Sunset Boulevard wins big at Oliviers as celebrity talent largely overlooked

  • london
  • April 14, 2024
  • Comments Off on Sunset Boulevard wins big at Oliviers as celebrity talent largely overlooked
Sunset Boulevard wins big at Oliviers as celebrity talent largely overlooked thumbnail

Jamie Lloyd’s bombastic reimagining of Sunset Boulevard starring Nicole Scherzinger was the standout show at this year’s Olivier awards, with seven wins on an evening when productions with celebrity talent were often overlooked.

The Savoy theatre adaptation of Billy Wilder’s classic 1950 film about the dark side of the Hollywood dream took home best actor in a musical for Tom Francis and best actress in a musical for Scherzinger. Lloyd – described as creating “a stupendous sense of reinvention” by the Guardian – won best director.

Sunset Boulevard’s wins followed its domination of the WhatsOnStage awards where it also won seven. Once again its technical team was also recognised with best lighting design (Jack Knowles), musical supervision (Alan Williams) and best sound design (Adam Fisher) all going to Lloyd’s revival.

Lloyd thanked Scherzinger for giving a “performance for the ages” and said he expected the production to take Broadway by storm when it transfers to New York later this year.

The event – which recognises only London-based productions or regional shows that have gone on to transfer to the capital – saw several stars from television and film nominated after they brought their mainstream appeal to West End productions that sold out rapidly but left some in the industry questioning whether celebrity casting ultimately hurts the sector.

Happy Valley’s James Norton (A Little Life), Fleabag’s Andrew Scott (Vanya), Sex in The City’s Sarah Jessica Parker (Plaza Suite) and former Doctor Who star David Tennant (Macbeth) were all nominated, as were Sheridan Smith (Shirley Valentine) and Joseph Fiennes (Dear England).

However, the big names were nearly all overlooked at the show which began with host Hannah Waddingham singing a rendition of Anything Goes.

Succession star Sarah Snook was a marquee name who did win, taking home best actress for the 26 roles she played in The Picture of Dorian Gray, which was her West End debut. [Snook said she learned her lines while breast-feeding her baby at night, regularly asking herself: “Why am I doing a 60,000-word monologue with an eight-month-old baby?”

Sarah Snook, winner of the Best Actress award for “The Picture Of Dorian Gray”, seen backstage. Photograph: Dave Benett/Getty Images

The National theatre, which bagged 15 nominations during its 60th anniversary year, managed to convert only three of those into wins, with James Graham’s football drama Dear England taking home two gongs for best new play and best actor in a supporting role for Will Close.

Best actor went to Mark Gatiss for his performance in The Motive and the Cue, the National’s production about the tempestuous but ultimately successful Broadway staging of Hamlet, where John Gielgud (played by Gatiss) and Richard Burton butted heads over “creative differences”.

Gatiss was one of several winners who decried the lack of opportunities for working-class voices in British theatre.

Close dedicated his award to “all the single mums in council houses” and said his mother’s encouragement was the reason he continued in theatre, while Gatiss said “as a working-class man who went to comprehensive school, all the routes that took me here have virtually vanished”.

James Graham said Dear England’s football theme was a way to make it accessible to a wider audience beyond the usual middle-class crowds who attend theatre. “I’m so glad that a play about football did bring in lads who’d never seen a play before,” he said.

One production that bucked the big-name trend entirely was Operation Mincemeat, a former fringe production about a second world war plot to fool the Nazis. It took home best new musical in a hyper competitive field where the Old Vic’s Groundhog Day, the Bridge theatre’s immersive Guys & Dolls, and Hadestown at the Lyric theatre were also nominated.

Jak Malone, who played put-upon secretary Hester, also won best actor in a supporting role in a musical.

Amy Trigg took home a surprise win in the best actress in a supporting role in a musical category for her performance as Agnes in The Little Big Things, while best revival went to Chekov’s Vanya adapted by Simon Stephens at the Duke of York’s Theatre.

One of the highlights was a standing ovation for Arlene Phillips, who won best choreography with James Cousins for Guys and Dolls at the Bridge theatre, while early in the evening there was a posthumous recognition for The Windsors and Drop the Dead Donkey star Haydn Gwynne, who died aged 66 in October.

She won best actress in a supporting role for When Winston Went to War with The Wireless.

Complete list of winners

Noël Coward award for best new entertainment or comedy play

Stranger Things: The First Shadow by Kate Trefry at the Phoenix theatre

Best family show

Dinosaur World Live by Derek Bond at Regent’s Park Open Air theatre

Gillian Lynne award for best theatre choreographer

Arlene Phillips with James Cousins for Guys and Dolls at the Bridge theatre

Best costume design

Marg Horwell for The Picture of Dorian Gray at the Theatre Royal Haymarket

Best revival

Vanya by Anton Chekhov, adapted by Simon Stephens at the Duke of York’s theatre

Best musical revival

Sunset Boulevard, music by Andrew Lloyd Webber, lyrics and book by Don Black and Christopher Hampton at the Savoy theatre

Best sound design

Adam Fisher for Sunset Boulevard at the Savoy theatre

Outstanding musical contribution

Alan Williams for musical supervision and musical direction for Sunset Boulevard at the Savoy theatre

Best actor in a supporting role

Will Close for Dear England at the National theatre – Olivier and Prince Edward theatre

Best actress in a supporting role

Haydn Gwynne for When Winston Went to War With the Wireless at the Donmar Warehouse

Best set design

Miriam Buether for set design and 59 Productions for video design for Stranger Things: The First Shadow at the Phoenix theatre

Best lighting design

Jack Knowles for Sunset Boulevard at the Savoy theatre

Best actress in a supporting role in a musical

Amy Trigg for The Little Big Things at @sohoplace

Best actor in a supporting role in a musical

Jak Malone for Operation Mincemeat at the Fortune theatre

Best new opera production

Innocence by the Royal Opera at the Royal Opera House

Outstanding achievement in opera

Antonio Pappano for his role as Musical Director of the Royal Opera House

Best actor in a musical

Tom Francis for Sunset Boulevard at the Savoy theatre

Best actress in a musical

Nicole Scherzinger for Sunset Boulevard at the Savoy theatre

Best new dance production

La Ruta by Gabriela Carrizo, part of Nederlands Dans theater – NDT 1 at Sadler’s Wells

Outstanding achievement in dance

Isabela Coracy for her performance in NINA: By Whatever Means, part of Ballet Black: Pioneers at the Barbican theatre

Outstanding achievement in affiliate theatre

Sleepova by Matilda Feyişayo at the Bush theatre

Sir Peter Hall award for best director

Jamie Lloyd for Sunset Boulevard at the Savoy theatre

Best actress

Sarah Snook for The Picture of Dorian Gray at the Theatre Royal Haymarket

Best actor

Mark Gatiss for The Motive and the Cue at the National theatre – Lyttelton and Noël Coward theatre

Best new play

Dear England by James Graham at the National theatre – Olivier and Prince Edward theatre

Best new musical

Operation Mincemeat, music, lyrics and book by David Cumming, Felix Hagan, Natasha Hodgson and Zoë Roberts at the Fortune theatre