74th Tony Awards
The 74th Tony Awards were held on September 26, 2021, to recognize achievement in Broadway productions during the 2019–20 season. After being delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City, the ceremony was held at the Winter Garden Theatre and was broadcast in two separate parts on CBS and Paramount+. Audra McDonald and Leslie Odom Jr. served as hosts.
The musical Jagged Little Pill led the nominations with 15, while the play with the most nominations was Slave Play, with 12. At the ceremony, Moulin Rouge! won ten awards, including Best Musical, becoming the production with the most wins of the season. The Old Vic production of A Christmas Carol won five awards, and The Inheritance won four, including Best Play. At 90 years old, Lois Smith became the oldest performer to win a Tony Award for acting, receiving the award for Featured Actress in a Play.
Background
Originally scheduled to be held on June 7, 2020, at Radio City Music Hall in New York City and televised by CBS, the ceremony was postponed indefinitely due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Nominations were originally scheduled to be announced on April 28, 2020. Various receptions were scheduled to be held, including the Meet the Nominees Press reception and Tony Nominees luncheon. At the Tony Honors reception, the Tony Honors for Excellence in the Theatre award was to be presented. On March 25, 2020, it was announced that the ceremony and all associated events had been postponed indefinitely due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States. New York had ordered the closure of all Broadway theatres on March 12 due to restrictions on gatherings. The ceremony's broadcaster CBS aired a sing-along version of the film adaptation of Grease on the Tony Awards' originally-scheduled night.On August 21, 2020, it was announced that the ceremony would be held virtually later in the year, with further details to be announced at a later date. No subsequent date in the year was ever set. The nominations were announced on October 15, 2020, by James Monroe Iglehart. Voting for the Tony Awards was held from March 1–15, 2021, and the ceremony was announced to be held in conjunction with the reopening of Broadway. Jagged Little Pill led the nominations with fifteen, and Slave Plays twelve nominations broke the record for most nominations for a non-musical play set by Angels in America at the 2018 ceremony.
Ceremony information
On May 26, 2021, it was announced that the ceremony would be held on September 26 of that year in a format that differed from previous years. Paramount+ first streamed a two-hour ceremony at 7:00 p.m. ET with presentations of the awards for individual categories. CBS then aired a two-hour primetime special, The Tony Awards Present: Broadway's Back!, presented as a concert to "celebrate the joy and magic of live theatre". The special included performances of "beloved classics" and the three Best Musical nominees, and the presentation of the awards for Best Musical, Best Revival of a Play, and Best Play. On September 13, Audra McDonald and Leslie Odom Jr. were announced as hosts of the Tony Awards ceremony and Broadway's Back! special respectively.In explaining the decision to split the ceremony between two platforms, producers Ricky Kirshner and Glenn Weiss said that allowed for a four-hour ceremony in total, as opposed to the typical three-hour limit imposed on a television-exclusive broadcast. Kirshner said that this also gave the chance to air complete acceptance speeches for winners in all categories, saying "In the past, a lot of these awards have been in a pre-show where they got a 10 second blurb on the air. Now they get their full award on the air."
Performances
Tony Awards
- "You Can't Stop the Beat" – Marissa Jaret Winokur, Matthew Morrison, Kerry Butler, Chester Gregory & Darlene Love
- "What I Did for Love" – Ali Stroker
- "Anyone Can Whistle" – Jennifer Nettles
- "And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going" '' – Jennifer Holliday
''Broadway's Back!''
- "Broadway's Back Tonight!" – Leslie Odom Jr.
- "Burning Down the House" – American Utopia
- "My Girl" / "Ain't Too Proud to Beg" – John Legend and the cast of Ain't Too Proud
- "Lady Marmalade" / "Because We Can" – Moulin Rouge!
