“Actor’s Express” and “Great Comet” Lead 2024 Suzi Bass Awards Nominations

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Actor’s Express theatre company and Horizon Theatre’s production of Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812 earned the most nominations in their respective categories for the 2024 Suzi Bass Awards, which honor the best in Atlanta-area theatre during the 2023-24 season.

The awards themselves will be given at a November ceremony, date to be announced.

Among the Atlanta-based theatre companies, Actor’s Express received 27 nominations, Theatrical Outfit received 25, Aurora Theatre received 24, and Alliance Theatre received 23.

Among the productions with the most nominations, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812 (Horizon Theatre): 15 nominations. Passing Strange (Theatrical Outfit): 11 nominations. Beautiful: The Carole King Musical (Aurora Theatre): 10 nominations. Everybody’s Talking About Jamie (Actor’s Express with Oglethorpe University): 10 nominations. Sister Act (Aurora Theatre): 10 nominations.

Here is full list of categories and corresponding nominees, as provided by the Suzi Bass Awards”

OUTSTANDING PRODUCTIONS

Outstanding Production of a Musical:

Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, Aurora Theatre
Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Actor’s Express with Oglethorpe Theatre
Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre
Passing Strange, Theatrical Outfit
Sister Act, Aurora Theatre

Outstanding Production of a Play:

cullud wattah, Actor’s Express
Dracula: The Failings of Men, Atlanta Shakespeare Company & Havoc Movement
Mercury, Actor’s Express
Remember This: The Lesson of Jan Karski, Theatrical Outfit
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Theatrical Outfit

Outstanding World Premiere Production:

Paris Crayton III, Class Dismissed, Out of Hand Theater
A.K. Payne, Furlough's Paradise, Alliance Theatre
Claire F. Martin, Sense and Sensibility, Atlanta Shakespeare Company & Belle Esprit
Brendan Pelsue, A Tale of Two Cities, Alliance Theatre
Kelundra Smith, The Wash, Synchronicity Theatre & Impact Theatre

Outstanding Social Justice Production:

Class Dismissed, Out of Hand Theater
cullud wattah, Actor’s Express
English, Alliance Theatre
The House That Will Not Stand, Horizon Theatre
The Wash, Synchronicity Theatre & Impact Theatre

Outstanding Production of Theatre for Young Audiences:

Babble Lab, Alliance Theatre
Into the Burrow: A Peter Rabbit™ Tale, Alliance Theatre
The Little Prince, Synchronicity Theatre
Three Little Pigs, Aurora Theatre
Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, Synchronicity Theatre

OTHER AWARDS TO MUSICALS

Choreography:

Thomas W. Jones II, Passing Strange, Theatrical Outfit
Heidi McKerley & Jeff McKerley, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre
Pytron Parker, Sister Act, Aurora Theatre
David Rossel, Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, Aurora Theatre
Precious West, Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Actor’s Express with Oglethorpe Theatre

Costume Design:

April Carswell, Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Actor’s Express with Oglethorpe Theatre
April Carswell, Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Actor’s Express 
Dr. L. Nyrobi Moss, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre 
Alice Neff, Sister Act, Aurora Theatre
Alan Yeong, Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, Aurora Theatre

Direction:

Justin Anderson, Sister Act, Aurora Theatre
Freddie Ashley, Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Actor’s Express with Oglethorpe Theatre
Thomas W. Jones II, Passing Strange, Theatrical Outfit
Heidi McKerley, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812 Horizon Theatre
David Rossel, Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, Aurora Theatre

Ensemble:

The Shining, Alliance Theatre with The Atlanta Opera
Aubrey Allicock, John Arnold, Gabrielle Benneh, Kearson Piper Brown, Phoebe Rose Claeys, Kevin Deas, Andrew Gilstrap, Thomas Glass, William Green, Craig Irvin, Kelly Kaduce, Tabitha Lawing, Kameron Lopreore, Eva Lukkonen, Malcolm Mackenzie, Adrienne Ocfemia, Victor Ryan Robertson, Max Walls

Featured Performer:

Janine Ayn as Helene, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre 
Chloe Cordle as Cynthia Weil, Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, Aurora Theatre 
Shelli Delgado as Ray, Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Actor’s Express with Oglethorpe Theatre
Isa Martinez as Sister Mary Robert, Sister Act, Aurora Theatre
Shelly McCook as Mother Superior, Sister Act, Aurora Theatre 
Jeff McKerley as The Prince/Ensemble, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre 
Candy McLellan as Ensemble, Passing Strange, Theatrical Outfit
Trevor Rashay Perry as Ensemble, Passing Strange, Theatrical Outfit
Terrence Smith as Dolokhov, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812 Horizon Theatre
Ben Thorpe as Hugo/Loco Chanelle, Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Actor’s Express with Oglethorpe Theatre

Lighting Design:

Kevin Frazier, Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, Aurora Theatre
Kevin Frazier, Sister Act, Aurora Theatre
D. Connor McVey, Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Actor’s Express with Oglethorpe Theatre
Mary Parker, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre
Ben Rawson, Passing Strange, Theatrical Outfit

Music Direction:

S. Renee Clark, Passing Strange, Theatrical Outfit
Holt McCarley, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre
Timothy Myers, The Shining, Alliance Theatre
Ann-Carol Pence, Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, Aurora Theatre
Ann-Carol Pence, Sister Act, Aurora Theatre

Principal Performer:

Daniel Burns as Pierre, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre
Niko Carleo as Hedwig, Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Actor’s Express
Anna Dvorak as Sonya, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre
Jill Hames as Margaret New, Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Actor’s Express with Oglethorpe Theatre 
Bethany Irby as Carole King, Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, Aurora Theatre 
Alexandria Joy as Natasha, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre
Christian Magby as Youth, Passing Strange, Theatrical Outfit
Jordan Patrick as Anatole, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre 
Brad Raymond as Narrator, Passing Strange, Theatrical Outfit
Noah Vega as Jamie New, Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Actor’s Express with Oglethorpe Theatre

Projection Design:

Isaac Burrier, Sister Act, Aurora Theatre

Scenic Design:

Stephanie Busing, Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Actor’s Express
Isabel & Moriah Curley-Clay, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre
Isabel & Moriah Curley-Clay, Passing Strange, Theatrical Outfit
Jon Nooner, Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Actor’s Express with Oglethorpe Theatre
Julie Ray, Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, Aurora Theatre

Sound Design:

Amari Hicks, Passing Strange, Theatrical Outfit
Daniel Pope, Sister Act, Aurora Theatre 
Tyehimba Shabazz, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre
Jon Summers, The Shining, Alliance Theatre with The Atlanta Opera
Daniel Terry, Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, Aurora Theatre

OTHER AWARDS TO PLAYS

Costume Design:

Fabian Fidel Aguilar, A Tale of Two Cities, Alliance Theatre
April Carswell, Home, I’m Darling, Synchronicity Theatre
Ricky Greenwell, Blues for an Alabama Sky, Actor’s Express
Dr. L. Nyrobi Moss, The Wash, Synchronicity Theatre & Impact Theatre
Cole Spivia, Dracula: The Failings of Men, Atlanta Shakespeare Company & Havoc Movement

Direction:

Melissa Foulger, Mercury, Actor’s Express
Derek Goldman, Remember This: The Lesson of Jan Karski, Theatrical Outfit
January Lavoy, Clyde’s, Theatrical Outfit
Mah Torney, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Theatrical Outfit
Amanda Washington, cullud wattah, Actor’s Express

Ensemble:

Blues for an Alabama Sky, Actor’s Express, Christopher Hampton, Tiffany Denise Hobbs, Jontavious Johnson, Kenisha Johnson, Damian Lockhartcullud wattah, Actor’s Express, Morgan Crumbly, Asha Basha Duniani, Terry Henry, Marita McKee, Parris Sarter
Mercury, Actor’s Express, Mahhew Busch, Carolyn Cook, Kate Donadio MacQueen, Tyshawn Gooden, Louis Kyper, Donna Lobello, Suehyla E. Young
A Tale of Two Cities, Alliance Theatre, Grant Chapman, Tiffany Denise Hobbs, Tess Malis Kincaid, Joe Knezevich, Louis Reyes McWilliams, Lee Osorio, Brad Raymond, Stephen Ruffin
The Wash, Synchronicity Theatre & Impact Theatre, Kenedi Deal, Tanya Freeman, Nevaina, Makallen Kelley, Charis Sellick, Jamila Turner

Featured Performer:

Jon Meyer as Arthur, Dracula: The Failings of Men, Atlanta Shakespeare Company & Havoc Movement
LaTarsha Rose as La Veuve/Marie Josephine, The House That Will Not Stand, Horizon Theatre

Lighting Design:

Rachael N. Blackwell, Wait Until Dark, Georgia Ensemble Theatre
Jiyoun Chang, A Tale of Two Cities, Alliance Theatre
Rob Dillard, Clyde’s, Theatrical Outfit
Greg Hanthorn, Jr., Dracula: The Failings of Men, Atlanta Shakespeare Company & Havoc Movement
David Reingold, Mercury, Actor’s Express

Principal Performer:

Andrew Benator as Jan, Remember This: The Lesson of Jan Karski, Theatrical Outfit
Burke Brown as Jason, Clyde’s, Theatrical Outfit
Steve Coulter as George, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Theatrical Outfit
Dionna D. Davis as Multiple, Class Dismissed, Out of Hand Theater
Tonia Jackson as Clyde, Clyde’s, Theatrical Outfit
Tess Malis Kincaid as Martha, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Theatrical Outfit
Bethany Anne Lind as Judy, Home, I’m Darling, Synchronicity Theatre
Marshall W Mabry IV as Juicy, Fat Ham, Alliance Theatre
Mary Ruth Ralston as Van Helsing, Dracula: The Failings of Men, Atlanta Shakespeare Company & Havoc Movement 
Alia Shakira as Makeda, The House That Will Not Stand, Horizon Theatre

Projection Design:

Kimberly Binns, The Wash, Synchronicity Theatre & Impact Theatre
Milton Cordero, Furlough's Paradise, Alliance Theatre

Scenic Design:

Kat Conley, Mercury, Actor’s Express
Isabel & Moriah Curley-Clay, Clyde’s, Theatrical Outfit
Isabel & Moriah Curley-Clay, Rooted, Horizon Theatre
Isabel & Moriah Curley-Clay, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Theatrical Outfit
Bailey McClure-Frank, cullud wattah, Actor’s Express

Sound Design:

Dan Bauman, Mercury, Actor’s Express
Amy Duffy, It’s a Wonderful Life: A Radio Play, Stage Door Theatre
Mikaela Frasier, cullud wattah, Actor’s Express
Omari Joseph and Jake Guinn, Dracula: The Failings of Men, Atlanta Shakespeare Company & Havoc Movement
Roc Lee, Remember This: The Lesson of Jan Karski, Theatrical Outfit

