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Ensemble-driven plays like “Purpose” and “English” received a slew of nominations, while Denzel Washington, Jake Gyllenhaal and Idina Menzel were overlooked.

May 1, 2025Updated 2:07 p.m. ET
Stars abounded. Attendance rebounded. Performers raised the roof and so did ticket prices. This was a big season for Broadway, finally achieving a credible post-Covid rebuild — but as what? Think of the Tony Award nominations as tea leaves, hinting at where the commercial theater has been and predicting where it’s going. And also, with 29 of the 42 eligible productions receiving nods, offering plenty of opportunities to celebrate surprises and bemoan omissions (or vice versa).
A boys’ club, but women rule.
To look at this season’s plays you would think Broadway was still a boys’ club. Men dominated the dramatic leading roles; many nonmusicals had no leading actresses at all. That left just nine women eligible for the standard five nominations, unless you count separately each of the 26 characters played by Sarah Snook in “The Picture of Dorian Gray.” (She nabbed just one nod.) But on the musical side of the ledger, women totally ruled, with so many star performances that some of Broadway’s biggest names were inevitably going to be snubbed. After the Sondheim revue “Old Friends” shuffled Bernadette Peters and Lea Salonga into the supporting category — which didn’t get them nominated anyway — that still left Adrienne Warren (“The Last Five Years”), Sutton Foster (“Once Upon a Mattress”) and Idina Menzel (“Redwood”) out in the cold. Especially Menzel, who in the course of that eco-musical sang a dozen songs while climbing a 200-foot tree and dancing upside-down in midair. As she proved in “Wicked,” it’s not easy being green.
‘Othello’ takes it in the back.
“My heart is turned to stone. I strike it, and it hurts my hand.” That’s Shakespeare’s Othello talking, but it could well be the cast and creative team of the Broadway revival, which received not a single Tony nomination. Most notably, both Denzel Washington and Jake Gyllenhaal were shut out in the category of lead actor in a play, which even made room for an unusual six nominees. “Romeo + Juliet” the season’s other Shakespeare production that drew mixed reviews, did squeak in for best revival of a play. Then again, the “Othello” producers didn’t take the blow lying down; within minutes of the nominations announcement, they issued a news release indicating that the show, which has been earning upward of $3 million a week during its limited run, had recouped its costs.
George Clooney gets lucky.
“Good Night, and Good Luck,” the other box office blockbuster of the spring, was always an iffy proposition for best new play, given that it closely resembles the screenplay of the 2005 film on which it is based. Still, Tony nominators paid tribute to its co-writer/star/man of conscience George Clooney with a nod as best lead actor in a play for his grave and bracing depiction of the 1950s-era watchdog journalist Edward R. Murrow. The show’s timing paid off — not to mention the star’s willingness to dye his hair oil-black for his Broadway debut.
It’s all in the family for ‘Purpose.’
Last year, Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’s “Appropriate” was nominated for eight Tony Awards. “Purpose,” his play about a prominent Black political family didn’t quite best that, but five of its six nominations were in the acting categories, an unusually high number for an ensemble-driven play in which the dining room pyrotechnics are apportioned so equally. (Sadly there was no place at the Tonys table for Alana Arenas, who gave a glamorous and explosive turn as the daughter-in-law, Morgan.) Sanaz Toossi’s “English” and Kimberly Belflower’s “John Proctor Is the Villain,” two other ensemble-powered dramas, netted three acting nominations each.