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55th Tony Awards

2001 theatrical awards ceremony


2001 theatrical awards ceremony

FieldValue
name55th Tony Awards
captionOfficial poster for the Tony Awards
dateJune 3, 2001
locationRadio City Music Hall, New York City, New York
hostMatthew Broderick and Nathan Lane
most_wins*The Producers* (12)
most_nominations*The Producers* (15)
networkCBS
producerRicky Kirshner
Gary Smith
directorGlenn Weiss
ratings8.9 million
previous[54th](54th-tony-awards)
mainTony Awards
next[56th](56th-tony-awards)
website

Gary Smith

The 55th Annual Tony Awards was held at Radio City Music Hall on June 3, 2001 and broadcast by CBS. "The First Ten" awards ceremony was telecast on PBS television . The event was co-hosted by Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick. The Producers, starring Lane and Broderick, won 12 awards (every award it was eligible to win), breaking the 37-year-old record set by Hello, Dolly! to become the most awarded show in Tony Awards history. Mel Brooks's win made him the eighth person to become an EGOT.

Eligibility

Shows that opened on Broadway during the 2000–01 season before May 3, 2001 are eligible.

;Original plays

  • The Dinner Party
  • The Gathering
  • George Gershwin Alone
  • The Invention of Love
  • Judgment at Nuremberg
  • King Hedley II
  • Proof
  • Stones in His Pockets
  • The Tale of the Allergist's Wife ;Original musicals
  • The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
  • Blast!
  • A Class Act
  • The Full Monty
  • Jane Eyre
  • The Producers
  • Seussical ;Play revivals
  • The Best Man
  • Betrayal
  • Design for Living
  • Macbeth
  • The Man Who Came to Dinner
  • One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
  • The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe ;Musical revivals
  • Bells Are Ringing
  • Follies
  • 42nd Street
  • The Rocky Horror Show

The ceremony

Presenters: Joan Allen, Dick Cavett, Kristin Chenoweth, Glenn Close, Dame Edna, Edie Falco, Kathleen Freeman, Gina Gershon, Heather Headley, Cherry Jones, Jane Krakowski, Marc Kudisch, Eric McCormack, Audra McDonald, Reba McEntire, Donna McKechnie, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Gwyneth Paltrow, Sarah Jessica Parker, Bernadette Peters, Natasha Richardson, Doris Roberts, Gary Sinise, Lily Tomlin, Henry Winkler, and three "Broadway Babies" (Meredith Patterson, Bryn Bowling, and Carol Bentley).

The musicals that performed were:

  • A Class Act ("Follow Your Star"/"Better"/"Self Portrait"—Nancy Anderson, Jeff Blumenkrantz, Donna Bullock, Randy Graff, David Hibbard, Lonny Price, Patrick Quinn, Sara Ramirez);
  • Bells Are Ringing ("I'm Going Back" -- Faith Prince);
  • 42nd Street ("42nd Street"—David Elder, Kate Levering and company);
  • Follies ("I'm Still Here" -- Polly Bergen with Louis Zorich, Jessica Leigh Brown, Colleen Dunn, Amy Heggins, and Wendy Waring);
  • The Full Monty ("Let It Go"—John Ellison Conlee, Jason Danieley, André De Shields, Kathleen Freeman, Romain Fruge, Marcus Neville, Patrick Wilson, Thomas Fiss, and company);
  • Jane Eyre ("Sirens" -- Marla Schaffel and James Barbour);
  • The Producers, the new Mel Brooks Musical ("Along Came Bialy" -- Roger Bart, Gary Beach, Matthew Broderick, Cady Huffman, Nathan Lane, Brad Oscar, and company); and
  • The Rocky Horror Show ("Time Warp" -- Dick Cavett, Lea Delaria, Jerrod Emick, Kristen Lee Kelly, Alice Ripley, Daphne Rubin-Vega, Tom Hewitt, Raul Esparza, Sebastian LaCause, and company).

Plays were also presented:

  • The Invention of Love, introduced by playwright Tom Stoppard. Montage with voice-over by Richard Easton.
  • King Hedley II, introduced by playwright August Wilson. Excerpt performed by Viola Davis and Brian Stokes Mitchell.
  • One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, introduced by Joan Allen. Excerpt performed by Gary Sinise, Amy Morton, Tim Sampson, Bruce McCarty, Jeanine Morick, and Afram Bill Williams.
  • Proof, introduced by playwright David Auburn. Scene with Mary-Louise Parker and Ben Shenkman.
  • The Tale of the Allergist's Wife, introduced by playwright Charles Busch. Scene with Linda Lavin, Tony Roberts, and Michele Lee.

Winners and nominees

Winners are in bold

Source: BroadwayWorld

Best PlayBest MusicalBest Revival of a PlayBest Revival of a MusicalBest Performance by a Leading Actor in a PlayBest Performance by a Leading Actress in a PlayBest Performance by a Leading Actor in a MusicalBest Performance by a Leading Actress in a MusicalBest Performance by a Featured Actor in a PlayBest Performance by a Featured Actress in a PlayBest Performance by a Featured Actor in a MusicalBest Performance by a Featured Actress in a MusicalBest Book of a MusicalBest Original Score (Music and/or Lyrics) Written for the TheatreBest Scenic DesignBest Costume DesignBest Lighting DesignBest OrchestrationsBest Direction of a PlayBest Direction of a MusicalBest Choreography

Special awards

Regional Theatre Award

  • Victory Gardens Theater, Chicago, Illinois Special Theatrical Event
  • Blast! Special Lifetime Achievement Tony Award
  • Paul Gemignani Tony Honors for Excellence in the Theatre
  • Betty Corwin and the Theatre on Film and Tape Archive of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
  • New Dramatists
  • Theatre World

Multiple nominations and awards

These productions had multiple nominations:

  • 15 nominations: The Producers
  • 10 nominations: The Full Monty
  • 9 nominations: 42nd Street
  • 6 nominations: King Hedley II and Proof
  • 5 nominations: A Class Act, Follies, The Invention of Love and Jane Eyre
  • 4 nominations: The Rocky Horror Show
  • 3 nominations: Stones in His Pockets and The Tale of the Allergist's Wife
  • 2 nominations: The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Bells Are Ringing, Betrayal, Blast!, Judgment at Nuremberg and One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest

The following productions received multiple awards.

  • 12 wins: The Producers
  • 3 wins: Proof
  • 2 wins: 42nd Street and The Invention of Love

References

References

  1. Porter, Rick. (June 13, 2010). "Tony Awards Ratings History". [[TV by the Numbers]].
  2. [http://www.tonyawards.com/en_US/archive/ceremonies/200909161253135305656.html "Year by Year 2001"] {{Webarchive. link. (2011-01-01 tonyawards.com, accessed April 28, 2011)
  3. link. (October 21, 2012)
  4. link. (January 22, 2014)
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