OTHER AWARDS TO THEATRE FOR YOUNG AUDIENCES

Outstanding Design:

Babble Lab, Alliance Theatre: Annie Cady (costumes), Wu Chen Khoo (lighting), Jorge Cousineau (projection), Katharine Horowitz (sound), Michael Sommers (scenic)
Into the Burrow: A Peter Rabbit™ Tale, Alliance Theatre: Raymond Carr (shadow puppets, filmography), Kat Conley (scenic), Garry Lennon (costumes), Hidenori Nakajo (sound), Karin Olson (lighting)
The Little Prince, Synchronicity Theatre: Ryan Bradburn (scenic and properties), Savannah Cobb (costumes), Elisabeth Cooper (lighting), Gamble (sound), Courtney Loner (properties)
Three Little Pigs, Aurora Theatre: Thom Jenkins (sound), Jon Sandmire (scenic), Mack Scales (lighting), Sydni Stephenson (costumes)
Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, Synchronicity Theatre: Jonida Beqo Vogli (costumes), Elisabeth Cooper (lighting and shadow puppets), Sophie Hansuh Im (scenic), Kate Hoáng (sound), Naomi B. Smith (properties)

Outstanding Direction:

Babble Lab, Alliance Theatre: Sarah Agnew (director)
Into the Burrow: A Peter Rabbit™ Tale, Alliance Theatre:  Mark Valdez (director), Imani Quiñones (music director), Rachel Van Buskirk (choreographer)
The Mad Hatterpillar and Her Many Heads, Stage Door Theatre: Rachel Frawley (director), Sarah Beth “SB” Hester (music director)
Three Little Pigs, Aurora Theatre: Greg Hunter (director), Ann-Carol Pence (music director), Jahi Bogard (choreographer)
Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, Synchronicity Theatre: Justin Anderson (director)

Outstanding New Work:

Babble Lab, Alliance Theatre: Autumn Ness
Into the Burrow: A Peter Rabbit™ Tale, Alliance Theatre: Mark Valdez (book), Christian Albright & Christian Magby, Brandon Bush, Annmarie Milazzo, Divinity Roxx, Jacob Ryan Smith, Eugene Russell IV (original songs), Imani Quiñones (orchestrations)
The Mad Hatterpillar and Her Many Heads, Stage Door Theatre: Rachel Frawley (book and lyrics), Sarah Beth Hester (music)

Outstanding Performance:

Babble Lab, Alliance Theatre: Autumn Ness
Into the Burrow: A Peter Rabbit™ Tale, Alliance Theatre: Shelli Delgado, Pamela Gold, Jontavious Johnson, Kylie Gray Mask, Wesley Tunison, Juan Carlos Unzueta
The Little Prince, Synchronicity Theatre: Ash Anderson, Mah Baum, Tyshawn Gooden, Bridget McCarthy, Alejandra Ruiz, Anna Snider
The Mad Hatterpillar and Her Many Heads, Stage Door Theatre: Dakota "Cody" Benfield, Niko Carleo, Shelby Folks, Imani Joseph, Daniela SanPago, Charis Sellick, Brie Wolfe
Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, Synchronicity Theatre: Willie Frierson, Jr., Chris Hecke, Charlene Hong White, Kristina Jin, Crystal Lo, Kevin Qian, Toru Shimoji

NOMINATIONS BY THEATRE

Actor’s Express, 27
Theatrical Outfit, 25
Aurora Theatre, 24
Alliance Theatre, 23
Horizon Theatre , 20
Synchronicity Theatre, 15
Oglethorpe Theatre (co-producer), 10
Atlanta Shakespeare Company, 9
Havoc Movement (co-producer), 7
Impact Theatre (co-producer), 5
Stage Door Theatre, 4
Out of Hand Theater, 3
Georgia Ensemble Theatre, 2
The Atlanta Opera (co-producer), 2
Belle Esprit (co-producer), 1

NOMINATIONS BY PRODUCTION

Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Horizon Theatre, 15
Passing Strange, Theatrical Outfit, 11
Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, Aurora Theatre, 10
Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Actor’s Express with Oglethorpe Theatre, 10
Sister Act, Aurora Theatre, 10
Dracula: The Failings of Men, Atlanta Shakespeare Company & Havoc Movement , 7
cullud wattah, Actor’s Express, 6
Mercury, Actor’s Express, 6
Babble Lab, Alliance Theatre, 5
Clyde’s, Theatrical Outfit, 5
Into the Burrow: A Peter Rabbit™ Tale, Alliance Theatre, 5
The Wash, Synchronicity Theatre & Impact Theatre, 5
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Theatrical Outfit, 5
A Tale of Two Cities, Alliance Theatre, 4
Remember This: The Lesson of Jan Karski, Theatrical Outfit, 4
The House That Will Not Stand, Horizon Theatre , 4
Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, Synchronicity Theatre, 4
Class Dismissed, Out of Hand Theater, 3
Fat Ham, Alliance Theatre, 3
Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Actor’s Express, 3
Home, I’m Darling, Synchronicity Theatre, 3
The Little Prince, Synchronicity Theatre, 3
The Mad Hatterpillar and Her Many Heads, Stage Door Theatre, 3
The Shining, Alliance Theatre with The Atlanta Opera, 3
Three Little Pigs, Aurora Theatre 3
Blues for an Alabama Sky, Actor’s Express, 2
Furlough’s Paradise, Alliance Theatre, 2
Wait Until Dark, Georgia Ensemble Theatre, 2
English, Alliance Theatre, 1
Greener Pastures, Aurora Theatre, 1
It’s a Wonderful Life: A Radio Play, Stage Door Theatre, 1
Rooted, Horizon Theatre, 1
Sense and Sensibility, Atlanta Shakespeare Company & Belle Esprit, 1
The Merchant of Venice, Atlanta Shakespeare Company, 1

INDIVIDUALS WITH MULTIPLE NOMINATIONS

Isabel & Moriah Curley-Clay, 5
Ann-Carol Pence, 3
April Carswell, 3
Imani Quiñones, 2
Autumn Ness, 2
Brad Raymond, 2
Christian Magby, 2
David Rossel, 2
Dr. L. Nyrobi Moss, 2
Elisabeth Cooper, 2
Heidi McKerley, 2
Jeff McKerley, 2
Jontavious Johnson, 2
Justin Anderson, 2
Kat Conley, 2
Kenedi Deal, 2
Kevin Frazier, 2
Mark Valdez, 2
Niko Carleo, 2
Rachel Frawley, 2
Sarah Beth Hester, 2
Shelli Delgado, 2
Shelly McCook, 2
Tess Malis Kincaid, 2
Thomas W. Jones II, 2
Tiffany Denise Hobbs, 2
Tonia Jackson, 2
Tyshawn Gooden, 2

Nominations for five Special Awards are now open via the Suzi website www.thesuzis.org. These awards are: The Spirit of Suzi Awards, Volunteer of the Year, The Callboard Award, Lifetime Achievement and the Gene-Gabriel Moore Playwrighting Award.

The Suzi Bass Awards were founded in 2003 by Gene-Gabriel Moore and a small group of industry professionals to celebrate outstanding work in live theatre and the artists who produce it. This season, The Suzi Bass Awards volunteer judges chose nominees and recipients in thirty-two performance categories. In addition, the annual Spirit of Suzi Award honors a person or organization for their long-time dedication to Atlanta theatre; the Gene-Gabriel Moore Playwriting Award recognizes Atlanta's talented local playwrights through special notice of a recently produced play; the Audience Choice Award recognizes one theatre's entire season through voting by the general public; and the Volunteer of the Year Award recognizes an individual or group with long-time volunteer contributions to a particular theatre.

Top Photo: Horizon Theatre’s production of Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812 earned the most Suzi Bass Award nominations of any Atlanta production. Photo courtesy of Horizon Theatre Company

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Actor’s Express theatre company and Horizon Theatre’s production of Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812 earned the most nominations in their respective categories for the 2024 Suzi Bass …

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“Outsiders” and “Stereophonic” Win Top 2024 Tony Awards

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The Outsiders, a musical about rival teen gangs in Tulsa, OK, and Stereophonic, a play about conflict in a 1970s recording studio, won Best Musical and Best Play, respectively in the 77th Annual Antoinette Perry “Tony” Awards.

The Tonys were bestowed June 16, for superlative achievement on Broadway during the 2023-24 season.

Stereophonic won a total of five Tonys, the most of any single show.  

Best Musical revival went to Stephen Sondheim’s Merrily We Roll Along, which also picked up three other Tonys, includng Jonathan Groff (Best Actor in a Musical) and Daniel Radcliffe (Best Featured Actor in a Musical).

Best Play revival went to Appropriate, which also took two other awards, including Best Leading Actress in a Play (Sarah Paulson).

Shaina Taub won two Tony Awards, Best Book and Best Score for her musical Suffs, but watched The Outsiders go home with Best Musical.

The musical Water for Elephants, which originated at Atlanta’s Alliance Theatre in summer 2023, was shut out of awards for which it was nominated in seven categories. Hell’s Kitchen, which had been nominated for 13 Tonys, won only two: Best Leading Actress (Maleah Joi Loon) and Best Featured Actress in a Musical (Kecia Lewis).

Among other nominees that won no Tonys this year: Lempicka, The Notebook, Prayer for the French Republic, Back To The Future: The Musical, Monty Python’s Spamalot and The Who’s Tommy.

The Tony Awards ceremony was hosted for the third consecutive year by Ariana DeBose, who won an Oscar for her performance in the 2021 film adaptation of West Side Story

The nominees were selected by an independent committee of 45 theatre professionals appointed by the Tony Awards Administration Committee. The 2024 Tony Awards were presented by The Broadway League and the American Theatre Wing. 

Of the 39 shows that opened on Broadway in the 2023-24 season, 36 were eligible for Tony nominations, including 10 original plays, 15 original musicals, five play revivals and six musical revivals. A total of 28 of the 39 shows that opened this season earned at least one nomination, and 12 of those shows wound up winning at least one Tony.

Here is the complete list of nominations for the 2024 American Theatre Wing’s Tony Awards. The winners in each category are listed in bold and marked with a star.

