Author: The Curator

Categories Leo Frank

Watching the Tonys, thinking about church Baptist News Global – Baptist News Global

The presenters sound like ministers winging the announcements.

I am watching The 76th Annual Tony Awards, celebrating the best of Broadway, and missing the writers.

The Writers Guild of America is on strike, so they came up with a curious compromise with the Tonys. They agreed to an unscripted broadcast. Presenters are not allowed to read off prompters, but they can use cue cards. The effect was amusing at first but then became depressing like an unfortunate solo on Youth Sunday. (Imagine the opposite of Lea Michelle singing Dont Rain on My Parade.)

Brett Younger

The shows nominated for Tony Awards can be depressing enough to make everyone want to go on strike. Broadway is all about heartache.

Leopoldstadt is a heart-wrenching play about a World War II-era Viennese Jewish family, many of whom die at the hands of the Nazis.

Prima Facie comes with a trigger warning. A criminal defense attorney must rethink her views after she is sexually assaulted.

Good Night, Oscar is the true story of Oscar Levants struggles with mental illness.

Life of Pi is about a boy who survives a shipwreck, but his family does not.

This years shows take tragedy seriously war, antisemitism, misogyny, mental illness, death.

The revivals are depressing, too.

Parade is a painful story of antisemitism. In Atlanta in 1915, Leo Frank is arrested, sentenced, and lynched for the rape and murder of a teenager. The play concludes he was the innocent victim of prejudice.

Sweeney Todd is murder and revenge.

Camelot is adultery and war.

The Sign in Sidney Brusteins Window ends with a suicide.

Funny Girl ends with a seriously rained-out parade as Fanny and Nick go their separate ways.

A view of the audience during The 76th Annual Tony Awards at United Palace Theater on June 11, 2023, in New York City. (Photo by Jenny Anderson/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions )

Three new shows Kimberly Akimbo, which won the most Tonys with five, Fat Ham, and New York, New York had 22 Tony nominations and seem to fit the pattern of despair.

Kimberly Akimbo has a disease that causes her to age four times faster. Her life expectancy was 16. She is aging fast and surrounded by adults who never grow up a hypochondriacal mother, an irresponsible father, and an aunt who has only terrible ideas.

Patrick Marber, winner of Best Direction Of A Play Award for Leopoldstadt, poses in the press room during The 76th Annual Tony Awards at Radio Hotel on June 11, 2023, in New York City. (Photo by Jemal Countess/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions)

Fat Ham is Shakespeares Hamlet set at a North Carolina barbecue, a backyard celebration of Juicys moms marriage to his uncle a week after the death of his father. The fathers ghost demands that Juicy, a queer, Black, Southern, college kid, avenge his murder. Juicy asks, What do you do when God dont want you and the devil wont have you? The play deals with homophobia and the inherited trauma of Black men going in and out of prison since the Civil War.

New York, New York is based on the movie of the same name set just after World War II. Robert DeNiro and Liza Minnelli are musicians with big dreams that are not coming true. They want music, money and love and do not get them.

These three shows reflect a culture that leans in the direction of despair disease, crime, murder, racism, homophobia, greed and shattered dreams. But then each show unexpectedly chooses not to give up and leaves room for hope.

The 1977 movie New York, New York ends with the star-crossed lovers breaking up. The new musical has a loud, happy ending. If they can make it there, they can make it anywhere, and they do.

Isnt changing the ending an interesting choice?

LaChanze, winner of the awards for Best Musical for Kimberly Akimbo and Best Revival of a Play for Topdog/Underdog, poses in the press room during The 76th Annual Tony Awards at Radio Hotel on June 11, 2023, in New York City. (Photo by Cindy Ord/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions)

In the original Hamlet, nine of the 11 characters die. Fat Ham is supposed to be the same tragedy, but Juicy does not want to go down the same road as his father. He longs for hope, love and joy. To be or not to be? he wants to be. In the retelling, there are two deaths, still too many, but less than nine. Why would the playwright make the most famous tragedy hopeful?

