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Tony Awards: Here’s Everything You Didn’t See on TV

  2024-03-11 varietyRebecca Rubin8360
Introduction

After 27 months, the Tony Awards returned on Sunday night to honor Broadway’s best. The ceremony — highlighting the shor

Tony Awards: Here’s Everything You Didn’t See on TV

After 27 months, the Tony Awards returned on Sunday night to honor Broadway’s best. The ceremony — highlighting the shortened 2019-2020 season — served as an emotional ode to the power of live theater, as well as an elaborately produced advertisement to get audiences back to the Great White Way.

Split between streaming and live TV, viewers at home were treated to galvanic performances (hello, Jennifer Holliday!) and moving speeches. Still, there’s plenty that cameras didn’t capture at the Winter Garden Theater in Manhattan. Here’s everything you didn’t see during the four-hour telecast.

A plea to wear masks

Broadway’s back, as audiences were reminded every few steps, and that meant pandemic-era safety protocols were in full force. Everyone had to be fully vaccinated in order to step foot in the theater, and anyone who walked the red carpet had to show proof of a negative COVID-19 test taken no more than 48 hours in advance.

Prior to the start of the show, producers had a simple request — don’t take your mask off. Winners were instructed to keep their masks on their face until getting on stage. For the night’s losers, it may have even been a welcome obligation. It meant that any reaction shots — the good and the bad — were concealed by a functional stretch of fabric. It also made it difficult to recognize old friends and do much celebrity gazing, though stars like Jesse Tyler Ferguson, with his shock of red hair, remained easy to spot.

Tony hopefuls or not, everyone in the crowd was handed Tony-themed masks upon arrival. However, the slender cloth covering wasn’t made with the dimensions of an adult human head in mind, so many in the crowd opted to wear the masks they brought from home.

Later on, Leslie Odom Jr., who hosted the “Broadway Is Back” concert on CBS in the second part of the ceremony, reiterated the need to mask up. During his opening number, he sang, “We gotta ask that you wear that mask until everything feels right. Because it’s no great thing to care about your neighbor when Broadway’s back tonight!”

Behind the scenes fun: Everyone in the audience was given a Tonys-themed mask, but it’s suffocatingly small! Either that, or I have a huge head pic.twitter/gnmwwKsZJw

— Rebecca Rubin (@rebeccaarubin) September 27, 2021

Lin-Manuel Miranda leads the first of many standing ovations

“Hamilton” mastermind Lin-Manuel Miranda was first out of his chair after cast members from the original cast of “Hairspray,” including Marissa Jaret Winokur and Matthew Morrison, kicked off the telecast with a rousing rendition of “You Can’t Stop the Beat.” It was the beginning of many (and we mean many) moments that had everyone on their feet. One thing was clear: Tony voters and nominees were more than eager to be back in the theater, as evidenced by the near constant standing ovations.

For the first award of the night, which went to David Alan Grier (“A Soldier’s Play”) for featured actor in a play, the applause in the room was so loud, it was nearly impossible to hear the nominees being read before the envelope was even opened.The cheers rose to a crescendo when Grier told the losers in his category, “tough bananas.” Another emotional moment came when Danny Burstein finally took home a statue after his seventh nomination. Before the “Moulin Rouge” actor even reached the stage, the audience leapt up and broke into applause.

Great #TonyAwards speech by Danny Burstein, acknowledging the tragic passing of his wife Rebecca Luker: "You all showed up for us. You were there for us. Whether you just sent a note or sent your prayers, sent bagels, it meant the world to us." pic.twitter/1zWv0eLhMB

— Brent Lang (@BrentALang) September 26, 2021

Later in the evening, André De Shields, who won a Tony in 2019 for “Hadestown,” was greeted with a standing ovation for simply walking on stage to present. (As he should be!) Hours into the night, the standing O’s didn’t waver, and it only intensified with the concert that brought out Broadway legends like Idina Menzel, Kristin Chenoweth, Audra McDonald (who hosted the first portion of the show) and Titus Burgess. Speaking of icons….

Jennifer Holliday brings down the house with “And I Am Telling You…”

The first two hours of the telecast went by quickly (no, seriously) because it was streaming on Paramount Plus, meaning there weren’t any commercial breaks to interrupt the flow of trophies. After a few touching musical performances and a slew of speeches — many that functioned as impassioned pleas to increase diversity and prioritize inclusion in the theater industry — Jennifer Holliday, who won a Tony in 1982 for “Dreamgirls,” had the rafters shaking with an emotionally charged and near-religious performance of “And I’m Telling You I’m Not Going.” It’s hard to convey how powerful the performance played in the room, but mid-way through the ballad, the misty-eyed audience couldn’t be contained any longer. Everyone in the 1,526-seat theater rose from their seats and didn’t return until Holliday exited the stage.

Send the mother f***ing ambulance right now to save me.
Jennifer. Holliday.@TheTonyAwards

— Javier Muñoz (@JMunozActor) September 27, 2021

Aaron Tveit won a Tony, but to the amusement of the crowd, his only competition was himself

In an unconventional year at an unconventional ceremony, at least everyone could appreciate the humor in Aaron Tveit’s, well, unconventional Tony win. As the leading man in “Moulin Rouge: The Musical,” the Broadway darling won his first Tony in an unusual way. For the first time, there was only one nominee for best performance by an actor in a leading role in a musical. But just because Tveit was the sole nominee didn’t mean his win was preordained. No, presenters Bebe Neuwirth and Courtney B. Vance assured everyone that he needed support from 60% of Tony voters to win. Cue laughter from the crowd. Of course, Tveit’s name was called and for a moment, it seemed like he would make a joke about the peculiar circumstances. Instead, he took the stage in a teary-eyed speech about the power that Broadway has to change lives.

Honestly, we're SO obsessed with @AaronTveit and everything about his #TonyAwards win for Best Leading Actor in a Musical!

(By/Rebecca Rubin)
 
 
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