The award for Best Play on the London stage went to Lucy Kirkwood for Chimerica — an exploration of the relationship between the United States and China, as seen through the eyes of an American photojournalist trying to track down a young protester who faced down a tank in Tiananmen Square in 1989.
A revival of Stephen Sondheim’s Merrily We Roll Along, a flop on Broadway in 1981, was named Best Musical, while Richard Eyre won Best Director for a revival of Ibsen’s Ghosts.
“People come from around the world to see plays in London,” Mayor Boris Johnson said, as he made his way into the awards banquet at the Savoy Hotel. “It’s the place where the theatre really got going in the 16th century.”
Mirren, who won an Oscar for her portrayal of Queen Elizabeth in Steven Frears’s movie The Queen, said she feels like she shares the accolade for the awards with the Queen herself. “I’ve always felt [by] playing her majesty that it’s actually her majesty who’s winning the award and not me,” Mirren told Reuters.
The Audience shows Mirren’s character meeting with prime ministers over many decades, and required that she portray a woman in her 20s as well as an octogenarian.
“I did feel the response to the play was as much a response to that person, that extraordinary woman, as it was to my performance. But I should be very proud,” she said, speaking before the official announcement was made.
More accolades
Kinnear and Lester said that portraying Othello and his nemesis Iago in the production of Shakespeare’s play at the National Theatre had been a challenge, both personally and in terms of seeing how the play could be interpreted for new audiences.
“It was important that we got on with each other because we’re spending an awfully long time ruining each other’s lives,” Kinnear said.
Lester thought the production had managed to connect with a whole new generation of theatre-goers. “It breathed fresh life into a play that people may have found dated,” he said.
London Evening Standard editor Sarah Sands, one of the judges, said, “The high level of theatrical daring and creativity seen on the London stage this year made our choices tougher than ever to make.”
“We, like the rest of the world, have been dazzled by the talent on show.”
Other awards:
American actor Seth Numrich took the Milton Shulman Award for Outstanding Newcomer for his portrayal of a small-town gigolo in Tennessee Williams’s Sweet Bird of Youth.
Rachel De-lahay won the Charles Wintour Award for Most Promising Playwright for her drama about immigration and multicultural London, Routes.
Rosalie Craig won a new award for Best Musical Performance as the star of The Light Princess.
The Evening Standard Theatre Icon Award went to Dame Maggie Smith for her contribution to the world stage.
David Walliams took home the new Award for Comedy for his performance as Bottom in A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
Actor and director Kevin Spacey, artistic director of the Old Vic since 2003, was given the Editor’s Award for his contribution to British Theatre.
Andrew Lloyd-Webber received the Lebedev Special Award for his contribution to musical theatre.
Actor/writer Cush Jumbo won the Emerging Talent Award for her one-woman play about Josephine Baker, Josephine and I.
The Beyond Theatre award was given to the BBC’s 2013 Proms season.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 19th, 2013.
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