Cookies

Monday, June 08, 2015

How'd We Do? Show Showdown Tony Predictions Wrap-Up

This post discusses the accuracy of the predictions we made here at Show Showdown. Suffice to say that none of us should leave our day job and go into fortune-telling. Mind you, we did all get Curious Incident for best play, Fun Home for best book, and Helen Mirren for best actress in a play. We may not be Nostradamuses, but we are awake! (And I'm not going to point out the ones where we were all wrong.)

Fun Home wins Best Musical, proving that it takes a village
(of extremely talented people)
Photo: Sara Krulwich
The "total right" stat at the bottom of this table is a little unfair, because not all of us made predictions in all the categories (hence the empty cells). The numbers in parens after the "total right" numbers are how-many-right-per-how-many-predicted stats.

Our correct predictions are highlighted.


Cameron
Liz
Sandra
Wendy
Best play: Curious Incident
Curious Incident
Curious Incident
Curious Incident
Curious Incident
Best musical: Fun Home
An American in Paris
Fun Home
An American in Paris

Best revival of a play: Skylight
Skylight
Skylight
Skylight
You Can’t Take it With You
Best revival of a musical: The King and I
The King and I
On the Twentieth Century
The King and I
On the Twentieth Century
Best book of a musical: Fun Home
Fun Home
Fun Home
Fun Home
Fun Home
Best original score: Fun Home
Fun Home
The Last Ship
Fun Home
Fun Home
Leading actor in a play: Alex Sharp
Alex Sharp


Alex Sharp
Leading actress in a play: Helen Mirren
Helen Mirren
Helen Mirren
Helen Mirren
Helen Mirren
Leading actor in a musical: Michael Cerveris
Robert Fairchild
Michael Cerveris
Ken Watanabe
Michael Cerveris
Leading actress in a musical: Kelli O’Hara
Kristin Chenoweth
Kristin Chenoweth
Leann Cope
Kristin Chenoweth
Featured actor in a play: Richard McCabe
Richard McCabe


Micah Stock
Featured actress in a play: Annaleigh Ashford
Annaleigh Ashford
Annaleigh Ashford

Annaleigh Ashford
Featured actor in a musical: Christian Borle
Brad Oscar
Andy Karl
Christian Borle
Christian Borle
Featured actress in a musical
Ruthie Ann Miles

Sydney Lucas
Judy Kuhn
Scenic design, play: Bunny Christie and Finn Ross, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Wolf Hall
Bunny Christie and Finn Ross, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

Bunny Christie and Finn Ross, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Scenic design, musical: Bob Crowley and 59 Productions, An American in Paris
The King and I
The King and I
The King and I
The King and I

Costume design, play: Christopher Oram for Wolf Hall Parts One & Two

You Can't Take It With You
The Audience

Wolf Hall Parts One & Two

Costume design, musical: Catherine Zuber for The King and I

On the Twentieth Century
The King and I
The King and I
The King and I

Lighting, play: Paule Constable for The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

Lighting, musical: Natasha Katz for An American in Paris

The Visit


The King and I

Direction, play: Marianne Elliott for The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

Marianne Elliott for The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Marianne Elliott for The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

Marianne Elliott for The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

Direction, musical: Sam Gold for Fun Home

Sam Gold, Fun Home

Christopher Wheeldon, An American in Paris
Casey Nicholaw, Something Rotten!

Choreograpy: Christopher Wheeldon for An American in Paris

Joshua Bergasse, On the Town
Christopher Wheeldon, An American in Paris

Christopher Wheeldon, An American in Paris

Christopher Wheeldon, An American in Paris

Orchestrations: Christopher Austin, Don Sebesky, Bill Elliott for An American in Paris

John Clancy, Fun Home
Rob Mathes, The Last Ship
Rob Mathes, The Last Ship
Christopher Austin, Don Sebesky and Bill Elliott, An American in Paris
Total correct
13 (13/24)12 (12/19)9 (9/16)15 (15/23)

The Tony Awards: Speeches You Didn't See

There will be plenty of time for people to weigh in on the ups and downs of the Tony Awards broadcast last night. I personally thought it was, for the most part, fine: Alan Cumming and Kristen Chenoweth overcame stupid opening material (and some unfortunate schtick throughout) to be pleasant enough as co-hosts. The musical numbers were engaging enough, or not, and either made me want to see the productions in question, or not. Sting has grown a beard and looks like a dope. Jersey Boys has been running for 500 years and I have no fucking clue why they did a closing number, but I hardly lost sleep about it. And finally, while I'm the first to argue that these kinds of awards ceremonies just don't mean very much, I was nevertheless thrilled for the cast and company of Fun Home, and glad to know that the Tony voters recognized that show as a major artistic achievement.

I was, however, kind of bummed that so many good speeches, by winners from some interesting and monumentally important categories, were cut from the broadcast. I thought I'd post them all here. If there are more that I'm missing, please feel free to let me know, and I can put them up, too.

Meanwhile, I look forward to reading more about what other people thought of Sting's beard in the days to come.