- Broadway Advocacy Coalition
- "Move On" – Ben Platt & Anika Noni Rose
- "Ironic" / "All I Really Want" – Jagged Little Pill
- "Beautiful City" – Josh Groban & Odom
- "The Impossible Dream (The Quest)" – Brian Stokes Mitchell
- "Somewhere" – Norm Lewis & Kelli O'Hara
- "We Don't Need Another Hero (Thunderdome)" / "The Best" / "Proud Mary" – Tina
- "It Takes Two" – Tituss Burgess & Andrew Rannells
- "You Matter to Me" – Odom & Nicolette Robinson
- "For Good" – Kristin Chenoweth & Idina Menzel
- "What You Own" – Adam Pascal & Anthony Rapp
- "Wheels of a Dream" – Audra McDonald & Mitchell
- Freestyle Love Supreme
Eligibility
;Original Plays
- A Christmas Carol
- Grand Horizons
- The Great Society
- The Height of the Storm
- The Inheritance
- Linda Vista
- My Name Is Lucy Barton
- Sea Wall/A Life
- Slave Play
- The Sound Inside
;Play Revivals
- Betrayal
- Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune
- The Rose Tattoo
- ''A Soldier's Play''
Non-competitive awards
- The Broadway Advocacy Coalition
- David Byrne's American Utopia
- Freestyle Love Supreme
Winners and nominees
Winners are listed first, and are highlighted in boldface:Productions with multiple nominations and awards
| Nominations | Production |
| 15 | Jagged Little Pill |
| 14 | Moulin Rouge! |
| 12 | Slave Play |
| 12 | Tina |
| 11 | The Inheritance |
| 7 | A Soldier's Play |
| 6 | The Sound Inside |
| 5 | A Christmas Carol |
| 4 | Betrayal |
| 4 | Sea Wall/A Life |
| 2 | Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune |
| 2 | Grand Horizons |
| 2 | Linda Vista |
| 2 | The Rose Tattoo |
| Awards | Production |
| 10 | Moulin Rouge! |
| 5 | A Christmas Carol |
| 4 | The Inheritance |
| 2 | Jagged Little Pill |
| 2 | A Soldier's Play |
Reception
Critical reviews
Greg Evans of Deadline Hollywood called the show "truly excellent television", and praised the two-part format, writing "The no-nonsense presentation of award announcements and acceptance speeches was followed by a lively special that impressively showcased contemporary Broadway musicals on their home turfs and classic reunions that felt fresh and welcome." However, he criticized the program's emphasis on musicals, commenting, "the non-musical plays got unforgivably short shrift." In Variety, Clayton Davis praised it as "a sensational awards ceremony" and described the show as "a near flawless and detailed blueprint on how should assemble their future ceremonies to bring forth an inviting place for people of all backgrounds, and an impeccable pace to keep your attention." He also commended the show's tone, concluding, "The Tonys were pure, not shy about the times we were in — and they sent a signal of hope for our futures."Conversely, however, Tim Teeman of The Daily Beast dismissed the Broadway's Back! portion of the show as "a purely commercial exercise based on telling people who kind of like theater that Broadway was back, and needs their financial support" and accused the ceremony at large of sending "mixed messages" about its industry, contrasting calls for diversity from winners and presenters with Slave Play, a work which addresses racism as a central theme, failing to win a single award. He also criticized the decision to present the vast majority of awards on the Paramount+ livestream, instead of on the CBS telecast, writing "A Tonys-themed song and dance show may suit ratings-counters at the network But if you're going to show an awards show, show an awards show."
Ratings
The Broadway's Back! special received 2.8 million viewers during its CBS telecast, an approximate 50% decline in viewership from the 73rd Tony Awards in 2019. Rick Porter of The Hollywood Reporter said that the loss may have been attributable to certain mitigating factors, such as most awards being handed out during the Paramount+ portion of the program, and the ceremony taking place in September, as opposed to its usual June date, putting it in conflict with the fall television season.''In Memoriam''
performed the song The Impossible Dream (The Quest) from The musical Man Of La Mancha and Norm Lewis AndKelli O’Hara performed Somewhere from the musical West Side Story.
- Ann Reinking
- Melvin Van Peebles
- Peter Nichols
- Valerie Harper
- Tony Tanner
- Terry Hands
- Sondra Gilman
- Shirley Knight
- Robert F.X. Sillerman
- Samuel E. Wright
- Rebecca Luker
- Joseph Shabalala
- Brent Carver
- Roger Horchow
- Herbert Kretzmer
- Orson Bean
- Franco Zeffirelli
- Isabel Toledo
- Max Wright
- James Lipton
- Darren P. DerVerna
- Lee Breuer
- Pat Collins
- Bob Swash
- Anton Coppola
- Ian Holm
- Gershon Kingsley
- Margo Lion
- Elizabeth I. McCann
- Ed Asner
- Jackie Mason
- Cloris Leachman
- Robert Fletcher
- Phyllis Newman
- Peter Larkin
- Ann Crumb
- Peter Wright
- Martin Markinson
- Biff McGuire
- Louis Johnson
- Christopher Plummer
- Thomas Jefferson Byrd
- Bob Avian
- Bernard Slade
- Richard Easton
- Martin Charnin
- Jonathan Miller
- Howell Binkley
- Marion McClinton
- Arthur Kopit
- Douglas Turner Ward
- Jerry Stiller
- Anthony Powell
- Hal Holbrook
- Bernard Gersten
- René Auberjonois
- Roger Berlind
- Al Kasha
- Ming Cho Lee
- Arthur T. Birsh
- Peter H. Hunt
- Diana Rigg
- Rip Torn
- Clarence Williams III
- Lisa Banes
- Diahann Carroll
- Allee Willis
- William F. Brown
- Ron Leibman
- Philip J. Smith
- Zoe Caldwell
- Jacki Barlia Florin
- Larry Kramer
- Gerald Hiken
- Adam Schlesinger
- Anna Quayle
- Paul Ritter
- Nick Cordero
- Olympia Dukakis
- Micki Grant
- Brian Dennehy
- Lois De Banzie
- Anthony Chisholm
- Herbert Goldsmith
- Peg Murray
- Walter C. Miller
- Cicely Tyson
- Jerry Herman
- Harold Prince
- Elliot Lawrence
- Terrence McNally