Tony Awards winners 2026: Schmigadoon! and Ragtime sweep top honors

The 79th Tony Awards opened Pride Month with a live, three-hour broadcast that celebrated Broadway’s recent season and handed out more than two dozen trophies on Sunday. Hosted by pop star Pink, the ceremony highlighted a mix of bold revivals, screen-to-stage adaptations and star-studded revivals — developments that will influence casting, tours and future productions.

Top nominees and the race they set up

Musical nominations were dominated by two unexpected contenders: a stage take on the 1987 vampire film and a theatrical version of an Apple TV comedy, each earning a leading share of nods. Close behind was a large-scale revival of an early 20th-century American classic.

  • The Lost Boys — 12 nominations
  • Schmigadoon! — 12 nominations
  • Ragtime — 11 nominations
  • Cats: The Jellicle Ball — 9 nominations
  • The Rocky Horror Show (revival) — 9 nominations

On the plays side, Arthur Miller’s revival led with nine nominations, while a contemporary family-focused piece and several diverse new productions followed. Those tallies matter beyond trophies: they can drive box-office momentum, encourage national tours and shape awards-season narratives.

  • Death of a Salesman (revival) — 9 nominations
  • Oedipus — 7 nominations
  • Tied with 5 nominations: The Balusters, Fallen Angels, Joe Turner’s Come and Gone, Liberation

Who’s giving out the awards

The ceremony gathered a long list of presenters from film, TV and music — a deliberate move to underline Broadway’s cultural reach. Their participation underscores how awards night serves as both a promotional stage and a moment of recognition for theatre professionals.

  • Adrien Brody
  • Annette Bening
  • Ariana DeBose
  • Ben Platt
  • Bernadette Peters
  • Billy Crystal
  • Bowen Yang
  • Brian Stokes Mitchell
  • Carrie Coon
  • Cole Escola
  • Darren Criss
  • Jack O’Brien
  • Jeremy Pope
  • John Leguizamo
  • Julia Louis-Dreyfus
  • Kara Young
  • Kelli O’Hara
  • Kristin Chenoweth
  • Law Roach
  • Lena Waithe
  • Lily Rabe
  • Maya Rudolph
  • Megan Thee Stallion
  • Neil Patrick Harris
  • Nicole Scherzinger
  • Patrick Wilson
  • Paul Rudd
  • Rachel Zegler
  • Ruben Santiago-Hudson
  • Sarah Paulson
  • Sting

The mix of film stars, comedians and established theatre figures reinforced the Tonys’ dual role: honoring artistic craft while broadcasting theatrical relevance to wider audiences.

What this night changes

Beyond trophies, the ceremony is a market signal. Shows with multiple nominations often see ticket sales rise, producers secure touring opportunities, and casting notices gain readership. For performers and creative teams, a Tony nod or win can be career-defining; for audiences, it reshapes what’s likely to return to the boards or go on the road.

There was also a clear appetite for reinvention this season — contemporary spins on familiar titles and adaptations from screen to stage ranked among the most-talked-about nominees. That trend could steer programming decisions in the coming seasons as producers chase both critical attention and commercial viability.

Tonight’s ceremony marked a high-profile start to the summer theatre calendar, signaling which artists and productions will dominate conversation — onstage and off — in the months ahead.

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