Kimberly Akimbo ends not with Kimberlys death, but with a love scene between a tuba-playing, high school ber-nerd and a 16-year-old girl who looks like his grandmother. She has figured out how to live each day to the fullest. She wants to have an adventure while she can. The sun shines through the clouds. Hope overcomes tragedy.

The 24-hour news cycle runs on misery about 23 of those hours.

Why would Broadway celebrate optimism in a world that reveres pessimism? Our culture encourages us to give up and give in. Our national ethos promotes anxiety and belittles hope. We treat despair, relativism and cynicism as signs of intelligence. The 24-hour news cycle runs on misery about 23 of those hours.

One of the purposes of art is to challenge the status quo. When the culture is obsessed with the clouds, the best artists aim for the sun. When the national ethos seems to prefer darkness, the church has an opportunity to focus on light. Deconstruction makes room for reconstruction. People need sincerity, idealism and truth. When our country embraces gloom, Christianity points to a brighter day.

We do not have to deny the problems to recognize the joy beyond despair.

The churchs message is that we should not give up, except to give up our worries to God. We should not give in, except to give in to the love that brings Gods intentions in the world, in spite of what gets the most attention. When things are falling apart, God comes in a new way of seeing things and a new sense of purpose.

When it feels like whoever is supposed to be writing our story is on strike, the church gets to say, Life can be a tragedy, but it is also a brand-new musical.

Brett Younger serves as senior minister at Plymouth Church in Brooklyn, N.Y.

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Categories Leo Frank

Don’t miss these 23 UNCSA alumni connections to 2023 Tony … – UNCSA

Named for actress, stage director and philanthropist Antoinette Perry (1888-1946), who founded the American Theatre Wing, The Tony Awards recognizes excellence in live Broadway theatre. Held at the United Palace Theater in New York City, the 2023 Tony Awards was unscripted due to the ongoing WGA writers' strike and a historic night with the first openly nonbinary actors to win.

With connections to "Leopoldstadt" and "Parade," which took home top prizes, musical thriller "Sweeney Todd," musical comedy "Some Like it Hot" and more, UNCSA made a strong appearance in the night's award-winning productions.

Here's a list of all the 2023 Tony Award-winning productions with UNCSA connections in alphabetical order.

"Leopoldstadt" won the Tony Award for best play, featured actor in a play, direction in a play and costume design in a play. Regarded by the Wall Street Journal as an "inexpressibly moving, majestic play," "Leopoldstadt" is a passionate drama of love and endurance that begins in the last days of 1899.

Several School of Design & Production alumni have connections to the production, including Brad Peterson(B.F.A. '09), who served as the video programmer, Henry Wilen (B.F.A. '18), who served as the moving light programmer for the play and Tracy Cowit (M.F.A. '16), who served as was the Assistant Sound Engineer on Leopoldstadt.

"Life of Pi" won the Tony Awards for sound design play, lighting design play and scenic design play. Based on Yann Martel's Bestselling Novel, "Life of Pi" is an epic tale of endurance and hope that follows a sixteen-year-old boy named Pi who survives a shipwreck on a lifeboat with the most unlikely of companions: a Royal Bengal tiger.

Several alumni have connections to the production, including School of Dance alumnusMatthew Murphy (H.S. '03) and Design & Production alumni Brad Peterson(B.F.A. '09). Additionally, School of Drama alumni Avery Glymph (B.F.A. '95) played the roles ofFather Martin and Admiral Jackson and Brian Thomas Abraham (B.F.A. '99) played Cook and the voice of Richard Parker in the production.

"New York, New York" won the Tony Awards for scenic design musical. Loosely based on the 1977 film of the same name, "New York, New York" is a glittering love letter to the most fantastic city in the world. The brand-new musical follows a group of New Yorkers who unite to chase their dreams of music, money and love.

Several School of Design & Production alumni have connections to the production, including Johnny Milani (B.F.A. '09) as the production stage manager; Romello Huins (B.F.A. '21) as the assistant scenic designer; JoAnn Battat (B.F.A. '21) as assistant hair supervisor and alumna Rose Rue (B.F.A. '22) as a hairstylist.