Best Musical
Hell’s Kitchen
Illinoise
The Outsiders
Suffs
Water for Elephants

Best Play
Jaja's African Hair Braiding
Mary Jane
Mother Play
Prayer for the French Republic
Stereophonic

Best Revival of a Musical
Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club
Gutenberg! The Musical!
Merrily We Roll Along
The Who's Tommy

Best Revival of a Play
Appropriate
An Enemy of the People
Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch

Best Book of a Musical
Kristoffer Diaz, Hell's Kitchen
Bekah Brunstetter, The Notebook
Adam Rapp and Justin Levine, The Outsiders
Shaina Taub, Suffs
Rick Elice, Water for Elephants

Best Original Score (Music and/or Lyrics) Written for the Theatre
Adam Guettel, Days of Wine and Roses
David Byrne and Fatboy Slim, Here Lies Love
Jamestown Revival (Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance) and Justin Levine, The Outsiders
Will Butler, Stereophonic
Shaina Taub, Suffs

Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Play
William Jackson Harper, Uncle Vanya
Leslie Odom, Jr., Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch
Liev Schreiber, Doubt: A Parable
Jeremy Strong, An Enemy of the People
Michael Stuhlbarg, Patriots

Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Play
Betsy Aidem, Prayer for the French Republic
Jessica Lange, Mother Play
Rachel McAdams, Mary Jane
Sarah Paulson, Appropriate
Amy Ryan, Doubt: A Parable

Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical
Brody Grant, The Outsiders
Jonathan Groff, Merrily We Roll Along
Dorian Harewood, The Notebook
Brian d'Arcy James, Days of Wine and Roses
Eddie Redmayne, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical
Eden Espinosa, Lempicka
Maleah Joi Moon, Hell's Kitchen
Kelli O’Hara, Days of Wine and Roses
Maryann Plunkett, The Notebook
Gayle Rankin, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Play
Will Brill, Stereophonic
Eli Gelb, Stereophonic
Jim Parsons, Mother Play
Tom Pecinka, Stereophonic
Corey Stoll, Appropriate

Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play
Quincy Tyler Bernstine, Doubt: A Parable
Juliana Canfield, Stereophonic
Celia Keenan-Bolger, Mother Play
Sarah Pidgeon, Stereophonic
Kara Young, Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch

Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Musical
Roger Bart, Back To The Future: The Musical
Joshua Boone, The Outsiders
Brandon Victor Dixon, Hell's Kitchen
Sky Lakota-Lynch, The Outsiders
Daniel Radcliffe, Merrily We Roll Along
Steven Skybell, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Musical
Shoshana Bean, Hell's Kitchen
Amber Iman, Lempicka
Nikki M. James, Suffs
Leslie Rodriguez Kritzer, Monty Python's Spamalot
Kecia Lewis, Hell's Kitchen
Lindsay Mendez, Merrily We Roll Along
Bebe Neuwirth, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

Best Direction of a Play
Daniel Aukin, Stereophonic
Anne Kauffman, Mary Jane
Kenny Leon, Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch
Lila Neugebauer, Appropriate
Whitney White, Jaja's African Hair Braiding

Best Direction of a Musical
Maria Friedman, Merrily We Roll Along
Michael Greif, Hell's Kitchen
Leigh Silverman, Suffs
Jessica Stone, Water for Elephants
Danya Taymor, The Outsiders

Best Choreography
Annie-B Parson, Here Lies Love
Camille A. Brown, Hell's Kitchen
Rick Kuperman and Jeff Kuperman, The Outsiders
Justin Peck, Illinoise
Jesse Robb and Shana Carroll, Water for Elephants

Best Orchestrations
Timo Andres, Illinoise
Will Butler and Justin Craig, Stereophonic
Justin Levine, Matt Hinkley and Jamestown Revival (Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance), The Outsiders
Tom Kitt and Adam Blackstone, Hell's Kitchen
Jonathan Tunick, Merrily We Roll Along

Best Scenic Design of a Play
dots, Appropriate
dots, An Enemy of the People
Derek McLane, Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch
David Zinn, Jaja's African Hair Braiding
David Zinn, Stereophonic

Best Scenic Design of a Musical
AMP featuring Tatiana Kahvegian, The Outsiders
Robert Brill and Peter Nigrini, Hell's Kitchen
Takeshi Kata, Water for Elephants
David Korins, Here Lies Love
Riccardo Hernández and Peter Nigrini, Lempicka
Tim Hatley and Finn Ross, Back To The Future: The Musical
Tom Scutt, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

Best Costume Design of a Play
Dede Ayite, Appropriate
Dede Ayite, Jaja's African Hair Braiding
Enver Chakartash, Stereophonic
Emilio Sosa, Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch
David Zinn, An Enemy of the People

Best Costume Design of a Musical
Dede Ayite, Hell's Kitchen
Linda Cho, The Great Gatsby
David Israel Reynoso, Water for Elephants
Tom Scutt, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club
Paul Tazewell, Suffs

Best Lighting Design of a PlayIsabella Byrd, An Enemy of the People
Amith Chandrashaker, Prayer for the French Republic
Jiyoun Chang, Stereophonic
Jane Cox, Appropriate
Natasha Katz, Grey House

Best Lighting Design of a Musical
Brandon Stirling Baker, Illinoise
Isabella Byrd, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club
Natasha Katz, Hell's Kitchen
Bradley King and David Bengali, Water for Elephants
Brian MacDevitt and Hana S. Kim, The Outsiders

Best Sound Design of a Play
Justin Ellington and Stefania Bulbarella, Jaja's African Hair Braiding
Leah Gelpe, Mary Jane
Tom Gibbons, Grey House
Bray Poor and Will Pickens, Appropriate
Ryan Rumery, Stereophonic

Best Sound Design of a Musical
M.L. Dogg and Cody Spencer, Here Lies Love
Kai Harada, Merrily We Roll Along
Nick Lidster for Autograph, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club
Gareth Owen, Hell's Kitchen
Cody Spencer, The Outsiders

Tony Award Totals by Production:

Stereophonic - 5
Merrily We Roll Along - 4
The Outsiders - 4
Appropriate - 3
Hell’s Kitchen - 2
Suffs - 2
Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club - 1
An Enemy of the People - 1
The Great Gatsby - 1
Illinoise – 1
Jaja’s African Hair Braiding - 1
Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch - 1

Above: A scene from The Outsiders on Broadway. Photo by Matthew Murphy

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The Outsiders, a musical about rival teen gangs in Tulsa, OK, and Stereophonic, a play about conflict in a 1970s recording studio, won Best Musical and Best Play, respectively in …

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Atlanta’s Water for Elephants up for 7 Tony Awards June 16 

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    [post_date] => 2024-06-14 17:18:44
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It’s Broadway’s big weekend. The American Theatre Wing’s 77th Annual Antoinette Perry “Tony” Awards will be handed out Sunday, June 16, for superlative achievement on Broadway during the 2023-24 season.

The musical Water for Elephants, which originated at Atlanta’s Alliance Theatre in summer 2023, is nominated in seven categories: Best Musical, Best Book of a Musical, Best Director of a Musical,  Best Chreography, Best Scenic Design of a Musical, Best Costume Design of a Musical and Best Lighting Design of a Musical.

Hell’s Kitchen, with a score composed by Alicia Keys, based on her early life growing up in the Manhattan neighborhood of the title, and Stereophonic, a play about a 1970’srock band on the rocks, were tied with 13 nominations each. Hell’s Kitchen joined Water for Elephants in the Best Musical nominee circle, along with  Illinoise, The Outsiders and Suffs

Among other non-musical plays, Appropriate earned eight, and a revival of Purlie Victorious earned six.

Nominations in 26 competitive categories for the Tonys were announced April 30 by actors Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Renée Elise Goldsberry.

The Tony Awards ceremony will be hosted for the third consecutive year by Ariana DeBose, who won an Oscar for her performance in the 2021 film adaptation of West Side Story. The 2024 Tony ceremony will be broadcast live from the Lincoln Center's David H. Koch Theater, and air on CBS. The celebration will commence at Sunday, June 16, 2024 (8-11 PM, LIVE ET/5-8 PM, LIVE PT) on the CBS Television Network, and streaming on Paramount+ in the U.S. (live and on-demand for Paramount+ with SHOWTIME subscribers, or on-demand for Paramount+ Essential subscribers the day after the special airs).

The nominees were selected by an independent committee of 45 theatre professionals appointed by the Tony Awards Administration Committee. The 2024 Tony Awards are presented by The Broadway League and the American Theatre Wing. 

Of the 39 shows that opened on Broadway in the 2023-24 season, 36 were eligible for Tony nominations, including 10 original plays, 15 original musicals, five play revivals and six musical revivals. A total of 28 of the 39 shows that opened this season earned at least one nomination.

Here is the complete list of nominations for the 2024 American Theatre Wing’s Tony Awards. 

Best Musical
Hell’s Kitchen
Illinoise
The Outsiders
Suffs
Water for Elephants

Best Play
Jaja's African Hair Braiding
Mary Jane
Mother Play
Prayer for the French Republic
Stereophonic

Best Revival of a Musical
Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club
Gutenberg! The Musical!
Merrily We Roll Along
The Who's Tommy

Best Revival of a Play
Appropriate
An Enemy of the People
Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch

Best Book of a Musical
Kristoffer Diaz, Hell's Kitchen
Bekah Brunstetter, The Notebook
Adam Rapp and Justin Levine, The Outsiders
Shaina Taub, Suffs
Rick Elice, Water for Elephants

Best Original Score (Music and/or Lyrics) Written for the Theatre
Adam Guettel, Days of Wine and Roses
David Byrne and Fatboy Slim, Here Lies Love
Jamestown Revival (Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance) and Justin Levine, The Outsiders
Will Butler, Stereophonic
Shaina Taub, Suffs

Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Play
William Jackson Harper, Uncle Vanya
Leslie Odom, Jr., Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch
Liev Schreiber, Doubt: A Parable
Jeremy Strong, An Enemy of the People
Michael Stuhlbarg, Patriots

Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Play
Betsy Aidem, Prayer for the French Republic
Jessica Lange, Mother Play
Rachel McAdams, Mary Jane
Sarah Paulson, Appropriate
Amy Ryan, Doubt: A Parable

Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical
Brody Grant, The Outsiders
Jonathan Groff, Merrily We Roll Along
Dorian Harewood, The Notebook
Brian d'Arcy James, Days of Wine and Roses
Eddie Redmayne, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical
Eden Espinosa, Lempicka
Maleah Joi Moon, Hell's Kitchen
Kelli O’Hara, Days of Wine and Roses
Maryann Plunkett, The Notebook
Gayle Rankin, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Play
Will Brill, Stereophonic
Eli Gelb, Stereophonic
Jim Parsons, Mother Play
Tom Pecinka, Stereophonic
Corey Stoll, Appropriate

Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play
Quincy Tyler Bernstine, Doubt: A Parable
Juliana Canfield, Stereophonic
Celia Keenan-Bolger, Mother Play
Sarah Pidgeon, Stereophonic
Kara Young, Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch

Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Musical
Roger Bart, Back To The Future: The Musical
Joshua Boone, The Outsiders
Brandon Victor Dixon, Hell's Kitchen
Sky Lakota-Lynch, The Outsiders
Daniel Radcliffe, Merrily We Roll Along
Steven Skybell, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Musical
Shoshana Bean, Hell's Kitchen
Amber Iman, Lempicka
Nikki M. James, Suffs
Leslie Rodriguez Kritzer, Monty Python's Spamalot
Kecia Lewis, Hell's Kitchen
Lindsay Mendez, Merrily We Roll Along
Bebe Neuwirth, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

