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Award for best Broadway musical
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Musical is given annually to the best new Broadway musical, as determined by Outer Critics Circle. The award is one of the ceremony's longest-standing awards, having been presented each year since 1951. The award goes to the producers of the winning musical. A musical is eligible for consideration in a given year if it has not previously been produced on Broadway and is not "determined... to be a 'classic' or in the historical or popular repertoire", otherwise it may be considered for Best Revival of a Musical.[1]
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| Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Musical | |
|---|---|
| Awarded for | Best Musical |
| Location | New York City |
| Presented by | Outer Critics Circle |
| Currently held by | Moulin Rouge! (2020) |
| Website | TonyAwards.com |
Best Musical is the final award presented at the Tony Awards ceremony. Excerpts from the musicals that are nominated for this award are usually performed during the ceremony before this award is presented.
This is a list of winners and nominations for the Tony Award for Best Musical.
Winners and nominees
1950s
| Season | Musical | Book | Music | Lyrics | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1949-1950 | |||||
| The Consul | Gian Carlo Menotti | [2] | |||
| 1950-1951 | |||||
| Guys and Dolls | Abe Burrows & Jo Swerling | Frank Loesser | [3] | ||
| 1951-1952 | |||||
| No award given | [4] | ||||
| 1952-1953 | |||||
| Wonderful Town | Jerome Chodorov & Joseph Fields | Leonard Bernstein | Betty Comden & Adolph Green | [5] | |
| 1953-1954 | |||||
| Kismet | Luther Davis & Charles Lederer | Alexander Borodin | Chet Forrest & Bob Wright | [6] | |
| 1954-1955 | |||||
| 3 for Tonight | Walter Schumann | Robert Wells | [7] | ||
| 1955-1956 | |||||
| My Fair Lady | Alan Jay Lerner | Frederick Loewe | Lerner | [8] | |
| 1956-1957 | |||||
| Awarded to the New York City Center Light Opera Company for their productions of Lerner and Loewe's Brigadoon and Rodgers and Hammerstein's Carousel | [9] | ||||
| 1957-1958 | |||||
| The Music Man | Franklin Lacey & Meredith Willson | Willson | [10] | ||
| 1958-1959 | |||||
| No award given | [11] | ||||
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
| Season | Musical | Book | Music | Lyrics |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020-2021 74th Tony Awards | ||||
| Moulin Rouge! | John Logan | Various | ||
| Jagged Little Pill | Diablo Cody | Glen Ballard & Alanis Morissette | Morissette | |
| Tina | Katori Hall, Frank Ketelaar & Kees Prins | Various | ||
Records
Accumulated records as of 2019:[14]
- The Producers has won the most Tonys, winning in 12 categories, including Best Musical.
- Hamilton is the most-nominated production in Tony history, with 16 nominations.
- The Sound of Music and Fiorello! are the only two musicals to date to have ever tied for the Best Musical award (in 1960).
- Passion is the shortest-running winner, with 280 performances.
- The Phantom of the Opera is the longest-running Best Musical winner, with 16 previews and 13,370 performances before performances were temporarily suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Hallelujah, Baby! is the only show thus far to have won the Tony Award for Best Musical after closing.
- Fun Home is the first musical written entirely by a team of women to win the Tony Award for Best Musical.
- Kiss Me, Kate and Titanic are the only two shows to win the Tony Award for Best Musical without any Tony nominations in the acting categories. (In Kiss Me, Kate's case, only winners were announced that year, and only in the lead performance categories.)
- What is now the Richard Rodgers Theatre has housed more Best Musical winners than any other theater on Broadway: Guys and Dolls (1951), Damn Yankees (1956), Redhead (1959), How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying (1962), 1776 (1969), Raisin (1974), A Chorus Line (1976), Nine (1982), In the Heights (2008), and Hamilton (2016).
- The Mystery of Edwin Drood was the first winner of the Tony Award for Best Musical to be entirely written by one man, Rupert Holmes. Rent (by Jonathan Larson) and Hamilton (by Lin-Manuel Miranda) also achieved this feat. Hadestown is the first musical entirely written by one woman, Anaïs Mitchell, to win this award.
- The 74th Tony Awards (2020) is the first ceremony in which only jukebox musicals were nominated.
