Tonys should aid success of 'Billy' and 'Carnage'

By Michael Kuchwara

Associated Press

Published: Monday, June 8 2009 5:00 p.m. MDT

From left, David Alvarez, Kiril Kulish, and Trent Kowalik accept the award for Best Performance by a leading Actor in a Musical, for their shared role in the show "Billy Elliot the Musical", at the 63rd annual Tony Awards in New York, Sunday.

Seth Wenig, Associated Press

Enlarge photo»

NEW YORK — Tony wins should strengthen even more the box-office appeal of "Billy Elliot" and "God of Carnage," already two of Broadway's biggest hits.

"It's the cherry on top of the sundae," said producer Ken Davenport about the 10 Tonys for "Billy Elliot," including best musical, and the three for "Carnage," including best play.

"I don't think either one of them needed it," Davenport said Monday. "But obviously, it's great to be able to tout it. For a show like 'Billy,' it's not just winning best musical. It's the amount, the volume of awards that mean a lot."

Ten Tonys for "Billy" is "a huge amount and when people see that quantity, they say, 'Wow. Anything that wins 10 has got to be good,'" added Davenport, producer of the off-Broadway hit "Altar Boyz," and the Broadway revivals of "Blithe Spirit" and "Speed-the-Plow."

Between them, the two shows took nearly half of the 27 competitive Tony Awards given out Sunday night at Radio City Music Hall.

Both "Billy Elliot" and "God of Carnage" have been doing excellent business, particularly the four-character, single-set "Carnage," which has often grossed more each week than big musicals. Its cast of James Gandolfini, Tony winner Marcia Gay Harden, Jeff Daniels and Hope Davis recently re-signed for an additional 10 weeks in the play, which will extend the actors' run into November (after a late summer hiatus).

"Next to Normal," the strongest Tony competitor for "Billy Elliot," managed to take three awards, including two — score and orchestrations — for composer Tom Kitt.

It can now claim in its ads that it has the best new score on Broadway. The double win was especially gratifying for Kitt, whose first Broadway show, "High Fidelity," closed after 13 performances in 2006.

"(Broadway) is my passion, my love," the composer said. "I have been very lucky to be able to do a number of different things. Looking back on the season, I was conducting (the musical) '13' during the first part of the season. I get to work with people on a variety of levels."

"In terms of composing, Brian (Yorkey, lyricist and book writer for 'Next to Normal') and I are hard at work deciding what our next project will be," Kitt said.

The day after the Tonys usually means closing announcements for some shows that go home empty-handed. Already there is one casualty this year.

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