Best Direction of a Play
Daniel Aukin, Stereophonic
Anne Kauffman, Mary Jane
Kenny Leon, Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch
Lila Neugebauer, Appropriate
Whitney White, Jaja's African Hair Braiding

Best Direction of a Musical
Maria Friedman, Merrily We Roll Along
Michael Greif, Hell's Kitchen
Leigh Silverman, Suffs
Jessica Stone, Water for Elephants
Danya Taymor, The Outsiders

Best Choreography
Annie-B Parson, Here Lies Love
Camille A. Brown, Hell's Kitchen
Rick Kuperman and Jeff Kuperman, The Outsiders
Justin Peck, Illinoise
Jesse Robb and Shana Carroll, Water for Elephants

Best Orchestrations
Timo Andres, Illinoise
Will Butler and Justin Craig, Stereophonic
Justin Levine, Matt Hinkley and Jamestown Revival (Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance), The Outsiders
Tom Kitt and Adam Blackstone, Hell's Kitchen
Jonathan Tunick, Merrily We Roll Along

Best Scenic Design of a Play
dots, Appropriate
dots, An Enemy of the People
Derek McLane, Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch
David Zinn, Jaja's African Hair Braiding
David Zinn, Stereophonic

Best Scenic Design of a Musical
AMP featuring Tatiana Kahvegian, The Outsiders
Robert Brill and Peter Nigrini, Hell's Kitchen
Takeshi Kata, Water for Elephants
David Korins, Here Lies Love
Riccardo Hernández and Peter Nigrini, Lempicka
Tim Hatley and Finn Ross, Back To The Future: The Musical
Tom Scutt, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

Best Costume Design of a Play
Dede Ayite, Appropriate
Dede Ayite, Jaja's African Hair Braiding
Enver Chakartash, Stereophonic
Emilio Sosa, Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch
David Zinn, An Enemy of the People

Best Costume Design of a Musical
Dede Ayite, Hell's Kitchen
Linda Cho, The Great Gatsby
David Israel Reynoso, Water for Elephants
Tom Scutt, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club
Paul Tazewell, Suffs

Best Lighting Design of a PlayIsabella Byrd, An Enemy of the People
Amith Chandrashaker, Prayer for the French Republic
Jiyoun Chang, Stereophonic
Jane Cox, Appropriate
Natasha Katz, Grey House

Best Lighting Design of a Musical
Brandon Stirling Baker, Illinoise
Isabella Byrd, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club
Natasha Katz, Hell's Kitchen
Bradley King and David Bengali, Water for Elephants
Brian MacDevitt and Hana S. Kim, The Outsiders

Best Sound Design of a Play
Justin Ellington and Stefania Bulbarella, Jaja's African Hair Braiding
Leah Gelpe, Mary Jane
Tom Gibbons, Grey House
Bray Poor and Will Pickens, Appropriate
Ryan Rumery, Stereophonic

Best Sound Design of a Musical
M.L. Dogg and Cody Spencer, Here Lies Love
Kai Harada, Merrily We Roll Along
Nick Lidster for Autograph, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club
Gareth Owen, Hell's Kitchen
Cody Spencer, The Outsiders

Tony Nominations by Production:
Hell's Kitchen - 13
Stereophonic - 13
The Outsiders - 12
Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club - 9
Appropriate - 8
Merrily We Roll Along - 7
Water for Elephants - 7
Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch - 6
Suffs - 6
An Enemy of the People - 5
Jaja's African Hair Braiding - 5
Here Lies Love - 4
Illinoise - 4
Mary Jane - 4
Mother Play - 4
Days of Wine and Roses - 3
Doubt: A Parable - 3
Lempicka - 3
The Notebook - 3
Prayer for the French Republic - 3
Back To The Future: The Musical - 2
Grey House - 2
The Great Gatsby - 1
Gutenberg! The Musical! - 1
Monty Python's Spamalot - 1
Patriots - 1
Uncle Vanya - 1
The Who's Tommy - 1

Above: A scene from Water for Elephants on Broadway. Photo by Matthew Murphy

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It’s Broadway’s big weekend. The American Theatre Wing’s 77th Annual Antoinette Perry “Tony” Awards will be handed out Sunday, June 16, for superlative achievement on Broadway during the 2023-24 season. …

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Atlanta’s Fox Theatre Tops Billboard Chart

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    [post_date] => 2024-06-13 15:31:15
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Billboard magazine, which charts business activity throughout the world of entertainment, named Atlanta’s Fox Theatre as the number-one worldwide top-grossing venue in its newly-released chart for venues with capacity of 5,000 seats or fewer.

The theatre is known for its Broadway Series that brings in major touring Broadway shows, including MJ, Aladdin and Hamilton. But the theatre also hosts a busy year-round schedule of concerts and comedy shows. 

For the period Oct. 1, 2023 to March 31, 2024, Billboard reported that Fox’s 

110 shows sold a combined 434,000 tickets and earned a combined $34.5 million—the most of any theatre in its category.

The news follows the April announcement that Six, the Broadway musical about the lives of the six wives of England’s Henry VIII, set an all-time record at the Fox the week of April 16-21. The North American touring company played to 36,160 people over the course of the standard eight performances—the highest-attended eight-performance week ever for a Broadway show or North American tour, according to the production.

The engagement was presented at the 4665-seat Fox Theatre by Regions Bank Broadway in Atlanta, part of the Broadway Across America network.

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Billboard magazine, which charts business activity throughout the world of entertainment, named Atlanta’s Fox Theatre as the number-one worldwide top-grossing venue in its newly-released chart for venues with capacity of …

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Six Musical Sets Record at Atlanta Fox

WP_Post Object
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    [post_date] => 2024-05-05 12:42:32
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Six, the Broadway musical about the lives of the six wives of England’s Henry VIII, set an all-time record at Atlanta’s Fox Theatre the week of April 16-21. The North American touring company played to 36,160 people over the course of the standard eight performances—the highest-attended eight-performance week ever for a Broadway show or North American tour, according to the production.

The engagement was presented at the 4665-seat Fox Theatre by Regions Bank Broadway in Atlanta, part of the Broadway Across America network.

Six originated in London and opened on Broadway Oct. 3, 2021. The show won the 2022 Tony Award for Best Original Score (Music and Lyrics) and the Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Musical of the season. Six recently played its 1,000th performance at the Lena Horne Theatre.

The North American tour launched at The Smith Center in Las Vegas on September 20, 2022, and is playing cities throughout the U.S.

Six has book, music and lyrics by Toby Marlow and Lucy Moss. The musical is constructed as a competition among the queens, who tell their stories about being married to the mercurial monarch. They start out by asking the audience to choose which of them had the most difficult married life, but later decide to take an entertainingly different tack. 

The North American tour of Six features Kristina Leopold as Catherine of Aragon, Cassie Silva as Anne Boleyn, Kelly Denice Taylor as Jane Seymour, Danielle Mendoza as Anna of Cleves, Alizé Cruz as Katherine Howard, and Adriana Scalice as Catherine Parr. 

Next up at the Fox: To Kill a Mockingbird, opening May 7. For tickets or more information, visit foxtheatre.org. Check out the 2024-25 Fox season lineup at encoreatlanta.com/?s=fox+season.

Photo: A scene from the North American tour of the musical Six. Photo by Joan Marcus

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Six, the Broadway musical about the lives of the six wives of England’s Henry VIII, set an all-time record at Atlanta’s Fox Theatre the week of April 16-21. The North …

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Atlanta Symphony Plans 8 Beethoven Symphonies and Yo-Yo Ma in 24-25

WP_Post Object
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    [post_date] => 2024-03-24 14:33:22
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The GrammyAward-winning Atlanta Symphony Orchestra announces the 2024-25 Delta Classical Concert season, the 80th Anniversary season and Music Director Nathalie Stutzmann’s third season at the helm of the orchestra.

“We are very much looking forward to the 2024-25 season, our 80th year of playing music for the city of Atlanta,” said Executive Director Jennifer Barlament. “The audiences in Atlanta have been incredibly supportive of Nathalie and the Orchestra these last two years – attendance is up, ticket sales are up, and we’ve welcomed a large number of new audience members.

“Nathalie has programmed a season focused primarily on the classical and early Romantic repertoire, and I know audiences will love to hear the major works of Beethoven, Haydn, and Mozart, as well as enjoy guest artists like the incomparable Yo-Yo Ma, who has been a friend of the Orchestra for many years.”

Stutzmann in the2024-25 Season
The 2024-25 season opens on September 19, 2024, with Stutzmann conducting Mahler’s Symphony No. 1, “Titan,” and cellist Edgar Moreau playing Schumann’s Cello Concerto, returning after a debut played “with dazzling accuracy and insouciant wit” (ArtsATL).

The following weekend, September 26 & 27, Stutzmann is joined by mezzo-soprano Fleur Barron and baritone Samuel Hasselhorn, both making their ASO debuts, for Mahler’s Des Knaben Wunderhorn (The Boy’s Magic Horn), followed by Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 6.

Stutzmann returns to the podium on November 7, 9, and 10 to conduct an evening of Mozart, presenting his passionate Symphony No. 40 and the masterpiece Mass in C Minor. Joining the Orchestra for the Mass are Olga Kulchynska, soprano; Julia Lezhneva, soprano; Lunga Eric Hallam, tenor; and Harold Wilson, bass, as well as the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Chorus.

On November 14 and 16, ASO Principal Flute Christina Smith takes center stage with Stutzmann conducting C.P.E. Bach’s Flute Concerto in D Minor, originally composed for King Frederick the Great. The same evening, after a well-received festival of his work in the 2023-24 season, Stutzmann returns to the “Architect of the Spirit,” Bruckner, and conducts his Symphony No. 4, “Romantic.”

Stutzmann welcomes 2022 Van Cliburn medalist Anna Geniushene, a pianist “with an exquisite touch and an almost infinite tonal palette” (La Scena), on April 10 and 12, 2025, to make her ASO debut playing Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 1. The program also features Ravel’s Ma mère L’Oye (Mother Goose) and La valse.

Beethoven Project 
In early 2025, Stutzmann begins the epic “Beethoven Project,” a series of concerts consisting of Beethoven’s first eight symphonies. The project allows audiences to follow the composer’s journey throughout his career:

  • January 23 and 25 Symphonies No. 1 and No. 3, “Eroica.”
  • January 30, February 1 & 2 Symphony No. 2 and the world-famous Symphony No. 5.
  • February 27 and March 1 Symphony No. 8 and Symphony No. 6, “Pastoral.”
  • March 6, 8, and 9 Symphonies No. 4 and No. 7

Stutzmann will conclude the cycle by performing Symphony No. 9 in the Fall of 2025. She has included other Beethoven masterpieces in the Project, with the composer’s Concerto for Violin, Cello, and Piano on April 3 & 4, 2025. The piece brings three different voices together, and the Orchestra’s own Concertmaster David Coucheron and Acting/Associate Principal Cello Daniel Laufer are joined by pianist Julie Coucheron, who is David’s sister and a highly sought-after recitalist.

