Liberation wins Tony for best play after Pulitzer Prize

Kathryn Lurie |

John Lithgow has won his third Tony for his role portraying Roald Dahl in Giant.
John Lithgow has won his third Tony for his role portraying Roald Dahl in Giant.

Liberation has won best play at the ‌Tony Awards, Ragtime took best musical revival and John Lithgow won best leading actor for Giant, highlighting Broadway works tackling themes of gender equality, race, class and anti-Semitism.

Liberation, ‌a drama examining the legacy of the 1970s women’s liberation movement, added to its 2026 Pulitzer Prize for drama, as author Bess Wohl became the fourth ‌woman to win the Tony Award for best play and the first since 2009.

Ragtime prevailed over Cats: The Jellicle Ball, reviving a sweeping story that intertwines black, immigrant and upper-class white lives, exploring race, class and the promise of the American Dream at the dawn of the 20th century.

John Lithgow
John Lithgow won his third Tony Award. (AP PHOTO)

In Giant, the 80-year-old Lithgow portrayed author Roald Dahl in the 1980s as he faces fallout for remarks deemed anti-Semitic and weighs apologising against risking his reputation. It was ‌his third Tony, having ‌won his first ⁠53 years ago for his Broadway debut in The Changing Room.

“At every point we had to figure ​out, ‘Why is this man doing this?'” he told reporters later. 

“Anti-Semitism, cruelty of all kinds … these are things that we’re dealing with these days up front and personal … that’s what makes Giant so important and such a success.”

Rose Byrne
Rose Byrne left empty handed after being nominated for her first Tony Award. (AP PHOTO)

Lesley Manville pipped Australia’s Rose Byrne, winning best lead actress in a play for her role as Jocasta in Robert Icke’s reimagining of the Sophocles classic Oedipus as a political thriller.

The Australian actress missed out for her critically-acclaimed portrayal of Jane Banbury in a the 1925 Noel Coward play, Fallen Angels.

This year’s awards cap a record Broadway season, having generated $US1.91 billion ($A2.71 billion) in grosses as audiences turned ⁠out for both established hits and new productions.

Lesley Manville
Lesley Manville took the Tony for best lead actress in a play. (AP PHOTO)

Pop star ‌Pink, hosting the ​ceremony at Radio City Music Hall, led a huge opening number with a Broadway-updated rendition of Lady Marmalade and starring the cast of every single nominated ​musical.

Zhailon Levingston and Bill Rauch won best direction of a musical for Cats: The Jellicle Ball, a bold reimagining of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical that places ​the ​story within New York’s ballroom culture. 

Joe Mantello won best ​direction of a play for the revival of Arthur Miller’s Death of a ‌Salesman starring Nathan Lane and Laurie Metcalf.

Metcalf won best featured actress in a play for her role as Linda Loman in Death of a Salesman.

Laurie Metcalf
Laurie Metcalf snapped her third Tony Award. (AP PHOTO)

Metcalf said she had never seen a production of Salesman in anticipation of one day starring in it. It was her third Tony. Alden Ehrenreich won best featured actor in a play for Becky Shaw.

Shoshana Bean won best featured actress in a musical for The Lost Boys, a stage adaptation of the 1987 ​vampire cult classic film that follows two brothers who move to a California beach town and discover it is inhabited by vampires. 

This ​was Bean’s third nomination and first win. ⁠Ali Louis Bourzgui won best featured actor in a musical for his role as lead vampire ​in the show. 

Reuters