‘Cabaret’ and ‘Prayer for the French Republic’ among Tony Award nominees

At a time of rising antisemitism, two shows about Jews caught up in a dangerous climate of hate received multiple nominations yesterday for the 2024 Tony Awards.

 View of an empty theatre salon at the Cameri theatre in Tel Aviv on January 26, 2006. (photo credit: MOSHE SHAI/FLASH90)
View of an empty theatre salon at the Cameri theatre in Tel Aviv on January 26, 2006.
(photo credit: MOSHE SHAI/FLASH90)

A brand-new revival of the Kander and Ebb musical “Cabaret,” about the hedonistic antics at a late Weimar-era Berlin nightclub, received a total of nine nominations at this year's Tony Awards. In contrast “Prayer for the French Republic,” a three-hour drama about antisemitism in France in 2016, received three.

Both productions trail this year’s most-nominated: David Adjmi’s “Stereophonic,” about a Fleetwood Mac-esque band, received 13 nominations — the most ever for a play — and the Alicia Keys jukebox musical “Hell’s Kitchen” also received 13. “Stereophonic” playwright Adjmi hails from Brooklyn’s Syrian Jewish community, while “Hell’s Kitchen” director Michael Greif is also Jewish — along with many other cast and crew members up for awards.

Among the nominations received by “Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club,” a revival that opened on Broadway last week, are for best lead actor and lead actress in a musical (Gayle Rankin, who plays Sally Bowles, and Eddie Redmayne, who plays the Emcee, a role made famous by Jewish icon Joel Grey). Jewish actors Bebe Neuwirth and Steven Skybell — who play doomed lovers Fräulein Schneider and Herr Schultz, a Jewish fruit vendor, in an enhanced Jewish storyline that’s been described as “the heart of the musical”  — picked up nominations for featured actress and actor in a musical

"I'm proud to give voice to the Jewish condition"

“If I only ever played Jewish characters for the rest of my life, I would be delighted, and I would be honored,” Skybell, who previously played Tevye in Fiddler on the Roof in Yiddish, recently told the New York Jewish Week. I actually feel now that it’s a calling for me to find myself in these stories with Jewish points of view because it’s more important now than I think it’s ever been in my life to give voice to the Jewish condition.”

Joshua Harmon’s “Prayer for the French Republic,” about generations of a French Jewish family grappling with antisemitism and their own Jewish identities, was nominated for best play. Star Betsy Aidem, who plays the matriarch Marcelle Salomon Benhamou, was nominated for best lead actor in a play.

Fiddler on the Roof (credit: Wikimedia Commons)
Fiddler on the Roof (credit: Wikimedia Commons)

Meanwhile, Jewish actor Michael Stuhlbarg, perhaps best known for portraying Jewish gangster Arnold Rothstein in HBO’s “Boardwalk Empire,” picked up a nomination for best lead actor in a play for his portrayal of Russian Jewish oligarch Boris Berezovsky in the new play “Patriots.”

Stuhlbarg faces competition in the category from fellow Jewish actors Liev Schreiber, nominated for his portrayal of Father Flynn in “Doubt: A Parable,” and “Succession” star Jeremy Strong, whose father’s family is Jewish, for his role in “An Enemy of the People.”

Like Schreiber and Strong, the vast majority of the Jews on this year’s list are nominated for plays and musicals with little, if any, Jewish content. For example, four of the five playwrights nominated for best play are Jewish: Amy Herzog (“Mary Jane”), Paula Vogel (“Mother Play”), Harmon (“Prayer for the French Republic”), and Adjmi (“Stereophonic”)—though only one, Harmon, was nominated for a Jewish-themed play.

Other notable Jewish nominations include seven for “Merrily We Roll Along,” a hit revival of 1981 Stephen Sondheim and George Furth’s flop, which landed a best-featured actor in a musical nod to Jewish actor Daniel Radcliffe — yes, Harry Potter himself. Jewish Broadway veteran Shoshana Bean picked up a nomination for her role as a domineering mother in “Hell’s Kitchen.”

“Suffs,” a musical about the women’s suffrage movement written and composed by Jewish actress, writer, and musician Shaina Taub—who “wants to make Broadway accessible to all,” according to our colleagues at Hey Alma—received six nominations.


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The 77th Tony Awards ceremony will be held on June 16 at the Lincoln Center’s David H. Koch Theater and will be broadcast on CBS.