Concluding the Beethoven Project for the season on May 10 and 11, Stutzmann conducts one of Beethoven’s most epic works for orchestra and chorus, the MissaSolemnis, with the Orchestra joined by the world-renowned Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Chorus. The four featured soloists in this notoriously difficult piece are all highly acclaimed opera singers: Julia Grüter, soprano; Anna Goryachova, mezzo- soprano; Miles Mykkanen, tenor; and Lawson Anderson, baritone.

Yo-Yo Ma Returns to Atlanta Symphony Hall
Arguably one of the most famous musicians in the world, Yo-Yo Ma has a decades-long career that luckily has included stops in Atlanta with the Orchestra on numerous occasions. This year, Ma plays a special concert on December 5, 2024, with Eric Jacobsen conducting. Ma will play Haydn’s Cello Concerto No. 1, which has not been heard in Atlanta in some years, and Bachianas Brasileiras No. 5 by Heitor Villa-Lobos, a Brazilian composer from the early 20th Century. Jacobsen, a member of the Silkroad Ensemble, makes his ASO debut conducting Dvořák’s Symphony No. 8 and Slavonic Dance, as well as a piece from GRAMMY® nominated composer Curtis Stewart.

Music Director Laureate Robert Soano Returns
Esteemed Music Director Laureate Robert Spano, who was recently named Music Director of the Washington National Opera, in addition to holding the same title with the Fort Worth Symphony, returns to the ASO to conduct two weekends of some of Atlanta’s favorite pieces. Spano will conduct Copland’s buoyant Appalachian Spring Suite and Vaughn Williams’s Fifth Symphony on March 20 and 22 and is joined by ASO Principal Harp Elisabeth Remy Johnson for the GRAMMY®-winning harp concerto from Jennifer Higdon.

The following weekend, March 27 and 29, Spano will welcome pianist Jae Hong Park, winner of the 2021 Busoni International Piano Competition, in his ASO debut to perform Scriabin’s Piano Concerto. The program opens with Tapiola from Sibelius and closes with a Spano favorite, Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade.

The Four Seasons Special Performance Returns
After two sell-out years, ASO Concertmaster David Coucheron will be back center stage to both play and lead Vivaldi’s masterpiece, The FourSeasons, on January 12. This year, he will also lead the Orchestra in Dvořák’s Serenade for Strings.

Guest Artists and Conductors
There are a number of thrilling debuts in the 2024-25 season, including conductor Earl Lee, who will lead the Orchestra in a European adventure, beginning with Haydn’s Symphony No. 104, “London,” and ending with Mendelssohn’s Symphony No. 4, “Italian.” In between, ASO Principal Oboe Elizabeth Koch Tiscione plays the delightful oboe concerto from Françaix, L’horlogede flore (The Flower Clock).

Conductor Roderick Cox returns to the ASO after his “season high” (ArtsATL) debut in 2023 as a last- minute replacement. ArtsATL said the Georgia native has a “remarkably dynamic and daring presence onstage,” and on October 24 and 26 presents a program with fire, including John Adams’s Doctor Atomic Symphony, Rachmaninoff’s Symphonic Dances, and the heart-breaking Barber Adagio for Strings.

Rising star Geneva Lewis makes her ASO debut on November 21 and 23 playing Mozart’s Violin Concerto No. 3, with Nicholas Carter conducting a program that includes Haydn’s Symphony No. 96, “Miracle,” and Walton’s Symphony No. 1.

On January 16 and 18, the Orchestra welcomes the dazzling Uzbek conductor Aziz Shokhakimov back to the podium to conduct Polina Nazaykinskaya’s Winter Bells and Stravinsky’s Petrushka (1947). Joining him is fellow countryman Behzod Abduraimov, making his ASO debut playing Rachmaninoff’s show- stopping RhapsodyonaThemeofPaganini.

The powerful, world-class ASO Chorus performs under the baton of guest conductor Vasily Petrenko as they present Walton’s famous oratorio, Belshazzar’s Feast, a jazz-inspired work from the 20th Century that draws on the Old Testament story of Belshazzar and the “writing on the wall.”

The phenomenal cello virtuoso Sterling Elliott makes his ASO debut on February 20 playing Haydn’s Cello Concerto No. 2, as part of an all-Haydn program from conductor Matthew Halls, who is also making his debut this weekend. The program, which is also performed on February 22, includes Haydn’s Symphony No. 101, “The Clock,” and the rarely-performed L’isoladisabitataOverture (The Uninhabited Island).

Guest conductor Andrew Manze returns to Atlanta on April 24 and 26 to conduct the ASO debut of violinist Clara-Jumi Kang, playing the Violin Concerto from Sibelius. Included in the program are three pieces from composer Khachaturian: “Sabre Dance” and “Lezghinka” from Gayane; and “Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia” from Spartacus. Manze concludes the program with the powerful Symphony No. 2 from Borodin.

At the beginning of May, on May 1 and 3, the ASO takes an Italian holiday with two exciting debuts – Italians Jader Bignamini, conductor, and Giuseppe Gibboni, violin. Bignamini opens his program with Bottesini’s IldiavolodellanotteOverture, and ends with two pieces from Italian composer Respighi: Fountains of Rome and Pines of Rome. In the middle, the sensational Gibboni, winner of the Paganini International Violin Competition, plays the composer’s wickedly difficult Violin Concerto No. 1.

Later in the month, the ASO welcomes a dear friend and an exciting new guest conductor, when Marc- André Hamelin returns to play Bartók’s Piano Concerto No. 3, while conductor Marzena Diakun makes her ASO debut. Diakun also conducts Weinberg’s Rhapsody on Moldovan Themes and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 1, “Winter Daydreams.”

Conductor Stéphane Denève had an exciting debut with the ASO in the 2023-24 season and comes back May 29 and 31 to conduct Gershwin’s AnAmericaninParis, Ibert’s Escales, and Milhaud’s Lacréationdu monde (The Creation of the World). Joining Denève is audience favorite, pianist Kirill Gerstein playing Ravel’s Piano Concerto for the Left Hand. 

The 2024-25 season concludes on June 5 and 7 with two powerhouses in classical music and frequent ASO guest artists, conductor Peter Oundijian and pianist Inon Barnatan, presenting Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1. Oundijian closes the program – and the season – with the massive Mahler Symphony No. 7, which is a fitting ending to an 80th Anniversary season.

Subscriptions are now on sale. Details are available at aso.org/2425

A full chronological listing with programming and artists can be found below.

2024/2025 AtlantaSymphonyOrchestraDeltaClassical Season
*DenotesanASO debut

SeasonOpenerwithNathalie Stutzmann
Thursday, September 19, 2024, 8pm
Saturday, September 21, 2024, 8pm

Nathalie Stutzmann, conductor
Edgar Moreau, cello
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra 

SCHUMANN: Cello Concerto
MAHLER: Symphony No. 1, “Titan”

NathalieStutzmannConductsMahler+ Shostakovich
Thursday, September 26, 2024, 8pm
Friday, September 27, 2024, 8pm

Nathalie Stutzmann, conductor
Fleur Barron, mezzo-soprano
Samuel Hasselhorn, baritone
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

MAHLER: DesKnabenWunderhorn (The Boy’s Magic Horn)
SHOSTAKOVICH: Symphony No. 6

HaydnandMendelssohn Symphonies
Thursday, October 17, 2024, 8pm
Saturday, October 19, 2024, 8pm

Earl Lee, conductor *
Elizabeth Koch Tiscione, oboe
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

HAYDN: Symphony No. 104, “London”
FRANÇAIX: L’horloge de flore (The Flower Clock)
MENDELSSOHN: Symphony No. 4, “Italian”

RoderickCoxConductsBarber+ Rachmaninoff
Thursday, October 24, 2024, 8pm
Saturday, October 26, 2024, 8pm 

Roderick Cox, conductor
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

BARBER: Adagiofor Strings
JOHN ADAMS: DoctorAtomic Symphony
RACHMANINOFF: Symphonic Dances

AllMozartwithStutzmann+ Chorus
Thursday, November 7, 2024, 8pm
Saturday, November 9, 2024, 8pm
Sunday, November 10, 2024, 3pm

Nathalie Stutzmann, conductor
Olga Kulchynska, soprano
Julia Lezhneva, soprano
Lunga Eric Hallam, tenor
Harold Wilson, bass

Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Chorus
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

MOZART: Symphony No. 40
MOZART: Mass in C Minor

StutzmannConducts Bruckner
Thursday, November 14, 2024, 8pm
Saturday, November 16, 2024, 8pm

Nathalie Stutzmann, conductor
Christina Smith, flute
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

C.P.E. BACH Flute Concerto in D Minor
BRUCKNER Symphony No. 4, “Romantic”

Haydn+Mozart+Walton
Thursday, November 21, 2024, 8pm
Saturday, November 23, 2024, 8pm

Nicholas Carter, conductor
Geneva Lewis, violin*
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

HAYDN: Symphony No. 96, “The Miracle”
MOZART: Violin Concerto No. 3
WALTON: Symphony No. 1

Yo-YoMa+AtlantaSymphony Orchestra
Thursday, December 5, 2024, 8pm
Eric Jacobsen, conductor*
Yo-Yo Ma, cello
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

DVOŘÁK: SlavonicDance, Op. 46, No. 8
CURTIS STEWART: “M. Bett” from The Famous People
HAYDN: Cello Concerto No. 1
VILLA-LOBOS: Bachianas Brasileiras No. 5 DVOŘÁK: Symphony No. 8

Coucheron+TheFour Seasons
Sunday, January 12, 2025, 3pm
David Coucheron, violin + director

DVOŘÁK Serenade for Strings, Op. 22
VIVALDI TheFourSeasons

Rachmaninoff+ Stravinsky
Thursday, January 16, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, January 18, 2025, 8pm

Aziz Shokhakimov, conductor
Behzod Abduraimov, piano*
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

POLINA NAZAYKINSKAYA: WinterBells
RACHMANINOFF: RhapsodyonaThemeof Paganini
STRAVINSKY: Petrushka(1947 Version)

BeethovenProject:Symphonies1+ 3
Thursday, January 23, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, January 25, 2025, 8pm
Nathalie Stutzmann, conductor
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra 

BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 1
BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 3, “Eroica”

BeethovenProject:Symphonies2+ 5
Thursday, January 30, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, February 1, 2025, 8pm
Sunday, February 2, 2025, 3pm

