Information AboutTony Award |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT TONY AWARD | |
| tony awards | |
| theatre awards | |
| broadway | |
| new york city culture | |
|
The award ceremony is broadcast on television, and includes songs from the nominated musicals, as well as video clips of or presentations about nominated plays. Winning a Tony award in a major category (Best Play, Best Musical, Best Play Revival, Best Musical Revival, Best Actor, Best Actress) can dramatically increase a show's ticket sales. A shortlist for the award is published several weeks before the award ceremony; between then and the announcement of the winners, plays advertise how many Tonys they have been nominated for. Often this advertisement is disingenuous, as many shows are nominated by default in years where there are few new plays and musicals. The awards were named after Antoinette Perry , a founder of the American Theatre Wing . Eligibility for the awards is restricted to shows playing in Broadway theaters during the season in question; these theaters are defined not strictly by their proximity to Broadway, but by their seating capacity. (Having closed does not make a show ineligible, though the voters generally favor shows that are still running when the awards are given.) For the purposes of the award, a "new" play or musical is one that has not previously been produced on Broadway and is not part of the "historical or popular repertoire." This phrase has been the subject of some controversy, as some shows have been ruled ineligible for the "new" categories, meaning that their authors did not have a chance to win the marquee awards of Best Play or Best Musical (or Best Score or Best Book for musicals). On the other hand, some people feel that allowing plays and musicals which are commonly produced to be eligible as new gives them an unfair advantage, because they will have benefited from additional development time as well as additional familiarity with the Tony voters. Shows recently transferred from Off-Broadway or London Theater are eligible as new; so are productions based closely on movies . In 2005 , awards were given in the following categories:
Other categories used in past years include:
Beginning with the . This category will honor actors and actresses who were cast as replacements and joined a long-running show after its official opening, and would not have otherwise had the chance to be recognized for a potentially Tony-worthy performance. SEE ALSO
EXTERNAL LINKS |
|
|