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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Mark E (talk | contribs) at 10:41, 22 August 2023 (→‎Listing Producers: new section). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Untitled

Is there anything to actually say about this though? Zephyrprince 11:50, 28 Feb 2005 (UTC)

I could probably add a very brief introduction (something like Tony Award for Best Original Score or Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical, but I don't really see it as being terribly necessary. The page is valuable as a list, and it's probably more useful to finish up the information on the nominees than to write a preamble. Kevin M Marshall 14:18, 28 Feb 2005 (UTC)

Could we add a multiple win section like Tony Award for Best Original Score? MikeyB! 19:33, 8 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The Tony for Best Musical is technically given to the producers of the show; however, producers in the modern era aren't usually thought of as being terribly significant to the artistry of the show--nowadays, they're just open pocketbooks. And I don't see why Best Musical awards should be credited to the composer, lyricist, or bookwriter; they have the score and book awards to directly measure their contributions. Kevin M Marshall 21:34, 8 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Producers

Since they are the ones who win this award, I will undertake at some point to change all the references. 24.149.45.52 (talk) 04:12, 20 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]

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Should we list the actual recipients/nominees (i.e. the producers)?

It seems counterintuitive not to list the actual winners/nominees on this page (the show's producers), but the problem is that, over the last 20 years or so, the number of producers listed per production has grown immensely (you can check for yourself at https://www.ibdb.com/awards). Before then, it was typically no more than a half dozen names, and often just one. The winners of the 2019 award (for Hadestown) were listed as:

Mara Isaacs, Dale Franzen, Hunter Arnold, Tom Kirdahy, Carl Daikeler, Five Fates, Willette & Manny Klausner, No Guarantees, Sing Out, Louise! Productions, Stone Arch Theatricals, Benjamin Lowy/Adrian Salpeter, Meredith Lynsey Schade, 42nd.club, Craig Balsam, Broadway Strategic Return Fund, Concord Theatricals, Laurie David, Demar Moritz Gang, Getter Entertainment, Deborah Green, Harris Rubin Productions, Sally Cade Holmes, Marguerite Hoffman, Hornos-Moellenberg, Independent Presenters Network, Jam Theatricals, Kalin Levine Dohr Productions, Phil & Claire Kenny, Mike Karns, Kilimanjaro Theatricals, Lady Capital, LD Entertainment, Sandi Moran, Tom Neff, MWM Live, Patti Sanford Roberts & Michael Roberts, Schroeder Shapiro Productions, Seriff Productions, Stage Entertainment, Kenneth & Rosemary Willman, KayLavLex Theatricals, Tyler Mount, Jujamcyn Theaters (Jordan Roth: President; Rocco Landesman: President Emeritus; Paul Libin: Executive Vice President Emeritus; Jack Viertel: Senior Vice President), The National Theatre, New York Theatre Workshop

The lists for the other nominees are of similar length. And unfortunately, it doesn't seem like they're in any meaningful order (i.e. I don't see any indication that Mara Isaacs had an especially prominent role, or was one of the show's chief backers), so there's no obvious way to select a few key representatives from the list. Searching some of the names, most don't have Wikipedia articles, and are probably low-profile individuals, so giving the full list of recipients is probably not giving the reader much useful information.

On the other hand, for productions that do list only one or two producers, they tend to be notable, and their involvement with the show is likely to be covered in secondary sources, e.g.:

It seems a shame to deprive the reader of this useful information. So, options?

  1. Status quo: don't list any producers
  2. List all producers
  3. List only notable producers (in the sense of WP:N - i.e. they have a Wikipedia article, or would qualify to have one)
  4. List only producers whose involvement in the show is mentioned in secondary sources
  5. List producers, but truncate the number of names at some arbitrary threshold. When a list of nominees/winners is truncated, indicate it with an ellipsis, and make sure there's an inline citation nearby that the reader can follow to get to the full list of names.

I think each of these comes with pretty significant downsides. Leaning slightly toward 4, since I think it best satisfies the goal of giving reader informative context, and discarding the information that veers in the direction of WP:INDISCRIMINATE. But it also creates work for editors, and may be hard to communicate to readers without WP:ASTONISHING them.

