Best Musical Revival in 2000; lost to Kiss Me, Kate
Evita and Jesus Christ Superstar for Best Musical Revival in 2012; both lost to Porgy & Bess
School of Rock for Best Musical in 2016; lost to Hamilton
The Broadway legend also had three other shows eligible for Best Musical noms, but each of them were nearly shut out: By Jeeves in 2002, The Woman in White in 2006 (even though it showed up for Best Score), and Bad Cinderella in 2023. In 2017, two of his shows were eligible for Best Musical Revival, but both of them were completely ignored: Cats and the previous remounting of Sunset Boulevard.
This year, the current Sunset Boulevard has seven nominations overall. Many are expecting it to do well on Tony night in terms of wins. In addition to Best Musical Revival, it's also expected to take home Best Direction of a Musical (Jamie Lloyd) and Best Lighting Design of a Musical (Jack Knowles). See Gold Derby's Tony odds.
Nicole Scherzinger, who's in second place for Best Actress in a Musical, is competitive for the win up against current frontrunner, Audra McDonald in Gypsy. The former has already won an Olivier (for the production's West End run) and Drama League Awards for her performance as Norma Desmond. This is a role that previously won Glenn Close a Tony for the original production.
The rest of this year's Best Musical Revival lineup includes Gypsy (second place), Floyd Collins (third place), and Pirates! The Penzance Musical (fourth place).
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David E. Kelley on the secret of his prolific career: ‘Don't ever assume you're smarter than the audience'
L.A. Law. Picket Fences. Chicago Hope. Ally McBeal. The Practice. Boston Legal. Big Little Lies. Nine Perfect Strangers. Presumed Innocent. And that's far from the complete list. So it's fitting that David E. Kelley was chosen as the inaugural recipient of the ATX TV Festival's Showrunner Award. Over the course of his career, he's earned 31 Emmy nominations and 12 wins (including a Hall of Fame trophy) and was the first producer ever to take home Emmys for both comedy series and drama series in the same year. Not to mention all of the actors he's written for who have won trophies in their own right. 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That the first 20 actors will be so far off, that number 21 will be remotely in the ballpark and you go, that's the one. And that's very dangerous. I've always counted on a strong casting director to bring a point of view and a perspective to (a) find the person that we're looking for, but (b) be strong and secure enough to tell me that this person is not it if I fall for the wrong person. A woman named Judith Weiner cast The Practice and Ally McBeal, which we were doing at the same time. We did The Practice first, and then we went to cast Ally McBeal, and she changed the furniture around in the same room. And I said, "Judith, I can see you've chosen to sit over by the window this time." And she said, "Yes, so I can jump out of it if you fall prey to some of the inclinations that you did during The Practice." When you get a casting director who does not settle, it just makes your job as a producer much, much easier. 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He was playing it with an affect and an aloofness and a humor and it wasn't at all the way I'd heard it when I'd written on the page. But it was great and the show needed a little bit of levity where we could find it. So I remember saying I don't know what he is doing but tell him to keep doing it. SEEDavid E. Kelley says new ending for 'Presumed Innocent' on Apple TV+ 'wasn't mandatory' Did you write end up writing to that? It's folly to say, well, that's not the construct that I set out to build and I'm going to stick to the original idea. Sometimes you do, but other times if you see what the actor is giving you is elevating the piece, don't be afraid of it. Is that something you've learned over the course of your career? I learned it pretty early from Stephen Bochco. He taught me so many good habits, and he also had huge amount of respect for the actors. If you surround yourself with good people and smart people, it's only going to make your work better. Lord knows we have more than a few in our industry who get threatened by others, who want to populate their piece with opinions who won't threaten their own, but he never did that. He did that, from the very first day I walked in his office, and he did that with the audience as well. So don't ever for a second assume you're smarter than the audience. These people more likely are going to be every bit as intelligent as you, if not more so. How were you lucky enough to find your way to Stephen Bochco so early in your career? I was a practicing lawyer in Boston, and I knew I liked to write. I had done a little bit in college, but it wasn't something I really thought I was going to make a living at. I was a young litigator and it was motion practice for the most part, which means you sit in a courtroom with a zillion other lawyers and you wait for your case to get called, and it's a long day in court with not much to do. 