Nathalie Stutzmann, conductor
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 2
BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 5 

ASOChorus+Belshazzar’s Feast
Thursday, February 13, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, February 15, 2025, 8pm

Vasily Petrenko, conductor
Nathan Berg, bass-baritone
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Chorus
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

SIBELIUS: Symphony No. 1
WALTON: Belshazzar’s Feast

AllHaydnwiththe ASO
Thursday, February 20, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, February 22, 2025, 8pm

Matthew Halls, conductor*
Sterling Elliott, cello*
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

HAYDN: L’isoladisabitataOverture (The Uninhabited Island)
HAYDN: Cello Concerto No. 2
HAYDN: Symphony No. 101, “The Clock” 

BeethovenProject:Symphonies6+ 8
Thursday, February 27, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, March 1, 2025, 8pm

Nathalie Stutzmann, conductor
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra 

BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 8
BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 6, “Pastoral”

BeethovenProject:Symphonies4+ 7
Thursday, March 6, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, March 8, 2025, 8pm
Sunday, March 9, 2025, 3pm

Nathalie Stutzmann, conductor
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra 

BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 4
BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 7 

RobertSpano Conducts
Thursday, March 20, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, March 22, 2025, 8pm

Robert Spano, conductor
Elisabeth Remy Johnson, harp
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra 

COPLAND: Appalachian Spring Suite
JENNIFER HIGDON: Harp Concerto
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Symphony No. 5

SpanoConducts Scheherazade
Thursday, March 27, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, March 29, 2025, 8pm

Robert Spano, conductor
Jae Hong Park, piano
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

SIBELIUS: Tapiola
SCRIABIN: Piano Concerto
RIMSKY-KORSAKOV: Scheherazade

BeethovenProject:StutzmannConductsTriple Concerto
Thursday, April 3, 2025, 8pm
Friday, April 4, 2025, 8pm

Nathalie Stutzmann, conductor
David Coucheron, violin
Daniel Laufer, cello
Julie Coucheron, piano
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

BEETHOVEN: Concerto for Violin, Cello, and Piano
STRAUSS: EineAlpensinfonie(An Alpine Symphony) 

NathalieStutzmannconductsTchaikovsky+ Ravel
Thursday, April 10, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, April 12, 2025, 8pm

Nathalie Stutzmann, conductor
Anna Geniushene, piano
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

TCHAIKOVSKY: Piano Concerto No. 1
RAVEL: MamèreL’Oye(Mother Goose) RAVEL: Lavalse

Sibelius ViolinConcerto
Thursday, April 24, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, April 26, 2025, 8pm

Andrew Manze, conductor
Clara-Jumi Kang, violin
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

KHACHATURIAN: “Sabre Dance” from Gayane
KHACHATURIAN: “Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia” from Spartacus
KHACHATURIAN: “Lezghinka” from Gayane
SIBELIUS: Violin Concerto BORODIN: Symphony No. 2

ItalianHolidaywiththe ASO
Thursday, May 1, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, May 3, 2025, 8pm

Jader Bignamini, conductor*
Giuseppe Gibboni, violin*
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

BOTTESINI: Il diavolo della notte Overture
PAGANINI: Violin Concerto No. 1
RESPIGHI: Fountains of Rome
RESPIGHI: Pines of Rome 

BeethovenProject: Missa solemnis
Thursday, May 8, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, May 10, 2025, 8pm
Sunday, May 11, 2025, 3pm

Nathalie Stutzmann, conductor
Julia Grüter, soprano
Anna Goryachova, mezzo-soprano
Miles Mykkanen, tenor

Lawson Anderson, baritone
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Chorus
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

BEETHOVEN: Missa solemnis

Tchaikovsky SymphonyNo.1
Thursday, May 15, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, May 17, 2025, 8pm

Marzena Diakun, conductor*
Marc-André Hamelin, piano
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra 

WEINBERG: Rhapsody onMoldovanThemes
BARTÓK: Piano Concerto No. 3
TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 1, “Winter Daydreams” 

An American in Paris
Thursday, May 29, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, May 31, 2025, 8pm

Stéphane Denève, conductor
Kirill Gerstein, piano
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

IBERT: Escales
RAVEL: Piano Concerto for the Left Hand
MILHAUD: La création dumonde (The Creation of the World)
GERSHWIN: An American in Paris

Oundjian Conducts Mahler Symphony No. 7
Thursday, June 5, 2025, 8pm
Saturday, June 7, 2025, 8pm

Peter Oundjian, conductor
Inon Barnatan, piano
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

SHOSTAKOVICH: Piano Concerto No. 1
MAHLER: Symphony No. 7

Photo: Cellist Yo-Yo Ma returns to Atlanta in December. Photo by Jason Bell

[post_title] => Atlanta Symphony Plans 8 Beethoven Symphonies and Yo-Yo Ma in 24-25 [post_excerpt] => [post_status] => publish [comment_status] => closed [ping_status] => closed [post_password] => [post_name] => atlanta-symphony-plans-8-beethoven-symphonies-and-yo-yo-ma-in-24-25 [to_ping] => [pinged] => [post_modified] => 2024-03-24 14:33:23 [post_modified_gmt] => 2024-03-24 14:33:23 [post_content_filtered] => [post_parent] => 0 [guid] => https://encoreatlanta.com/?p=59665 [menu_order] => 0 [post_type] => post [post_mime_type] => [comment_count] => 0 [filter] => raw )

The GrammyAward-winning Atlanta Symphony Orchestra announces the 2024-25 Delta Classical Concert season, the 80th Anniversary season and Music Director Nathalie Stutzmann’s third season at the helm of the orchestra. “We …

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“Bohème Project” Will Open Atlanta Opera 24-25 “Hero” Season

WP_Post Object
(
    [ID] => 59617
    [post_author] => 47
    [post_date] => 2024-03-14 09:23:39
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The Atlanta Opera will open its 2024-25 season (the company’s 45th) with two installments in its multi-season “Bohème Project”: a contemporary and immersive opera experience that alternates a new version of Giacomo Puccini’s tragedy La bohème set during the 2020s COVID-19 pandemicwith its modern-day analogue, Jonathan Larson’s Rent, set in the during the darkest days of the AIDS epidemic. 

Both will be performed at Atlanta’s converted industrial complex Pullman Yards (Sept. 18-Oct. 16). They follow the current (January 2024) production of the opera in its traditional 19th century setting when the leading character is dying of tuberculosis.

They will be part of a full season of six opera productions inspired by the archetypal “hero’s journey” found in myths and fairytales from around the world. 

The two “Bohème Project” operas will be followed by General & Artistic Director Tomer Zvulun’s new production of Wagner’s Siegfried (April 26-May 4), the third opera in The Atlanta Opera’s Ring Cycle. As Siegfried, the acclaimed Greer Grimsley is joined by the “impassioned” (Parterre Box 2022) heldentenor Stefan Vinke, together with luminaries of the Wagner repertory Barry Banks as Mime, Lise Lindstrom, who “brings instant star power to the role of Brunnhilde” (Classical CD Reviews) and the “burning, taut contralto” (New York Classical Review) of Lindsay Ammann in the role of Erda 

In its first complete season as one of the 10 top-tier opera companies in the U.S., The Atlanta Opera’s mainstage series at the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre includes Mozart’s The Magic Flute (Nov 2-10) featuring Rainelle Krause as Queen of the Night in her company debut and Santiago Ballerini as the hero Tamino. Michael Mayes will play the anti-hero of Giuseppe Verdi’s Macbeth (March 1-9) joined by Sara Gartland as Lady Macbeth.  The regular season will conclude with Handel’s Semele featuring Lauren Snouffer as the hero who, like Macbeth, allows her ambition to mislead her into disaster (June 7-15). 

All mainstage series productions will be livestreamed and filmed for release by The Atlanta Opera Film Studio.

Tickets for the 2024-25 season are now available as multi-event season subscriptions. Six-performance subscriptions for the Discoveries and Mainstage productions start at $250. Four-performance subscriptions for the Mainstage productions start at $160.

Season subscriptions may be secured online at www.AtlantaOpera.org; by phone at 404-881-8885 (weekdays 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. for live operators and call-backs for messages); by mail or in person during business hours (to: Atlanta Opera Tickets, 1575 Northside Dr. NE, Bldg 300, Suite 350, Atlanta, GA 30318).

Those who subscribe by April 1, 2024 can get free parking passes for four Mainstage productions at Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre.

Individual event tickets will go on sale in summer 2024. 

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The Atlanta Opera will open its 2024-25 season (the company’s 45th) with two installments in its multi-season “Bohème Project”: a contemporary and immersive opera experience that alternates a new version …

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TPAC Season to Include Moulin Rouge!, & Juliet and Shucked

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    [ID] => 59507
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    [post_date] => 2024-02-21 17:00:20
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Nashville’s Tennessee Performing Arts Center has announced its musical and play subscription season for 2024-25 that features six Nashville premieres including & Juliet, Clue, the Tony Award-winning Best Musical Kimberley Akimbo, plus the return of the smash hit Mamma Mia! and a newly-imagined adaptation of the musical Peter Pan.

To purchase season tickets and review the full benefits, pricing and seat map, visit TPAC.ORG/Broadway, or call TPAC Patron Services at 615-782-6560.

Here are the shows that will be lighting up Nashville:

CLUE
Sept. 10-15, 2024
clueliveonstage.com 

Murder and blackmail are on the menu when six mysterious guests assemble at Boddy Manor for a night they’ll never forget! Was it Mrs. Peacock in the study with the knife? Or was it Colonel Mustard in the library with the wrench? Based on the cult 1985 Paramount movie and inspired by the classic Hasbro board game, CLUE is the ultimate whodunit that will keep you guessing until the final twist.

MOULIN ROUGE! THE MUSICAL
Oct. 8-20, 2024
moulinrougemusical.com 

Enter a world of splendor and romance, of eye-popping excess, of glitz, grandeur and glory! A world where Bohemians and aristocrats rub elbows and revel in electrifying enchantment. Welcome to MOULIN ROUGE! THE MUSICAL. Baz Luhrmann’s revolutionary film comes to life onstage, remixed in a new musical mash-up extravaganza. Directed by Tony Award winner Alex Timbers, MOULIN ROUGE! THE MUSICAL is a theatrical celebration of truth, beauty, freedom and—above all—love. With a book by Tony Award winner John Logan; music supervision, orchestrations, and arrangements by Tony Award winner Justin Levine; and choreography by Tony Award winner Sonya Tayeh, MOULIN ROUGE! is more than a musical—it is a state of mind.