"Parade" won the Tony Awards for revival musical and lighting design musical. A musical with a book by Alfred Uhry and music and lyrics by Jason Robert Brown, "Parade" is a dramatization of the 1913 trial and imprisonment, and 1915 lynching, of Jewish American Leo Frank in Georgia.

Several alumni have connections to the production. Design & Production alumni Bethany J. Itterly's (B.F.A. '11) company Bethany Joy Costumes created costume pieces for the play. Rebecca Eckes (B.F.A. '18, M.F.A. '21) is a draper for Bethany Joy Costumes and worked on the production with the company. Additional Design & Production alumni who worked on the production include M. Meriwether Goldstein (B.F.A. '10), who was the assistant costume designer on "Parade." Drama alumna Courtnee Carter (B.F.A. '16) played the role of Angela in "Parade."

"Prima Facie" won the Tony Award for the lead actress play. The solo drama follows the young, brilliant criminal defense barrister (or attorney), Tessa, whose view of the legal system and its murky moral loopholes abruptly shifts when she is sexually assaulted.

Design & Production alumnusBrad Peterson(B.F.A. '09) served as the associate video designer for the play.

"Shucked" cast member Alex Newell made history as the first out nonbinary person to win the Tony Awards for featured actor musical. The show follows the story of a brave small-town woman who leaves home searching for someone to figure out why all the corn in the county keeps dying.

Several alumni have connections to the production, including Dance alumnusMatthew Murphy (H.S. '03), who served as the production photographer, and Design & Production alumnus Kenneth Wills (B.F.A. '12), who served as the associate lighting designer for the production.

"Some Like It Hot" won the Tony Awards for orchestration, choreography, costume design musical and lead actor musical. Like fellow winner Alex Newell, "Some Like It Hot" star J. Harrison Ghee made history as the first nonbinary person to win the Tony Awards for lead actor musical. Set in Chicago, when Prohibition has everyone thirsty for excitement, the musical tells the story of two musicians forced to flee the city after witnessing a mob hit. It follows the life-chasing, life-changing trip of a lifetime that ensues.

Several alumni have connections to the production, including Dance alumnusMatthew Murphy (H.S. '03), who served as the production photographer and School of Music alumna Mary Mitchell Campbell (H.S. '92) served as the the music supervisor for the production. Design and Production alumni Caitlin Molloy, who served as the production'shair and makeup supervisor,Sarah Penland(M.F.A. '22), who served as the assistant production manager and Sean Beach (B.F.A. '09), who served as the lighting programmer.

"Sweeney Todd" won the Tony Awards for sound design in a musical and lighting design in a musical. The show follows the unsettling tale of a Victorian-era barber who returns home to London after fifteen years of exile to take revenge on the corrupt judge who ruined his life.

Several alumni have connections to the production, including Dance alumnusMatthew Murphy (H.S. '03), who served as the production photographer. Design & Production alumni Alex Fogel (B.F.A. '09) served as the lighting programmer, Jaechelle Johnson (B.F.A. '16) served as the assistant sound designer and Craig Stelzenmuller (B.F.A. '01) served as the associate lighting designer.

"The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window" won the Tony Award for featured actress play. Set amidst a stormy political campaign in 1960s Greenwich Village, the play focuses on events after Sidney hangs a political sign urging the end of bossism in the window of his Greenwich Village apartment.

Several Design & Production alumni are attached to the production, including Sarah Penland(M.F.A. '22), who served as the assistant production manager for the production, and Jeremiah Lamm (B.F.A. '09), who owns Empire Technical Fabrications and built the scenery for the production.

During the 2023 Tony Awards, the company of "Camelot" performs "The Lusty Month of May" and "Camelot." The performance featured Drama alumnus Matias De La Flor (B.F.A. '22) in the ensemble.

"Camelot" follows King Arthur from a young, ambitious, idealistic King who dreams of creating a just society to the despairing king bearing witness to his dream's demise.

Did you catch a connection to a 2023 Tonys win that is not included on this list?Send us an emailand we will update the story.

by Natalie Shrader

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