Jews Sweep Tonys As Bette Midler, Ben Platt And ‘Oslo’ Win Big
“Dear Evan Hansen,” the teen-angst driven musical about a high school outsider, won the top prize at Sunday’s Tony Awards, Broadway highest honors, while J.T. Rogers’ Mideast peace accord drama “Oslo” was named best play.
The surprise hit musical won a total of six Tonys, including best musical actor for 23-year-old newcomer Ben Platt in the title role, featured actress Rachel Bay Jones, as well as best book, score and orchestrations.
As widely predicted, Bette Midler won her first competitive Tony as best actress in a musical for “Hello, Dolly!.”
Living up to her bawdy reputation, Midler delivered a speech laced with mild profanity to the star-laden audience at Radio City Music Hall, chastising the orchestra as its music welled when she spoke at length.
“Hello, Dolly!” won four Tonys, including best musical revival.
“It’s a very tough schedule,” Midler, 71, said backstage, noting she is “a woman of a certain age.” But she said the experience had been “life-affirming and life-changing,” telling reporters between tears, “It’s more than I deserve.”
On stage she praised the old-school musical as a balm for “these terrible, terrible times.”
Actors Cynthia Nixon, Kevin Kline and Laurie Metcalf all won Tonys for performances in plays.
Kline won the lead actor Tony for his turn as an egocentric actor in Noel Coward’s “Present Laughter.”
“I want to thank everybody,” Kline said, adding “we don’t do this alone.” Like many other winners, he made a pitch for the National Endowment for the Arts, which is facing funding cuts under the Trump administration, saying without it “half the people in this room wouldn’t be here.”
Former “Roseanne” star Metcalf won her first Tony after several nominations, taking best actress in a play for “A Doll’s House, Part 2,” a lively, fast-paced sequel to the Henrik Ibsen classic.
Nixon was named best featured actress in a play for a revival of Lillian Hellman’s “The Little Foxes,” about a greedy southern family’s underhanded business practices.
The actress lauded Hellman for her “eerily prescient play.”
Noting one of its lines about people who “eat the Earth” and others who “watch them do it,” Nixon praised “the people who in 2017 are refusing to just stand around and watch them do it.”
Michael Aronov was a surprise winner in the featured actor category for his kinetic performance as an Israeli negotiator in “Oslo,” a behind-the-scenes look at the 1993 Middle East peace accords.
“Oslo” playwright Rogers, making his Broadway debut, thanked “The ladies and gentlemen who believed in democracy, who believed in peace, who believed in seeing their enemies as humans. I give this up to you.”
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