SHUCKED
Nov. 5-10, 2024
shuckedmusical.com 

SHUCKED is the Tony Award®–winning musical comedy The Wall Street Journal calls “flat out hilarious!” And nobody knows funny like economists. Featuring a book by Tony Award® winner Robert Horn (Tootsie), a score by the Grammy Award–winning songwriting team of Nashvillians Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally (Kacey Musgraves’ “Follow Your Arrow”), and directed by Tony Award winner Jack O’Brien (Hairspray), this corn-fed, corn-bred American musical is sure to satisfy your appetite for great musical theatre. SHUCKED is recommended for ages 10+. SHUCKED contains adult themes, moments of adult language and a harvest of corny innuendo.

PETER PAN
Jan. 7-12, 2025
peterpanontour.com  

PETER PAN, the high-flying musical has been thrilling audiences of all ages for close to 70 years and is now being brought back to life in a new adaptation by celebrated playwright Larissa FastHorse, directed by Emmy Award winner Lonny Price and choreography by Lorin Latarro. The adventure begins when Peter Pan and his mischievous sidekick, Tinker Bell, visit the bedroom of the Darling children late one night. With a sprinkle of fairy dust and a few happy thoughts, the children are taken on a magical journey they will never forget. This extraordinary musical full of excitement and adventure features iconic and timeless songs including “I’m Flying,” “I Gotta Crow,” “I Won’t Grow Up” and “Neverland.” PETER PAN embraces the child in us all so go on a journey from the second star to the right and straight on ‘til morning—your entire family will be Hooked!

& JULIET
Feb. 11-16, 2025
andjulietbroadway.com 

Created by the Emmy-winning writer from Schitt’s Creek, this hilarious new musical flips the script on the greatest love story ever told. & JULIET asks: what would happen next if Juliet didn’t end it all over Romeo? Get whisked away on a fabulous journey as she ditches her famous ending for a fresh beginning and a second chance at life and love—her way. Juliet’s new story bursts to life through a playlist of pop anthems as iconic as her name, including "Since U Been Gone‚" “Roar,” “Baby One More Time,” “Larger Than Life‚” “That’s The Way It Is” and “Can't Stop the Feeling!”— all from the genius songwriter/producer behind more #1 hits than any other artist this century. Break free of the balcony scene and get into this romantic comedy that proves there’s life after Romeo. The only thing tragic would be missing it.

MAMMA MIA!
March 18-23, 2025
mammamiathetour.com 

A mother. A daughter. Three possible dads. And a trip down the aisle you’ll never forget! Set on a Greek island paradise where the sun always shines, a tale of love, friendship and identity is beautifully told through the timeless hits of ABBA. On the eve of her wedding, a daughter’s quest to discover the father she’s never known brings three men from her mother’s past back to the island they last visited decades ago. For nearly 25 years, people all around the world have fallen in love with the characters, the story and the music.

KIMBERLY AKIMBO
April 8-13, 2025
kimberlyakimbothemusical.com 

A new musical about growing up and growing old (in no particular order), KIMBERLY AKIMBO is the winner of 5 Tony Awards including Best Musical. It features Tony Award-winning book and lyrics by David Lindsay-Abaire (Shrek), a Tony Award-winning score by Jeanine Tesori (Fun Home), choreography by Danny Mefford (Dear Evan Hansen) and direction by Tony-nominated director Jessica Stone. Kimberly is about to turn 16 and recently moved with her family to a new town in suburban New Jersey. In this “howlingly funny heartbreaker of a show” (The New Yorker), Kim is forced to navigate family dysfunction, a rare genetic condition, her first crush…and possible felony charges. Ever the optimist, she is determined to find happiness against all odds and embark on a great adventure.

MJ
April 29 – May 11, 2024
tour.mjthemusical.com 

He was one of the greatest entertainers of all time. Now, Michael Jackson’s unique and unparalleled artistry comes to Nashville as MJ, the multi-Tony Award-winning musical centered around the making of the 1992 Dangerous World Tour, begins a tour of its own. Created by Tony Award-winning Director/Choreographer Christopher Wheeldon and two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Lynn Nottage, MJ goes beyond the singular moves and signature sound of the star, offering a rare look at the creative mind and collaborative spirit that catapulted Michael Jackson into legendary status. MJ is startin’ somethin’ as it makes its Nashville premiere. MJ is recommended for ages 8 and up.

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Nashville’s Tennessee Performing Arts Center has announced its musical and play subscription season for 2024-25 that features six Nashville premieres including & Juliet, Clue, the Tony Award-winning Best Musical Kimberley …

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Atlanta-Based Artists Win 2024 Grammys

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    [post_date] => 2024-02-06 17:42:20
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Atlanta proved itself a powerhouse of rap and Christian music at the 2024 Grammy Award, which were given February 4 at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles.

The Rap song “SCIENTISTS & ENGINEERS” and the Christian music song “Your Power” both brough Grammys to multiple Atlanteans each for their collaborations on those compositions. Theron Thomas was named Songwriter of the Year.

A complete list of winners and nominees for the 66th annual Grammy Awards, which recognized outstanding achievement in recorded music, can be found here: https://www.grammy.com/news/2024-grammys-nominations-full-winners-nominees-list

Here is a list of Atlanta’s artists who took home Grammy Awards:

Theron Thomas was named Songwriter of the Year, Non-Classical for nine songs, including “Told Ya,” “Cheatback,” “All My Life” and “How We Roll.”

André 3000 (André Benjamin) won for both Best Rap Performance and Best Rap Song for his work on “SCIENTISTS & ENGINEERS.”

Future (Nayvadius Cash) was named Songwriter of the Year, Non-Classical for his work on “Cheatback,” and for Best Rap Performance and Best Rap Song for his work on “SCIENTISTS & ENGINEERS.”

Killer Mike (Michael Render) won Best Rap Performance for “SCIENTISTS & ENGINEERS,” Best Rap Song for “SCIENTISTS & ENGINEERS” and Best Rap Album for “MICHAEL.”

Jordan Dollar and Alexandria Dollar were named winners of Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song for their work on “Your Power.”

Lasanna “Ace” Harris, David Hein, Deandre Hunter and Dylan Hyde were named winners of Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song for “Your Power.”

Christian Louisana was named winner of Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song for work on “Your Power.”

Patrick Darius Mix Jr. was named winner of Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song for his work on “Your Power.”

Justin Pelham was named winner of Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song for his work on “Your Power.”

Jeffrey Lawrence Shannon Won Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song for her work on “Your Power.”

Swoope (Lawrence Allen Swoope) won Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song for her work on “Your Power.”

Lecrae (Lecrae Moore) won Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song for work on “Your Power,” and Best Contemporary Christian Music Album for “Church Clothes 4.”

Colin Leonard won Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical for his work on “Jaguar II.”

Jason Isbell And the 400 Unit (Chad Gamble) won Best American Roots Song for “Cast Iron Skillet,” and Best Americana Album for “Weathervanes.”

Blind Boys of Alabama: Ricky McKinnie won Best Roots Gospel Album for “Echoes of the South.”

Photo: Theron Thomas was named Songwriter of the Year at the 66th annual Grammy Awards. 

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Atlanta proved itself a powerhouse of rap and Christian music at the 2024 Grammy Award, which were given February 4 at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles. The Rap song …

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2023 Suzi Bass Award Winners Announced

WP_Post Object
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    [ID] => 58858
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    [post_date] => 2024-01-25 15:01:41
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The Suzi Bass Awards celebrated their 20th anniversary on November 13, honoring outstanding work in Atlanta’s live theatre and the artists who create it. 

Among the shows garnering the most awards, Alliance Theatre’s new musical Water for Elephants, earned seven Suzis. The show is scheduled to open on Broadway next spring.

Award winners were announced at a party at Decatur’s DeKalb History Center, with a majority of Atlanta’s theatre community and industry artists in attendance.  

This season, the Suzi Bass Awards volunteer judges chose nominees and recipients in 29 categories. 17 theatres and 34 productions were represented in the nominees. 

Here is a complete list of the nominees, with the winners marked in boldface type:

AWARDS FOR MUSICALS

Choreography:
Brian Jordan, Jr. The Wiz True Colors Theatre Company
Jesse Robb+ & Shana Carroll Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre
David Rossetti Mary Poppins Aurora Theatre
Veronica Silk Guys and Dolls Atlanta Lyric Theatre
Precious West Urinetown Actor's Express & Oglethorpe Theatre

Costume Design:
Jarrod Barnes Urinetown Actor's Express & Oglethorpe Theatre
Jarrod Barnes The Wiz True Colors Theatre Company
Dr. L. Nyrobi Moss Bright Star Georgia Ensemble Theatre 
Alice Neff Mary Poppins Aurora Theatre
David Israel Reynoso Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre

Direction:
Freddie Ashley Urinetown Actor's Express & Oglethorpe Theatre
Kayce Grogan-Wallace Guys and Dolls Atlanta Lyric Theatre
Thomas W. Jones II Bright Star Georgia Ensemble Theatre 
Jessica Stone Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre
Amanda Wansa Morgan Next to Normal Jennie T. Anderson Theatre & Atlanta Lyric Theatre

Ensemble: 
Lizzie Actor's Express Jasmine Renee Ellis, Christina Leidel, Jessica De Maria, Megan Zhang

Featured Performer (10 nominees, 2 awards):
Caleb Brink as Nicely Nicely Johnson Guys and Dolls Atlanta Lyric Theatre
Patty de la Garza as Little Becky Two Shoes Urinetown Actor's Express & Oglethorpe Theatre 
Lawrence Flowers as James "Thunder" Early Dreamgirls Dominion Entertainment
Desiré Gaston as Disco Donna Summer: The Donna Summer Musical Aurora Theatre
Sara Gettelfinger as Barbara Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre
Tatum McBride as Little Sally Urinetown Actor's Express & Oglethorpe Theatre
Wade McCollum as Wade Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre
James Allen McCune as Jimmy Ray Dobbs Bright Star Georgia Ensemble Theatre
Golbanoo Setayesh as Natalie Next to Normal Jennie T. Anderson Theatre & Atlanta Lyric Theatre 
Jacob Ryan Smith as Gabe Next to Normal Jennie T. Anderson Theatre & Atlanta Lyric Theatre

Lighting Design:
Andre C. Allen/Blacklight Productions The Wiz True Colors Theatre Company
Maranda DeBusk Lizzie Actor's Express 
Bradley King Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre
D. Connor McVey Guys and Dolls Atlanta Lyric Theatre
D. Connor McVey Urinetown Actor's Express & Oglethorpe Theatre

Music Direction: 
John-Michael D'Haviland & Holt McCarley Next to Normal Jennie T. Anderson Theatre & Atlanta Lyric Theatre
Matt Hinkley Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre
Christian Magby & LeRell Ross Bright Star Georgia Ensemble Theatre
Ann-Carol Pence Mary Poppins Aurora Theatre
Ashley Prince Urinetown Actor's Express & Oglethorpe Theatre

