38th Tony Awards

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38th Tony Awards

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38th Tony Awards
Date June 3, 1984
Venue Gershwin Theatre, New York City, New York
Host Julie Andrews and Robert Preston
TV in the United States
Network CBS
 < 37th Tony Awards 39th > 

The 38th Annual Tony Awards were held on June 3, 1984 at the Gershwin Theatre and broadcast by CBS television. Hosts were Julie Andrews and Robert Preston.[1]

Presenters and Performers:[2] Carol Channing, Marilyn Cooper, Nancy Dussault, Robert Goulet, Robert Guillaume, Beth Howland, Larry Kert, Michele Lee, Dorothy Loudon, Shirley MacLaine, Liza Minnelli, Mary Tyler Moore, Anita Morris, Bernadette Peters, Anthony Quinn, Tony Randall, Tony Roberts, Chita Rivera, Leslie Uggams, Gwen Verdon, Raquel Welch.

Musicals represented:[2]

  • Baby, "I Want It All"-Liz Callaway, Catherine Cox, Beth Fowler;
  • La Cage aux Folles, "We Are What We Are"- Company/"I Am What I Am"- George Hearn;
  • The Tap Dance Kid, "Fabulous Feet"- Hinton Battle and Company;
  • The Rink, "Wallflower"- Chita Rivera and Liza Minnelli;
  • Sunday in the Park with George, "Sunday" - Mandy Patinkin, Bernadette Peters and Company.

There was a special salute to the songs of John Kander and Fred Ebb, Jerry Herman and Stephen Sondheim.[1] The Finale was a medley of Jerry Herman songs, including "Milk and Honey' and "Shalom" (Robert Goulet), "Before the Parade Passes By" (Carol Channing), "It Only Takes a Moment" (Nancy Dussault), "Hello, Dolly!" (chorus plus Channing), "If He Walked Into My Life" (Leslie Uggams) and "Mame" (Dorothy Loudon); a Mack & Mabel medley with Robert Preston ("I Won't Send Roses") and Bernadette Peters ("Time Heals Everything"); and a La Cage aux Folles segment with Gene Barry, the Cagelles, and George Hearn, ("I Am What I Am").[1] The first Brooks Atkinson Award for lifetime contribution to the theater was given to Al Hirschfeld.[3]

Contents

Winners and nominees

Winners in bold

Production

Best Play

  • The Real Thing by Tom Stoppard. (Produced by Emanuel Azenberg, The Shubert Organization, Icarus Productions, Byron Goldman, Ivan Bloch, Roger Berlind, and Michael Codron)
  • Glengarry Glen Ross by David Mamet. (Produced by Elliot Martin, The Shubert Organization, Arnold Bernhard, and The Goodman Theater)
  • Noises Off by Michael Frayn. (Produced by James Nederlander, Robert Fryer, Jerome Minskoff, The Kennedy Center, Michael Codron, Jonathan Farkas, and MTM Enterprises, Inc.)
  • Play Memory by Joanna Glass. (Produced by Alexander H. Cohen and Hildy Parks)

Best Musical

  • La Cage aux Folles (Produced by Allan Carr, Kenneth D. Greenblatt, Marvin A. Krauss, Stewart F. Lane, James M. Nederlander, Martin Richards, Barry Brown, and Fritz Holt
  • Baby (Produced by James B. Freydberg, Ivan Bloch, Kenneth-John Productions, Suzanne J. Schwartz and Manuscript Productions)
  • The Tap Dance Kid (Produced by Stanley White, Evelyn Barron, Harvey J. Klaris, and Michel Stuart)

Reproduction (Play or Musical)

Performance

Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play

Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Play

Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical

Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical

Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play

Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Play

Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical

Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical

Craft

Best Direction of a Play

Best Direction of a Musical

Best Choreography

Best Book of a Musical

Best Original Score Written for the Theatre

Best Scenic Design

  • Tony Straiges (Sunday in the Park with George)
  • Clarke Dunham (End of the World)
  • Peter Larkin (The Rink)
  • Tony Walton (The Real Thing)

Tony Award for Best Costume Design

Tony Award for Best Lighting Design

Special awards

  • To director Peter Brook and producer Alexander H. Cohen for La Tragedie de Carmen, for outstanding achievement in musical theatre[4]
  • Peter Feller, a master craftsman who has devoted forty years to theatre stagecraft and magic
  • A Chorus Line producer Joseph Papp was presented with a special Gold Tony Award in honor of becoming Broadway's longest-running musical[4]
Regional Theatre Award

References

  1. ^ a b c Gans, Andrew.playbill.com article, July 1, 2005, "Diva Talk: A Backwards Glance—the 1984 Tonys PLUS Ripley, Menzel and Jones" playbill.com, July 1, 2005
  2. ^ a b "1984 - 38th Annual Tony Awards" tonyawards.com, accessed April 30, 2011
  3. ^ O'Connor, John J. "The 38th Tony Awards" The New York Times, June 5, 1984, p. C17
  4. ^ a b Freedman, Samuel G. " 'Real Thing' And 'La Cage' Dominate The Tony Awards", The New York Times, June 4, 1984, p.C11

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