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Though the past year has been full of conflict and occasional catastrophe for the local arts scene, Seattle came out of the 59th annual Tony Awards Sunday, June 5, smelling like a rose. Bill Irwin, a favorite with Seattle Rep audiences, won a best actor award for holding his own against Kathleen Turner in the high-profile revival of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf; Rep alum Doug Hughes, sporting a previously unknown British accent, took home a trophy for his direction of John Patrick Shanley's Pulitzer-winning play Doubt, which was also awarded best play; and shining above all the rest was the Intiman Theatre–bred musical The Light in the Piazza, which received six awards—more for the night than any other show in its genre. Piazza swept the technical categories (costume, scenic design, and lighting), and was singled out for orchestrations, for Adam Guettel's challenging score, and, finally, for Victoria Clark's moving, magnificent lead performance as a Southern mother in Florence handling her mentally impaired daughter's romance with a handsome young Italian. Piazza lost the top prize of the night to Monty Python's Spamalot, the crowd-pleasing musical adaptation of the Python Holy Grail film, but its success could mean a bigger and brighter future for an ambitious Intiman.
Winners of the 2005 Tony Award
Compiled by Nichole Boland