Principal Performer (10 nominees, 2 awards):
Marcello Audino as Sky Masterson Guys and Dolls Atlanta Lyric Theatre 
Mary Nye Bennett as Diana Next to Normal Jennie T. Anderson Theatre & Atlanta Lyric Theatre
Taylor Buice as Dan Next to Normal Jennie T. Anderson Theatre & Atlanta Lyric Theatre
Chloe Cordle as Miss Adelaide Guys and Dolls Atlanta Lyric Theatre
Jaymyria Etienne as Sarah Brown Guys and Dolls Atlanta Lyric Theatre
Bryan Fenkart* as August/Charlie Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre
Megan K. Hill as Pennywise Urinetown Actor's Express & Oglethorpe Theatre
Liza Jaine as Alice Murphy Bright Star Georgia Ensemble Theatre
Isabelle McCalla as Marlena/June Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre 
Ryan Vasquez as Jacob Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre

Projection Design: 
David Bengali Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre
Kimberly Binns The Wiz True Colors Theatre Company
Kimberly Binns Summer: The Donna Summer Musical Aurora Theatre
Maranda DeBusk Lizzie Actor's Express
Bobby Johnston Next to Normal Jennie T. Anderson Theatre & Atlanta Lyric Theatre

Scenic Design:
Seamus M. Bourne Urinetown Actor's Express & Oglethorpe Theatre
Isabel & Moriah Curley-Clay The Wiz True Colors Theatre Company 
Takeshi Kata Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre
Stephanie Polhemus Bright Star Georgia Ensemble Theatre
Stephanie Polhemus Guys and Dolls Atlanta Lyric Theatre

Sound Design:
Jeremiah Davison Summer: The Donna Summer Musical Aurora Theatre
Caleb Hurst Guys and Dolls Atlanta Lyric Theatre
Bobby Johnston Next to Normal Jennie T. Anderson Theatre & Atlanta Lyric Theatre 
Jessica Paz Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre
Daniel Terry Mary Poppins Aurora Theatre

AWARDS FOR PLAYS

Costume Design:
Anné Carole Butler Much Ado About Nothing Atlanta Shakespeare Company
Anné Carole Butler & Clint Horne As You Like It Atlanta Shakespeare Company
Dr. L. Nyrobi Moss Designing Women 2020 Horizon Theatre
Dr. L. Nyrobi Moss The Play That Goes Wrong Aurora Theatre 
Jennifer Schottstaedt Tesla vs. Edison Center for Puppetry Arts

Direction:
Freddie Ashley Prayer for the French Republic Actor's Express 
Jason Hines Tesla vs. Edison Center for Puppetry Arts
Amber McGinnis Tiny Beautiful Things Theatrical Outfit
Heidi McKerley The Play That Goes Wrong Aurora Theatre
Matt Torney & Tim Stoltenberg The White Chip Theatrical Outfit & Dad’s Garage

Ensemble: 
The Play That Goes Wrong Aurora Theatre -- Marcello Audino, Skyler Brown, Caleb Clark, Arianna Hardaway, Chris Hecke, Jeff McKerley, Candy McLellan, Anthony Rodriguez
Designing Women 2020 Horizon Theatre -- Beth Beyer, Robin Bloodworth, Lane Carlock, Joanna Daniels, Luis R. Hernandez, Eve Krueger, Katherine Lanasa, Tiffany Porter
Much Ado About Nothing Atlanta Shakespeare Company--Mila Bolash, O’Neil Delapenha, Jaclyn Hofmann Faircloth, Nick Faircloth, Chris Hecke, Adam King, Amanda Lindsey McDonald, Daryel T Monson, Mary Ruth Ralston, Cameryn Richardson, David Rucker III, Charlie Thomas, Kelly Clare Toland, Tyra Watkins, Kenneth Wigley
Tiny Beautiful Things Theatrical Outfit--Robin Bloodworth, Candy McLellan, Maria Rodriguez-Sager, Stephen Ruffin
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged) Atlanta Shakespeare Company--O'Neil Delapenha, Ebony Jerry, Trevor Perry

Featured Performer (10 nominees, 2 awards): 
Jeremy Aggers as Doug The Many Wondrous Realities of Jasmine Starr-Kidd Alliance Theatre
Brandon Burditt as Uncle Craig The Many Wondrous Realities of Jasmine Starr-Kidd Alliance Theatre
Lamar K. Cheston as Rich/Mr. Lee/Mike/Alex Kim's Convenience Aurora Theatre & Horizon Theatre Company
Jay Jones as TJ The Hot Wing King Alliance Theatre
Faina Khibkin as Elodie Prayer for the French Republic Actor's Express
Aliya Kraar as Molly Prayer for the French Republic Actor's Express
Antonia LaChé as Ensemble Mlima's Tale 7 Stages
Adir Lev Mann as Daniel Prayer for the French Republic Actor’s Express 
Cara Mantella as Mary Jane Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train Actor's Express
Susan Shalhoub Larkin as Momo The Humans Theatrical Outfit

Lighting Design:
Liz Lee Tesla vs. Edison Center for Puppetry Arts
Joseph P. Monaghan III Prayer for the French Republic Actor’s Express
Mary Parker Designing Women 2020 Horizon Theatre
Ben Rawson The Many Wondrous Realities of Jasmine Starr-Kidd Alliance Theatre
Toni Sterling The Play That Goes Wrong Aurora Theatre

Principal Performer (10 nominees, 2 awards):
Ross Benjamin as Patrick Prayer for the French Republic Actor’s Express
LaLa Cochran as Deidre Blake The Humans Theatrical Outfit 
Carolyn Cook as Marcelle Prayer for the French Republic Actor’s Express
Bjorn Dupaty as Cordell The Hot Wing King Alliance Theatre
Alan Edwards as Erik Blake The Humans Theatrical Outfit
Cristian Gonzalez as Angel Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train Actor's Express
Ingrid Griffith as Shirley Chisholm and others Shirley Chisholm: Unbossed & Unbowed Out of Hand Theater 
Sekou Laidlow as Lucius Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train Actor's Express
Christina Leidel as The Woman The Turn of the Screw Georgia Ensemble Theatre
Olubajo “Bajo” Sonubi as Mlima Mlima’s Tale 7 Stages

Projection Design:
Milton Cordero Everybody Alliance Theatre 
Caite Hevner The Many Wondrous Realities of Jasmine Starr-Kidd Alliance Theatre
Jason Hines Tesla vs. Edison Center for Puppetry Arts
Daniel Pope Kim’s Convenience Aurora Theatre & Horizon Theatre Company
Olubajo “Bajo” Sonubi Mlima's Tale 7 Stages

Scenic Design:
Michael Carnahan The Hot Wing King Alliance Theatre
Isabel & Moriah Curley-Clay The Play That Goes Wrong Aurora Theatre
Isabel & Moriah Curley-Clay Designing Women 2020 Horizon Theatre Company
Isabel & Moriah Curley-Clay Support Group for Men Horizon Theatre Company
Ryan Sbaratta Tesla vs. Edison Center for Puppetry Arts

Sound Design: 
Christopher Darbassie The Many Wondrous Realities of Jasmine Starr-Kidd Alliance Theatre
Mikaela Fraser The Play That Goes Wrong Aurora Theatre
Bailey Gafeny & Johnathan Taylor / Multiband Studio Designing Women 2020 Horizon Theatre
Winston Johnson The Turn of the Screw Georgia Ensemble Theatre
Sharath Patel The Humans Theatrical Outfit

THEATRE FOR YOUNG AUDIENCES

Performance:
The Boy Who Kissed the Sky Alliance Theatre -- Deborah Bowman, Alexandria Joy, Aishé Keita, Cedric Lamar, Brandon L. Smith, Mike Spee, Adam Washington
Mufaro’s Beautiful Daughters -- Synchronicity Theatre Jonathan Bryant, Brandin Jay, Kendra Johnson, Brittani Minnieweather, Anthony Nash, Ja’Siah Young

Design: 
The Boy Who Kissed the Sky -- Alliance Theatre Alan Yeong^ (costumes), Connie Yun (lighting), Miko Simmons (projections), Carey Wong^ (scenic), Chris Lane (sound)
Mufaro’s Beautiful Daughters Synchronicity Theatre -- Dr. L. Nyrobi Moss (costumes), Maliya McCall (lighting), Gabrielle Stephenson (scenic), Johnathan Taylor (sound)

Direction:
The Boy Who Kissed the Sky -- Alliance Theatre Tim Bond+ (director), Eugene H. Russell IV (music director), Sonia Dawkins (choreographer)
Mufaro’s Beautiful Daughters Synchronicity Theatre Taryn Janelle (director/choreographer), LeRell Ross (music director)

New Work:
The Boy Who Kissed the Sky Alliance Theatre -- Idris Goodwin (book), Eugene H. Russell IV & Divinity Roxx (music)
Mufaro’s Beautiful Daughters Synchronicity Theatre Karen Abbott (book), LeRell Ross (music), Taryn Janelle (lyrics)

OUTSTANDING PRODUCTIONS

Musical:
Bright Star Georgia Ensemble Theatre
Guys and Dolls Atlanta Lyric Theatre
Next to Normal Jennie T. Anderson Theatre & Atlanta Lyric Theatre
Urinetown Actor's Express & Oglethorpe Theatre Water for Elephants Alliance Theatre

Play:
Designing Women 2020 Horizon Theatre Company
The Play That Goes Wrong Aurora Theatre 
Prayer for the French Republic Actor's Express
Tesla vs. Edison Center for Puppetry Arts
Tiny Beautiful Things Theatrical Outfit

World Premiere:
By My Will by Douglas Post Atlanta Shakespeare Company
Flex by Candrice Jones Theatrical Outfit
Oh, To Be Pure Again by Kira Rockwell Actor's Express
Tesla vs. Edison by Jason Hines Center for Puppetry Arts 
Water for Elephants by Rick Elice (book), Pigpen Theatre Co. (music and lyrics), based on the novel by Sara Gruen Alliance Theatre

Outstanding Social Justice:
The Hot Wing King Alliance Theatre
Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train Actor's Express
Kim's Convenience Aurora Theatre & Horizon Theatre
Mlima’s Tale 7 Stages 
Shirley Chisholm: Unbossed & Unbowed Out of Hand Theater

Theatre for Young Audiences: 
The Boy Who Kissed the Sky Alliance Theatre
Mufaro’s Beautiful Daughters Synchronicity Theatre

SPECIAL AWARDS:
The Spirit of Suzi Bass Award: The Overture Series at the Jennie T. Anderson Theatre under the direction of Jono Davis 
Volunteer of the Year Award: Julianne Taft, Board Chair, Synchronicity Theatre 
Callboard Award: LaWanda Green, Operations Manager, Horizon Theatre Company

For a further details, visit www.thesuzis.org.

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The Suzi Bass Awards celebrated their 20th anniversary on November 13, honoring outstanding work in Atlanta’s live theatre and the artists who create it.  Among the shows garnering the most …

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