Brandon Uranowitz and Bonnie Milligan were the first big winners as the theater world gathered together again on Sunday evening for the Tony Awards, an annual celebration of all things Broadway.
Uranowitz joked that his ‘imposter syndrome is on fire’ as he made an emotional speech to accept the Tony Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Play, while Milligan won for Kimberly Akimbo in the Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Musical category.
This year’s ceremony is the latest production to be impacted by the ongoing Writers Guild of America Strike, as film and television writers fight against major studios and streamers for better pay and residuals, along with assurances that they won’t be phased out in favor of AI-created scripts. It marks the first time in 35 years that the Tonys were afflicted by the WGA strike.
Despite the challenges, the show will still go on.
The ceremony airs on CBS in an unscripted format, and the union has agreed not to picket the event after negotiations. Broadway icon Lin-Manuel Miranda has also dropped out as writer of the opening segment in solidarity with the WGA.

Winners! Brandon Uranowitz and Bonnie Milligan were the first big winners as the theater world gathered together again on Sunday evening for the Tony Awards, an annual celebration of all things Broadway

Master of ceremonies: West Side Story actress — and Academy Award winner — Ariana DeBose hosted this year’s event from the United Palace Theatre in Washington Heights. She said the show featured no script in solidarity with the WGA strike
West Side Story actress — and Academy Award winner — Ariana DeBose hosted this year’s event from the United Palace Theatre in Washington Heights.
She opened the show in a backstage dressing room as a saxophonist played Billy Strayhorn and Duke Ellington’s Take The ‘A’ Train as dancers flooded the theater.
Nominee Samuel L. Jackson even made an appearance when she invited him to stand up from his seat in the audience, though he lost out on the first award of the evening.
DeBose also referenced opening a script with blank pages in the dance and noted that it was in solidarity with members of the WGA, before explaining how the Tony’s and the Writers Guild found a compromise.
In his impassioned speech, Uranowitz spoke out about antisemitism and the ‘false promise of assimilation,’ both of which are explored in his play Leopoldstadt. He also addressed his parents in a teary moment.
‘The only thing I’ve wanted in this life is to be able to repay you for the sacrifices you’ve made for me,’ he said, addressing them in the audience.
Milligan said that she had her late father’s voice, and she brought him with her everywhere.
The acclaimed playwright Suzan-Lori Parks was honored with the award for best revival for her play Topdog/Underdog, which premiered off-Broadway in 2001.
The next award was for Best Direction of a Play. Patrick Marber won for directing Tom Stoppard’s play Leopoldstadt, and he joked about how the non-actors didn’t get the same excitement from the show.

Living legend: The acclaimed playwright Suzan-Lori Parks was honored with the award for best revival for her play Topdog/Underdog, which premiered off-Broadway in 2001; seen with husband Christian Konopka

Something’s different: Patrick Marber won for directing Tom Stoppard’s play Leopoldstadt, and he joked about how the non-actors didn’t get the same excitement from the show

Proud: Michael Arden won Best Direction of a Musical for Parade. He spoke out in support of transgender youths and queer performers. ‘Growing up, I was called the F-word more times than I can remember, and now all I can say is that I’m a f***** with a Tony,’ he said to boisterous applause
Michael Arden won Best Direction of a Musical for Parade. He spoke out in support of transgender youths and queer performers.
‘Everyone in this room needs you and will fight alongside you, and we’ll win,’ he said defiantly before reclaiming an anti-gay slur.
‘Growing up, I was called the F-word more times than I can remember, and now all I can say is that I’m a f***** with a Tony,’ he said, which brought the crowd to its feet in applause and cheers.
Miriam Silverman was awarded Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play for The Sign In Sidney Brustein’s Window, written by Lorraine Hansberry.
She emphasized her support for the WGA strike and remembered her late father, noting that he was ‘the one who told me that day in the ICU that I should stick with this play, no matter what, even if I wanted to quit, knowing how much it meant to me.’
Viewers will still be entertained with plenty of performances from a variety of Tony-nominated musicals on stage.
Audience members will be serenaded by the casts of Into the Woods; New York, New York; Shucked; Beautiful Noise; Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber Of Fleet Street; and more.
It will also feature performances from the cast of the Lea Michele–led musical Funny Girl.
As far as nominations, Some Like It Hot, the musical adaptation of the classic Marilyn Monroe–starring comedy, is up for the most Tonys with a whooping 13 nominations.
It will be battling it out for Best Musical against & Juliet; Kimberly Akimbo; New York, New York; and Shucked.

Supporting part: Miriam Silverman was awarded Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play for The Sign In Sidney Brustein’s Window, written by Lorraine Hansberry


Stunner: Jessica Chastain was among the A-list nominees for Best Leading Actress of a Play for A Doll’s House. Josh Groban was nominated for Leading Actor in a Musical for the title role in Stephen Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Nominations for Best Play include Ain’t No Mo’, Between Riverside and Crazy, Cost of Living, Fat Ham and Leopoldstadt.
In a statement, Jack Sussman, executive vice president of specials, music, live events and alternative programming at CBS, said of the show: ‘CBS has been home to the Tony Awards for more than 40 years.
‘We are proud to once again celebrate the best of theater this season, and continue our support for Broadway, the broader theater community and all the incredible artistic talents both on stage and behind the scenes who bring the shows to life.’
‘This year’s Tony Award nominees are a reflection of a tremendous year of Broadway,’ Charlotte St. Martin, president of The Broadway League and Heather Hitchens, president and CEO of the American Theatre Wing, said in a statement.
‘The show will feature performances by Broadway’s brightest lights — from breakthrough performers to industry icons — in recognition of the momentous productions wowing audiences worldwide.’
The Tony Awards marks the latest product impacted by the ongoing picket lines.
Drew Barrymore dropped out of hosting the MTV Movie & Television Awards last month in solidarity with the writers, and the event moved forward in a significantly stripped-down, pre-recorded fashion.
Film and television writers are on strike over complaints that studios have underpaid them for years, particularly when it comes to streaming programs that offer almost no residuals over time. They are also fighting back against studios’ attempts to shrink writers’s rooms, to shorten the number of episodes of television seasons and to leave open the possibility of replacing human writers with so-called ‘AI’ programs.
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