Sunday, June 13, 2010

'Memphis' wins best musical Tony Award

Tony Award

NEW YORK — "Memphis," an interracial romance set against the backdrop of the 1950s rhythm 'n' blues explosion, has won the 2010 Tony Award for best musical.

The show of soulful sounds and a parade of engaging characters beat out "Fela!" — the innovative Afro-beat biography of Nigerian superstar Fela Anikulapo-Kuti; Green Day's rock musical "American Idiot"; and "Million Dollar Quartet," a fictional re-creation of a jam session of Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins and Jerry Lee Lewis in a Memphis recording studio.

The Tonys were telecast Sunday by CBS, live from Radio City Music Hall.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

NEW YORK (AP) — "Red," the anguished two-man drama about painter Mark Rothko and the timeless tug of war between art and commerce, was a big winner Sunday at the 2010 Tony Awards, receiving the best play prize and five other honors.
"This to me is the moment of my lifetime," said "Red" playwright John Logan.
The play picked up prizes for Michael Grandage, who won for best director of a play, and Eddie Redmayne, who won featured performance by an actor in a play as the increasingly disillusioned assistant to Rothko, the abstract expressionist who agonizes over whether to accept a lucrative commission for the Four Seasons restaurant.

"This is the stuff dreams are made of. Wow," Redmayne said, clutching his prize.
"Red," starring Alfred Molina as Rothko, was also awarded a Tony for best lighting design of a play, best sound design and best scenic design.
Three Hollywood stars, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Denzel Washington and Scarlett Johansson, were first-time nominees and winners.

"Fences," a revival of August Wilson's deeply personal drama about family, won for best revival of a play and its two stars, Washington and Viola Davis, won for best actors in a play. Even their acceptance speeches seemed to complement each other.
"My mother always says, `Man gives the award, God gives the reward.' I guess I got both tonight," Washington said after winning for his performance as the sanitation man who might have been a baseball star. It was his first Tony Award and nomination.
"I don't believe in luck or happenstance. I absolutely believe in the presence of God in my life," said Davis, honored for playing Washington's all-sacrificing wife. "It feels like such a divine experience eight times a week."
Zeta-Jones won for best actress in a musical as the amorous actress in the revival of "A Little Night Music" and thanked her husband, Michael Douglas, who she "gets to sleep with every night."

"La Cage Aux Folles" won three awards: for best revival of a musical, for David Hodge as best lead actor in a musical and director Terry Johnson for best direction of a musical. "Memphis," a tale of segregation and integration in the American South, was cited for best orchestration, original score and best book of a musical. "Fela!" won for Bill T. Jones' choreography, best costume design of a musical and best sound design of a musical.

Johansson won for best featured performance as an actress in a play for her Broadway debut, the object of her uncle's lust in Arthur Miller's "A View From a Bridge."
"Every since I was a little girl I wanted to be on Broadway and here I am," said Johansson, the voluptuous Hollywood star best known for such films as "Matchpoint" and "Lost in Translation."
"Fela!" — the innovative Afro-beat biography of Nigerian superstar Fela Anikulapo-Kuti — and "La Cage aux Folles" — a revival of the classic Jerry Herman-Harvey Fierstein musical farce — each had 11 nominations.
The ceremony, from Radio City Music Hall and telecast on CBS, was hosted by Sean Hayes, who didn't win as lead actor in a musical for "Promises, Promises," but did put on a memorable show of song, jokes and costumes, dressing up as everyone from Spiderman to Little Orphan Annie.
"I have actually managed to combine a good chance of losing with a good chance of bombing," he joked during his opening monologue, which was widely applauded.
One of Hayes' co-stars, scene-stealing Katie Finneran, won for best featured actress in a musical. Best featured actor in a musical went to Levi Kreis as rock 'n' roll wild man Jerry Lee Lewis in "Million Dollar Quartet."

Hayes began with a playful piano medley circling around "Give My Regards to Broadway," then stepped up the beat and segued into a stomping "Blue Suede Shoes," as performed by cast members from "Million Dollar Quartet." Segments from "Promises, Promises," "Come Fly With Me" and others followed, capped and stolen by a shouting medley from Green Day.
Five-time Tony winner Angela Lansbury, a nominee Sunday, was named the first-ever honorary chairman of the American Theatre Wing. Special Tony Awards for lifetime achievement were given to playwright Alan Ayckbourn ("The Norman Conquests," a trilogy that won the play-revival Tony last year), and actress Marian Seldes ("A Delicate Balance," "Equus," "Deathtrap," "Three Tall Women").
The Eugene O'Neill Theater Center in Waterford, Conn., received the regional theater award.

Source:- Google News

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