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词条 42nd Tony Awards
释义

  1. The Ceremony

  2. Winners and nominees

  3. Special awards

  4. References

  5. External links

{{Infobox award
| name = 42nd Tony Awards
| image =
| caption =
| date = June 5, 1988
| location = Minskoff Theatre, New York City, New York
| host = Angela Lansbury
| network = CBS
| previous = 41st
| main = Tony Awards
| next = 43rd
}}

The 42nd Tony Awards ceremony was held on June 5, 1988, at the Minskoff Theatre and broadcast live on CBS, hosted by Angela Lansbury. (Lansbury has hosted or co-hosted more Tony Award ceremonies than any other individual: 1968, 1971, 1987, 1988, and 1989).

At these Tony Awards, the longest-running musical on Broadway, Andrew Lloyd Webber's Phantom of the Opera, competed for awards and received the season's Best Musical award.

Stephen Sondheim has won more Tony Awards than any other composer, with seven Tony Awards: Best Music and Best Lyrics for Company (1971); and Best Score for Follies (1972), A Little Night Music (1973), Sweeney Todd (1979), Into the Woods (1988) and Passion (1994).

The Ceremony

Musicals represented were:[1]

  • A Chorus Line, "Music and the Mirror" - Donna McKechnie
  • Anything Goes, "Anything Goes" - Patti LuPone and Company
  • Dreamgirls, "One Night Only"/"Dreamgirls" - Sheryl Lee Ralph, Loretta Devine and Terry Burrell;
  • Into the Woods, "Into the Woods"/"Children Will Listen" - Phylicia Rashad and Company;
  • The Phantom of the Opera, Last verse of "The Phantom of the Opera" and "The Music of The Night" - Sarah Brightman and Michael Crawford;
  • Romance/Romance, "I'll Always Remember the Song"/"It's Not Too Late" - Scott Bakula, Alison Fraser and Company
  • Sarafina!, "Sarafina!" - Company

Plays represented were:[1]

M. Butterfly, Scene with John Lithgow and B. D. Wong;

Joe Turner's Come and Gone, Scene with Mel Winkler, Ed Hall and Delroy Lindo;

A Walk in the Woods, Scene with Sam Waterston and Robert Prosky; and

Speed-the-Plow, Scene with Joe Mantegna and Ron Silver.

A tribute to the late Michael Bennett was performed by Donna McKechnie of the original Chorus Line and the three original Dreamgirls, Terry Burrell, Loretta Devine and Sheryl Lee Ralph.[2]

