WTF's 'Visit,' 'Elephant Man' Rack Up Tony Nominations

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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Roger Rees and Chita Rivera starred in 'The Visit' at Williamstown Theatre Festival last summer, under the direction of John Doyle, right. The production is up for five Tony Awards, including for Rivera for Outstanding Actress in a Musical.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Two productions that got their start at the Williamstown Theatre Festival racked up a combined nine Tony Award nominations on Tuesday morning.
 
"The Visit," which ran last summer in Williamstown, and "The Elephant Man," which ran in 2012, each will be up for top honors in their respective categories when the Tonys are announced live on CBS television on June 7.
 
"The Visit" is up for Best Musical, Best Book, Best Score, Best Lighting Design and Outstanding Actress in a Musical.
 
Chita Rivera is a two-time Tony winner, having won the award for Outstanding Actress in a Musical in 1984 ("The Rink") and 1993 ("Kiss of the Spider Woman").
 
"I'm so grateful to receive this wonderful acknowledgement for 'The Visit,' " Rivera told "Playbill" on Tuesday.
 
"Broadway is my home, and I'm so happy to be back in this terrific musical written by my dear friends John Kander, Fred Ebb and Terrence McNally, directed by the incomparable John Doyle and choreographed by the dazzling Graciela Daniele. How lucky am I to have such great friends and co-star with the phenomenal Roger Rees?
 
"I share all these tributes with our extraordinary company who put their hearts and souls into this piece every day."
 
The legendary writing team of Kander and Ebb are nominated together for Best Score. Ebb died in 2004, three years after "The Visit's" original Broadway debut was derailed by the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
 
McNally is up for Best Book.
 
Bradley Cooper and Patricia Clarkson each received their first Tony nomination for their work in 'The Elephant Man.'
"The Elephant Man" is nominated for Best Revival of a Play, Best Lead Actor in a Play, Best Featured Actor in a Play and  Best Featured Actress in a Play.
 
All three nominated performers in WTF's "Elephant Man," reprised their roles in its limited three-month run on Broadway from November 2014 to February 2015.
 
Bradley Cooper and Patricia Clarkson each received their first Tony nomination for their work in "The Elephant Man."
 
"To be a part of a community that gathers together in a 13-block radius, eight shows a week, no matter what, in the greatest city in the world – for one sole purpose, to tell stories – I can't think of a better job to have," Cooper told "Playbill."
 
Williamstown Theatre Festival, which itself earned a Tony for  Outstanding Regional Theatre in 2002, is listed as a producer on both "The Visit" and "The Elephant Man."

Tags: musical,   tony award,   WTF,   

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Williams Grads Told: Be Kind to 'What Is Strange Within You'

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — After describing herself as neither a speech writer nor a public speaker, Williams College Commencement speaker Cécile McLorin Salvant said that she watched "millions" of similar addresses when figuring out what she would say to the school's Class of 2026.
 
"I watched Valerie Jarrett's commencement speech from last year here at Williams, and it was so incredibly inspiring," Salvant said. "It was great, but, after watching, I felt like I had even less I wanted to say.
 
"And then I thought: What if I just showed up here as myself? I have spent so much of my life looking at what other people are doing and trying to fit myself into that, but I don't really fit. And I know you don't really fit, and, actually, I've been most rewarded when I remembered that and when I've honored that."
 
Salvant said that graduation day is a good time for the graduates to think about what drives them and trust themselves to find a path.
 
"We're so often looking at what everyone else is doing, distracting ourselves from our own desires and our own idiosyncrasies, and the result is that we get a little more mean, a little less understanding of others, a little more stingy, a little less kind," Salvant said. "So what I'm advocating for, ultimately, is a kindness that goes both ways. That kindness toward yourself, toward what is strange within you, is that same kindness with which you can meet the people in the world around you, and you can keep giving that kindness both ways, even when you think you have none left to give."
 
And, with that, the three-time Grammy winner and MacArthur fellow told the crowd that she was going to be true to her self, launching into a stirring a cappella rendition of West Side Story's "Somewhere," composed by longtime Tanglewood fixture Leonard Bernstein with lyrics by Williams alum Stephen Sondheim.
 
Salvant was one of a handful speakers who took a turn at the podium at the school's 237th Commencement Exercises.
 
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