27th Tony Awards

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See main article Tony Awards.

The 27th Annual Tony Awards (1973) was broadcast by ABC television on March 25, 1973 from the Imperial Theatre in New York City. Hosts were Rex Harrison, Celeste Holm and co-hosts were Sandy Duncan and Jerry Orbach.

The opening was a song-and-dance medley performed by Gwen Verdon, Paula Kelly, Helen Gallagher, and Donna McKechnie. [1]

The theme was the global reach of Broadway. The "Wide World of Broadway" featured narrations by Rex Harrison, Walter Slezak, Rossano Brazzi, Yul Brynner, and Peter Ustinov, who brought the viewers to: Vienna: West Side Story; Tokyo: The King and I; Milan: Ciao, Rudy; Paris: Hello, Dolly!; London: Show Boat; Zagreb, Yugoslavia: Man of La Mancha; and Witchita Falls, Texas: My Fair Lady.

Musicals represented: Pippin ("Magic To Do"- Ben Vereen and Company).

A new series of awards was started this year, termed "Theater Awards '73", renewable annually. (New York Times, McCandlish Phillips, p.52, 3/26/73)

This was the fourth time that Julie Harris won a Tony Award (and her sixth nomination); she won a total of five with a sixth for Lifetime Achievement.[2]

Contents

[edit] Winners and Nominees

Winners are in bold

[edit] Production

Best Play


Nominees:

  • Butley by Simon Gray. Produced by Lester Osterman and Richard Horner
  • The Changing Room by David Storey. Produced by Charles Bowden, Lee Reynolds, and Isobel Robins
  • The Sunshine Boys by Neil Simon. Produced by Emanuel Azenberg and Eugene V. Wolsk

Best Musical


Nominees:

[edit] Performance

Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play


Nominees:

Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Play


Nominees:

Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical


Nominees:

Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical


Nominees:

Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play


Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Play


Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical


Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical


[edit] Craft

Best Direction of a Play


Best Direction of a Musical


Best Choreography


Best Book of a Musical


Best Original Score Written for the Theatre


Best Scenic Design


Tony Award for Best Costume Design


Tony Award for Best Lighting Designer


  • Jules Fisher (Pippin)
  • Martin Aronstein (Much Ado About Nothing)
  • Ian Calderon (That Championship Season)
  • Tharon Musser (A Little Night Music)

[edit] Special Awards

  • John Lindsay, Mayor of New York City (construction of legitimate theaters)
  • Actors' Fund of America (honored for 90 years of assistance to needy and elderly theater people)
  • Shubert Organization (for nearly 75 years of activity as well as for the Shubert Foundation)

Source: (New York Times, McCandlish Phillips, p.52, 3/26/73)

[edit] References

  1. ^ New York Times, John J. O'Connor, p. 95, 3/27/73
  2. ^ Internet Broadway Database listing

[edit] External links