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I think he even said that Mr. Mercedes was one of his favorite adaptations, because I knew he hated The Shining. SEE'Presumed Innocent' producers J.J. Abrams and David E. Kelley on teaming up, 'contemptible' characters, and season 2 What about Scott Turow with ? Scott Turow's the same with Presumed Innocent. Again, I loved that book. I also loved the movie. I was daunted. This has been done well twice — in book form and in movie form — and I didn't want to be the one to screw it up. The series offered an opportunity to dig deeper into characters, especially the ancillary characters, so I was really excited about that opportunity and it was the love for the characters that that made me dive in. And Scott Turow said OK. He understood the difference in the process. A book is a book, a television series is a series. It was my baby, it's now it's your baby. You've been on a run of limited series; would you ever go back to continuing drama again? I do enjoy the limited series, but right now I'm beginning to miss series again. I tend to mourn characters when series are over. You live with them for a year or two years, and they become a little too real, and then when they're gone, it's sad. Big Little Lies, I still miss them. With series television, you live with the characters for longer. Also, you're really building a community. I am looking to do less amount of projects and get back to a series where it can go on for a long time and maybe we can get that community that I missed back. There was real currency in it. The studios now are looking for shows that aren't going to be over and done with in one, two, or three years, and I think that's going to be good for the consumer. And I look forward to it as a writer too because when, again, when you spend so much time working with these characters, they tend to become real, they tend to become like your family, and you want to hold on to them. But not the Mr. Mercedes family. I was happy to say goodbye to that family. Is there any other family in your library you would revisit for a reunion or a revival? I'm not a reboot kind of guy. I feel I've done that once, and I'm not opposed to someone else taking something I've done if they've got a new idea on it. But I feel it I just want to go forwards not backwards if I can. And do you still write longhand? I do, although my hand sort of runs out of gas now. (Laughs.) I actually do believe that there is a hand-brain connection. Because when I try to dictate or type, the brain doesn't fire as well as when I write with my hand. You heard it here. 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This Sunday, June 1, marked the 69th Annual Drama Desk Awards, celebrating the greatest shows, actors, and creative teams across Broadway, off-Broadway, and off-off-Broadway this season. Taking the stage at NYU Skirball, in downtown Manhattan, were the ceremony's hosts, Debra Messing and Tituss Burgess (the latter, due to return to Broadway for a six-week encore engagement in Cole Escole and Sam Pinkleton's Oh, Mary! this summer), as well as a heavy-hitting lineup of presenters, including Escola, Victoria Clark, Darren Criss, Brandon Victor Dixon, Andrew Durand, Tom Francis, Jonathan Groff, Sarah Hyland, Jeremy Jordan, Jinkx Monsoon, Bebe Neuwirth, Lily Rabe, Nicole Scherzinger, and Jennifer Simard. (Adding to the evening's star power? Performances by Joshua Henry—set to star in a Broadway revival of Ragtime this fall—Norm Lewis, Lesli Margherita, and the cast of Dead Outlaw.) So, who walked away with trophies? (And will we see any repeat winners at next weekend's Tony Awards?) See all the victors at this year's Drama Desk Awards—benefitting the Entertainment Community Fund—right here. Outstanding Play WINNER: Purpose, by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins Blood of the Lamb, by Arlene Hutton Deep Blue Sound, by Abe Koogler Grangeville, by Samuel D. Hunter John Proctor is the Villain, by Kimberly Belflower Liberation, by Bess Wohl Outstanding Musical WINNER: Maybe Happy Ending BOOP! The Musical Death Becomes Her Just in Time Music City Outstanding Revival of a Play WINNER: Eureka Day Garside's Career Home Wine in the Wilderness Yellow Face Outstanding Revival of a Musical WINNER: Gypsy Cats: 'The Jellicle Ball' Floyd Collins Once Upon a Mattress See What I Wanna See Sunset Blvd. Outstanding Lead Performance in a Play WINNER: Laura Donnelly, The Hills of California WINNER: Sarah Snook, The Picture of Dorian Gray Betsy Aidem, The Ask Patsy Ferran, A Streetcar Named Desire Danny J. Gomez, All of Me Doug Harris, Redeemed Patrick Keleher, Fatherland Louis McCartney, Stranger Things: The First Shadow Lily Rabe, Ghosts Jay O. Sanders, Henry IV (Theatre for a New Audience) Paul Sparks, Grangeville Olivia Washington, Wine in the Wilderness Outstanding Lead Performance in a Musical WINNER: Audra McDonald, Gypsy WINNER: Jasmine Amy Rogers, BOOP! The Musical
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