It’s just about an hour until the Tony Awards kick off… and the webcast is streaming from the red carpet…Christine Ebersole looks great, by the way, and so does Donna Murphy (but God help whoever sits behind her and that huge hair), ...and tonight’s show should be pretty great, even though that other big event is taking place over on HBO.
This has always been my favorite of all the award galas. Recently, while watching lots of this season’s big moments on YouTube (especially Spring Awakening and Company), I remember getting my first VCR just in time to record the telecast from 1984; that was the year Julie Andrews and Robert Preston co-hosted, when La Cage beat Sunday in the Park with George for the Best Musical prize, when Chita Rivera finally won her first Tony, when Bea Arthur and Angela Lansbury were reunited for a show-stopping rendition of “Bosom Buddies.” It was almost too much. Every single viewer had no choice but to embrace, with pride, their inner gaiety, if only for the remainder of that singularly sensational evening.
That was also the year that the original production of The Real Thing swept the non-musical field. That was a great production: Jeremy Irons, Glenn Close, Christine Baranski (all winning Tonys), not to mention Peter Gallagher and Cynthia Nixon, all under Mike Nichols’ direction. To this day, one of those “great nights in the theater” that you never forget. Now, I also recall how the great Rosemary Harris was nominated that season for the revival of Heartbreak House. She lost to Close who played Annie in The Real Thing. Many years later, Harris would be nominated for Waiting in the Wings, and she lost again, this time to the actress playing Annie the revival of The Real Thing who also happened to be her daughter, Jennifer Ehle.
I’ll probably be one of about ten viewers outside of New York who tune into CBS tonight and then catch The Sopranos a little later. I doubt that David Chase will disappoint us with anything like the ultimate M*A*S*H or Seinfeld sendoffs, and even if it doesn’t reach the brilliance of, say, “White Caps” or “Long Term Parking,” it’s already guaranteed a place in TV history simply for being the last one. I’m not really sure what to look for this evening since my expectations have been so wonderfully undermined during the past two seasons. However, in retrospect, everything makes sense within the world of these characters. (Of course Tony had to kill Christopher.) I think I actually gasped when Adriana showed up in Carmela’s dream during the Paris visit. And there is a look that Aida Turtorro gives Steven Schirripa in the recent “Soprano Home Movies” that is so great, so heartbreaking, that you knew, then and there, Bobby was doomed. Edie Falco’s Carmela is the one I’ll miss the most (we even named our dog after her) with Lorraine Bracco’s Dr. Melfi pulling a close second. And I think she should still get a retroactive Emmy for the “Employee of the Month” episode.
Gotta wrap this up. It’s almost curtain time at Radio City.
This has always been my favorite of all the award galas. Recently, while watching lots of this season’s big moments on YouTube (especially Spring Awakening and Company), I remember getting my first VCR just in time to record the telecast from 1984; that was the year Julie Andrews and Robert Preston co-hosted, when La Cage beat Sunday in the Park with George for the Best Musical prize, when Chita Rivera finally won her first Tony, when Bea Arthur and Angela Lansbury were reunited for a show-stopping rendition of “Bosom Buddies.” It was almost too much. Every single viewer had no choice but to embrace, with pride, their inner gaiety, if only for the remainder of that singularly sensational evening.
That was also the year that the original production of The Real Thing swept the non-musical field. That was a great production: Jeremy Irons, Glenn Close, Christine Baranski (all winning Tonys), not to mention Peter Gallagher and Cynthia Nixon, all under Mike Nichols’ direction. To this day, one of those “great nights in the theater” that you never forget. Now, I also recall how the great Rosemary Harris was nominated that season for the revival of Heartbreak House. She lost to Close who played Annie in The Real Thing. Many years later, Harris would be nominated for Waiting in the Wings, and she lost again, this time to the actress playing Annie the revival of The Real Thing who also happened to be her daughter, Jennifer Ehle.
I’ll probably be one of about ten viewers outside of New York who tune into CBS tonight and then catch The Sopranos a little later. I doubt that David Chase will disappoint us with anything like the ultimate M*A*S*H or Seinfeld sendoffs, and even if it doesn’t reach the brilliance of, say, “White Caps” or “Long Term Parking,” it’s already guaranteed a place in TV history simply for being the last one. I’m not really sure what to look for this evening since my expectations have been so wonderfully undermined during the past two seasons. However, in retrospect, everything makes sense within the world of these characters. (Of course Tony had to kill Christopher.) I think I actually gasped when Adriana showed up in Carmela’s dream during the Paris visit. And there is a look that Aida Turtorro gives Steven Schirripa in the recent “Soprano Home Movies” that is so great, so heartbreaking, that you knew, then and there, Bobby was doomed. Edie Falco’s Carmela is the one I’ll miss the most (we even named our dog after her) with Lorraine Bracco’s Dr. Melfi pulling a close second. And I think she should still get a retroactive Emmy for the “Employee of the Month” episode.
Gotta wrap this up. It’s almost curtain time at Radio City.
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