Consistently fine Tony Awards show
Posted: Mon Jun 13, 2016 1:52 am
I didn't get to watch it live much because of work, but what I've seen and read since make me think this was one of the most consistently good Tony shows in quite a while.
Most of the performances showed you why you might want a ticket to their show (except maybe "Fiddler", which is a good enough show but a weird song choice) and as a group, these folks strike me as genuinely grateful rather than entitled.
Highlights for me:
1. Cynthia. Damn. Erivo.
Kay and I got to see her last month live and she tore it up. I didn't even realize how well she had sold her deep grief and sadness throughout the first 3/4 of the story until she breaks through at the end and carries us with her to the land of self-respect. We got to see a talkback after the show and she said she is trying to do that, to convince everyone in the room that she or he is worthy of love and respect and that we are all beautiful.
It's a lot less sappy than it sounds. It's powerful.
I also loved Heather Headley as Shug and Danielle Brooks as Sophia. And that the set is eight chairs, two baskets, and four sheets.
2. Sara Bareilles and Jessie Mueller doing "She Used to Be Mine" - I got to see Sara do this in concert a couple of years ago, when it was the first song she had written for "Waitress". I was a little distracted by some of Mueller's acting choices tonight that I maybe was not close enough to see in the theater last month, but Sara's part was awesome.
3. James Corden's opening number, especially the closing part where he sang directly to the fifth graders who were watching and said this could be you someday.
Most of the performances showed you why you might want a ticket to their show (except maybe "Fiddler", which is a good enough show but a weird song choice) and as a group, these folks strike me as genuinely grateful rather than entitled.
Highlights for me:
1. Cynthia. Damn. Erivo.
Kay and I got to see her last month live and she tore it up. I didn't even realize how well she had sold her deep grief and sadness throughout the first 3/4 of the story until she breaks through at the end and carries us with her to the land of self-respect. We got to see a talkback after the show and she said she is trying to do that, to convince everyone in the room that she or he is worthy of love and respect and that we are all beautiful.
It's a lot less sappy than it sounds. It's powerful.
I also loved Heather Headley as Shug and Danielle Brooks as Sophia. And that the set is eight chairs, two baskets, and four sheets.
2. Sara Bareilles and Jessie Mueller doing "She Used to Be Mine" - I got to see Sara do this in concert a couple of years ago, when it was the first song she had written for "Waitress". I was a little distracted by some of Mueller's acting choices tonight that I maybe was not close enough to see in the theater last month, but Sara's part was awesome.
3. James Corden's opening number, especially the closing part where he sang directly to the fifth graders who were watching and said this could be you someday.