Winners and nominees

Winners are in bold
Best PlayBest Musical
  • M. Butterfly – David Henry Hwang
    • A Walk in the Woods – Lee Blessing
    • Joe Turner's Come and Gone – August Wilson
    • Speed-the-Plow – David Mamet
  • The Phantom of the Opera
    • Into the Woods
    • Romance/Romance
    • Sarafina!
Best RevivalBest Book of a Musical
  • Anything Goes
    • A Streetcar Named Desire
    • Cabaret
    • Dreamgirls
  • James Lapine – Into the Woods
    • Lee Breuer – The Gospel at Colonus
    • Richard Stilgoe and Andrew Lloyd Webber – The Phantom of the Opera
    • Barry Harman – Romance/Romance
Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a PlayBest Performance by a Leading Actress in a Play
  • Ron Silver – Speed-the-Plow as Charlie Fox
    • Derek Jacobi – Breaking the Code as Alan Turing
    • John Lithgow – M. Butterfly as Rene Gallimard
    • Robert Prosky – A Walk in the Woods as Andrey Botvinnik
  • Joan Allen – Burn This as Anna Mann
    • Blythe Danner – A Streetcar Named Desire as Blanche Du Bois
    • Glenda Jackson – Macbeth as Lady Macbeth
    • Frances McDormand – A Streetcar Named Desire as Stella Kowalski
Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a MusicalBest Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical
  • Michael Crawford – The Phantom of the Opera as The Phantom of the Opera
    • Scott Bakula – Romance/Romance as Alfred Von Wilmers/Sam
    • David Carroll – Chess as Anatoly
    • Howard McGillin – Anything Goes as Billy Crocker
  • Joanna Gleason – Into the Woods as Baker's Wife
    • Alison Fraser – Romance/Romance as Josefine Weninger/Monica
    • Judy Kuhn – Chess as Florence
    • Patti LuPone – Anything Goes as Reno Sweeney
Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a PlayBest Performance by a Featured Actress in a Play
  • BD Wong – M. Butterfly as Song Liling
    • Michael Gough – Breaking the Code as Dillwyn Knox
    • Lou Liberatore – Burn This as Larry
    • Delroy Lindo – Joe Turner's Come and Gone as Herald Loomis
  • L. Scott Caldwell – Joe Turner's Come and Gone as Bertha Holly
    • Kimberleigh Aarn – Joe Turner's Come and Gone as Mattie Campbell
    • Kate Nelligan – Serious Money as Various Characters
    • Kimberly Scott – Joe Turner's Come and Gone as Molly Cunningham
Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a MusicalBest Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical
  • Bill McCutcheon – Anything Goes as Moonface Martin
    • Anthony Heald – Anything Goes as Lord Evelyn Oakleigh
    • Werner Klemperer – Cabaret as Herr Schultz
    • Robert Westenberg – Into the Woods as Wolf/Cinderella's Prince
  • Judy Kaye – The Phantom of the Opera as Carlotta Guidicelli
    • Leleti Khumalo – Sarafina! as Sarafina
    • Alyson Reed – Cabaret as Sally Bowles
    • Regina Resnik – Cabaret as Fraulein Schneider
Best Original Score (Music and/or Lyrics) Written for the TheatreBest Choreography
  • Into the Woods – Stephen Sondheim (music and lyrics)
    • The Phantom of the Opera – Andrew Lloyd Webber (music) and Charles Hart and Richard Stilgoe (lyrics)
    • Romance/Romance – Keith Herrmann (music) and Barry Harman (lyrics)
    • Sarafina! – Mbongeni Ngema and Hugh Masakela (music and lyrics)
  • Michael Smuin – Anything Goes
    • Lar Lubovitch – Into the Woods
    • Gillian Lynne – The Phantom of the Opera
    • Ndaba Mhlongo and Mbongeni Ngema – Sarafina!
Best Direction of a PlayBest Direction of a Musical
  • John Dexter – M. Butterfly
    • Gregory Mosher – Speed-the-Plow
    • Lloyd Richards – Joe Turner's Come and Gone
    • Clifford Williams – Breaking the Code
  • Harold Prince – The Phantom of the Opera
    • James Lapine – Into the Woods
    • Mbongeni Ngema – Sarafina!
    • Jerry Zaks – Anything Goes
Best Scenic DesignBest Costume Design
  • Maria Björnson – The Phantom of the Opera
    • Eiko Ishioka – M. Butterfly
    • Tony Straiges – Into the Woods
    • Tony Walton – Anything Goes
  • Maria Björnson – The Phantom of the Opera
    • Ann Hould-Ward – Into the Woods
    • Eiko Ishioka – M. Butterfly
    • Tony Walton – Anything Goes
Best Lighting Design
  • Andrew Bridge – The Phantom of the Opera
    • Paul Gallo – Anything Goes
    • Richard Nelson – Into the Woods
    • Andy Phillips – M. Butterfly

Special awards

//Regional Theatre Tony Award">Regional Theatre Tony Award
  • South Coast Repertory, Costa Mesa, CA
Special Awards
  • Brooklyn Academy of Music

References

1. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20110519173408/http://http/ "1988 - 42nd Annual Tony Awards"] tonyawards.com, accessed April 29, 2011
2. ^Rothstein, Mervyn.[https://www.nytimes.com/1988/06/06/theater/phantom-of-the-opera-wins-seven-tonys-best-play-butterfly.html?scp=1&sq=%22Tony+Award%22&st=nyt " 'Phantom Of The Opera' Wins Seven Tonys; Best Play: 'Butterfly' "] New York Times, June 6, 1988

External links

  • Tony Awards Official Site
{{Tony Awards}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Tony Awards, 42}}

5 : Tony Awards ceremonies|1988 in theatre|1988 theatre awards|1988 awards in the United States|1988 in New York City

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