As Broadway producers and performers gird themselves for the 2013 Tony Award nominations on Tuesday morning, several shows are already fortified by strong ticket sales - so much so that Tony nominations may not make much of a difference.
Case in point: âMotown: The Musicalâ is the biggest box office hit among the new productions of the 2012-13 season, grossing $1,213,611 last week - better than any other musical except the blockbusters âThe Lion King,â âWicked,â and âThe Book of Mormon.â This success comes in spite of âMotownâ receiving mixed to negative reviews. It seems likely that fans of Diana Ross, the Jackson 5, Smokey Robinson and Marvin Gaye will keep buying tickets to hear the showâs classic Motown songs regardless of whether the production racks up many Tony nominations.
Among Broadway plays, the top two at the box office last week- âLucky Guyâ ($1,384,178) and âIâll Eat You Lastâ ($646,102) - will probably continue selling strongly thanks to audience interest in their stars, Tom Hanks and Bette Midler. While both actors have a good chance of being nominated on Tuesday, no one thinks ticket sales will decline if, say, Ms. Midler is crowded out by the very large field for the five best actress nominations.
The two likely front-runners for the best musical Tony, âMatildaâ and âKinky Boots,â were also in strong shape last week: âKinky Bootsâ had its highest gross since performances began in March, taking in $1,112,163, while âMatildaâ was not far behind with $1,107,815.
Other shows may benefit from Tony Awards recognition. The one-woman play âAnn,â starring Holland Taylor as former Texas Gov. Ann Richards, grossed a middling 24 percent of its maximum possible amount last week, while âThe Testament of Mary,â starring Fiona Shaw as the mother of Christ, grossed about 27 percent of the maximum possible. Each actress drew praise from many critics, and both are seen as contenders for a Tony nomination.
One musical that could use some help - but wonât be receiving any from the Tony Awards - is âSpider-Man: Turn Off the Dark.â Its producers are a long way from recouping the showâs record-setting cost of $75 million, and last weekâs gross of $1,003,279 was one of its lowest yet. The musicalâs weekly running expenses total between $1.1 million and $1.2 million. âSpider-Manâ opened in 2011 and was eligible for Tony nominations for the 2011-12 season; the show received two, for costumes and sets, but won neither.
Overall Broadway musicals and plays grossed $24.6 million last week, compared to $24.7 million the previous week and $26.1 million for the comparable week last season.
The Tony Award nominations will be announced on Tuesday at 8:30 a.m.; check back here for updates and analysis through the morning.