“I know it’s Broadway, but we’re at the ballet!”
Ariana DeBose was twirling about a space in Lincoln Center’s David H. Koch Theater, which last night hosted the 77th Tony Awards. Returning to host the ceremony for the third time, the dancer first, Oscar-winner second, was right at home in the madness. It was 4:30 p.m., just about three hours before her call time, and she’d been hailed “the busiest woman on Broadway” by The New York Times earlier that day.
“It doesn’t feel like I’m multitasking—it just sort of is to me,” she said, posing in an intricate Oscar de la Renta dress made of connected acrylic pieces resembling stained glass. Soon enough, the room she was in—a patron lounge turned speakeasy hosted by Baccarat and Basil Hayden—would become the busiest on Broadway, allowing the theater industry’s heavyweights a brief respite as they escaped the flashes of the blue carpet outside and prepared to take their seats before the show.
Another Broadway-beloved dancer, Julianne Hough, juggled three Shake Shack milkshakes and a Basil 75 (one of the speakeasy’s themed cocktails, a take on the classic French 75) as she hustled out to prepare for her own duties cohosting the Tonys preshow. She briefly crossed paths with producer and red-carpet staple Jordan Roth, whose sheer black Rodarte look contrasted sharply with Hough’s airy, cream-colored Ermanno Scervino dress.
His vinous look—inspired by Dionysus, the Greek god of wine and theater—complemented the room’s natural elements: plum blossoms extending from hand-painted wallpaper and peacocks of different sizes positioned elegantly throughout. Roth’s appearance in the room, at around 5:15 p.m., was the evening’s starting gun, with a frenzy of nominees and celebrities promptly flowing in after him.
Shaina Taub (Suffs) posed for photos in a garnet pantsuit and olive-branch hair clip—unwittingly the perfect complement to the room’s brooding interior—while Deirdre O’Connell entered shyly behind Cabaret’s Gayle Rankin, demurely introducing herself as “Didi” to those unaware of the downtown favorite’s radical best-actress win just two years prior. Anna Wintour and Bee Carrozzini followed Harvey Fierstein into the bustling festivities, as Jeremy Strong stuck closely to power couple Amy Herzog and Sam Gold, whose adaptation of An Enemy of the People would net him a best-actor trophy in a few hours.