Thoughts? Also, a related issue: the tables of nominees and winners currently have columns for the writers of the show's book, music, and lyrics. This could easily mislead a casual reader into thinking that those people were the recipients of the award (based on ibdb, I think they were given the award before 1971, but now it's just producers). Does the benefit of the additional context provided by those names outweigh that risk of misleading? Colin M (talk) 15:26, 28 June 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Actually, on further thought, I'm thinking maybe the status quo is best. Yes, the producers are technically listed as the winners on the Tony's website and ibdb, and they get to go on stage and receive the trophies, but RS coverage of the award almost universally refers to the award as being given to the play/musical itself, not the producers. Coverage will sometimes mention the producers of the show incidentally (e.g. from the New York Times: The Lion King, a daring mix of experimental techniques with a familiar story that was a critical success and a smashing financial one for the Walt Disney Company, won the Tony Award for best musical last night.), but most of the time they're not even mentioned at all in coverage of the award. Colin M (talk) 15:54, 28 June 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Why is Ain't Too Proud credited as having music and lyrics by The Temptations? The Temptations did not write their own songs, and in fact I don't think they wrote any of the songs used in this musical. The Internet Broadway Database gives the following writing credits:

Book by Dominique Morisseau; Music by The Legendary Motown Catalog; Lyrics by The Legendary Motown Catalog; Based on the book entitled "The Temptations" by Otis Williams; Based on the book entitled "The Temptations" by Otis Williams with Patricia Romanowski; Music orchestrated by Harold Wheeler; Music arranged by Kenny Seymour; Musical Director: Kenny Seymour; Featuring songs by Edward Holland, Jr., Norman J. Whitfield, Lamont Herbert Dozier, Brian Holland, Barrett Strong, Smokey Robinson, Ronald White, Ronald Miller, Orlando Murden, Ester Navarro, Carl Christiansen, Rodger Penzabene, Sr., Helga Penzabene, Roger Penzabene, Jr., Cornelius Grant, Johnny Bristol, Vernon Bullock, Harvey Fuqua, Kenneth Gamble, Leon Huff, Gregg America, Gregg Crockett, Skip Batey, Fred Parris, Troy Carter, Anthony Fontenot, Armique Wyche, Ronald Isley, Rudolph Isley, O'Kelly Isley, Jr., Warren Moore, Robert Rogers, James Dean, Paul Riser and William Weatherspoon; Featuring songs with lyrics by Edward Holland, Jr., Norman J. Whitfield, Lamont Herbert Dozier, Brian Holland, Barrett Strong, Smokey Robinson, Ronald White, Ronald Miller, Orlando Murden, Ester Navarro, Carl Christiansen, Rodger Penzabene, Sr., Helga Penzabene, Roger Penzabene, Jr., Cornelius Grant, Johnny Bristol, Vernon Bullock, Harvey Fuqua, Kenneth Gamble, Leon Huff, Gregg America, Gregg Crockett, Skip Batey, Fred Parris, Troy Carter, Anthony Fontenot, Armique Wyche, Ronald Isley, Rudolph Isley, O'Kelly Isley, Jr., Warren Moore, Robert Rogers, James Dean, Paul Riser and William Weatherspoon

"The Legendary Motown Catalog" is not a person or group, so I would think we should credit the music and lyrics for Ain't Too Proud to "Various" as has been done with other jukebox musicals with multiple songwriters. --Metropolitan90 (talk) 05:46, 30 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Listing Producers

With the full listing of all producers on all nominated productions, the article has become messy, unfocused and cluttered, especially from the 2000's onward. It is not allowing readers (and I count myself in this) to easily and readily access the information they are most likely looking for. Going forward I would propose listing the lead producer only, with referencing linking to a full list of producers. Some recent productions such as NYNY have over 60 names listed as nominees, this just isn't sustainable for to list such a long list of names for every new musical. I refer to an earlier comment made by @Colin M - "coverage of the award almost universally refers to the award as being given to the play/musical itself, not the producers. Coverage will sometimes mention the producers of the show incidentally" Mark E (talk) 10:41, 22 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]