Wednesday, June 03, 2015

Show Showdown's Totally Unscientific, Completely Biased, Absolutely Pointless Tony Forecast, 2015


This year's Tony Awards are going to be aired on Sunday, June 7, and we at Show Showdown are so excited that we couldn't help but weigh in with our first ever forecast. There are a number of categories that are totally up for grabs this time around, and the close competition should make for a ceremony that is filled with surprises.

Our picks are listed below, with occasional commentary, and omissions when one or the other of us had no strong opinions about a particular category, or hadn't seen enough to weigh in comfortably.


BEST PLAY
Cameron, Wendy, Sandra and Liz
Will win: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Wendy: Curious Incident couldn't do what it does as a movie or TV show; it makes full use of the magic of theatre to take us on a journey both with someone and in his head.

Cameron
Should win: Disgraced

Monday, June 01, 2015

Tuesdays at Tesco's

In many ways, it's a familiar story. An adult child continues to care for her elderly parent despite never receiving simple acknowledgement and acceptance of who she is. The adult child might have married out of the faith or chosen a profession against the parent's advice. The adult child might be gay. Whatever the circumstances, the elderly parent remains withholding, no matter how helpful the adult child is or how many sacrifices and compromises she makes.

Simon Callow
Photo: Carol Rosegg
In Tuesdays at Tesco's the adult child is transwoman Pauline. Pauline's father makes no secret of his disgust at her physical presentation, insists on calling her Paul, and stands as far away as possible when they do their weekly shopping at the titular Tesco's, a British grocery/department store.

Written by Emmanuel Darley (adapted and translated by Matthew Hurt and Sarah Vermande) and directed by Simon Stokes, Tuesday at Tesco's stars Simon Callow. While it's sort of a one-person show, Callow shares the stage with musician Conor Mitchell, who accompanies Pauline's periodic dance breaks, which are physical expressions of her emotions and personality. When not playing, Mitchell takes notes, slumps at the piano, and otherwise pulls focus. Together, the dances and Mitchell's presence add little and take away a lot. They would not be missed in a show that feels oddly long at 75 minutes.

Friday, May 29, 2015

Nice Girl

What does it mean to be a "nice girl"? And is it really a positive label? In Melissa Ross's Nice Girl at the Labyrinth, Jo (the smart and subtle Diane Davis) doesn't feel nice at all. She knows that she is angry and even bitter, and that she only carries out the actions that make her seem nice because she's too passive not to.

Diane Davis
Photo: Monique Carboni
Jo lives with and takes care of her mother, Francine (Kathryn Kates), a woman who rarely changes out of her housecoat and whose only exercise is pressing Jo's buttons. Although Jo was once student at Radcliffe, her father's death and her mother's neediness truncated her education. She is now a secretary at an accounting firm, depressed and lonely. She is 37 and stuck.

One day Jo's coworker Sherry (the wonderfully vivid Liv Rooth) reaches out to her. Where Jo is turned inward and doesn't even know what she wants, Sherry explodes outward, with a loud voice, overdone makeup, and strong appetites that she fulfills whenever she can. Sherry tells Jo that has been dating--and loving--a man who just recently mentioned that he has a wife (they're separated) and child. Sherry is furious at him, but she is also angry at herself for the general messiness of her life. She sees Jo as, yes, a nice girl, and she thinks that a friendship might be good for both them.

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

The King and I

The King and I is an odd classic. Full of wonderful songs, it features a dumb plot with a cutesy approach to female enslavement, a condescending view of Siamese culture, unconvincing scenes that rely too heavily on the charms of the leads to cover their flaws, and a truly bizarre combination of cheerfulness, silliness, seriousness, and weirdness.

Kelli O'Hara
Photo: Paul Kolnik
Say we're willing to buy that a king would show so much interest in a teacher of his children. Say that we dismiss the ickiness of his receiving a woman as a gift as a cultural difference. Say we even give him credit for doing the best he can. We're still supposed to be pleased that the teacher--a smart and independent woman--is attracted to him, even though he's basically a slave owner who has sex with dozens of women whether or not they want to have sex with him.

And then, the teacher kills him by calling him a barbarian and making him look weak by stopping him from whipping a wayward wife--and in front of other people!

In the production of The King and I at Lincoln Center, Kelli O'Hara (lovely but not all that interesting as Anna) and Ken Watanabe (chewing the exquisite scenery as the king) lack the charm and chemistry to distract from the show's weak points. It doesn't help that Ashley Park as Tuptim and Conrad Ricamora as Lun Tha are more interested in the sounds of their own voices than each other. Nor does it help that Bartlett Sher blocks the show with constant and distracting movement.  I respect that Sher is (I assume) trying to make sure that everyone in the difficult Beaumont Theatre has a chance to see what is going on, but the show starts to look busy for busy-ness' sake. In particular, the King and Anna circle each other like boxers in the ring, which is effective up to a point but becomes annoying.

The show doesn't lack strengths. O'Hara's singing is often wonderful, and "Getting to Know You" is a pleasure. Ruthie Ann Miles is a formidable and excellent Lady Thiang. And the show is gorgeous to look at, from the second you set foot in the theatre. The sets, designed by Michael Yeargan, are downright scrumptious.

(third row, to audience left of center, member ticket)