NEW YORK – The musicals “An American in Paris” and “Fun Home” each received a leading 12 Tony Award nominations on Tuesday, showing two very different sides of this Broadway season.

One side is sunny – the dance-heavy stage adaptation of the 1951 musical film choreographed by Gene Kelly – and the other moody – the dark show based on Alison Bechdel’s coming of age graphic novel about her closeted and suicidal dad.

The best new play category will include the candidates “Wolf Hall, Parts One & Two,” ”Hand to God,” ”Disgraced” and ”The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time.” Larry David’s “Fish in the Dark” was snubbed entirely.

In addition to “An American in Paris” and “Fun Home,” the best new musical category includes “Something Rotten!” and “The Visit.” The Peter Pan-themed “Finding Neverland,” marking Harvey Weinstein’s first-ever venture into Broadway as a lead producer, didn’t get a single nomination.

Donald Holder, who graduated from the University of Maine in 1980 and worked at Portland Stage, was nominated for Best Lighting Design of a Musical for the revival of “The King and I.” He has been nominated many times before, and  Tony Awards in 1998 and 2008.

The nominations were announced in a televised event co-hosted by Mary-Louise Parker and Bruce Willis. The Tonys will be handed out at Radio City Music Hall on June 7.

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The best actress in a musical category includes Kristin Chenoweth for “On the Twentieth Century,” Kelli O’Hara for “The King and I,” Chita Rivera for “The Visit,” Leanne Cope from “An American in Paris” and Beth Malone from “Fun Home.”

The best actor in a musical nominees are Brian d’Arcy James for “Something Rotten!”, Michael Cerveris in “Fun Home,” Matthew Morrison from “Finding Neverland,” Ken Watanabe in “The King and I,” Tony Yazbeck in “On the Town” and Robert Fairchild in “An American in Paris.”

The best actor in a play nominees include Bradley Cooper for “The Elephant Man,” Ben Miles for “Wolf Hall, Parts One & Two,” Alex Sharp in “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time,” Steven Boyer in “Hand to God,” and Bill Nighy for “Skylight.”

The five best actresses in a play nominees are: Carey Mulligan in “Skylight,” Helen Mirren in “The Audience,” Ruth Wilson in “Constellations,” Geneva Carr in “Hand to God” and Elisabeth Moss in “The Heidi Chronicles.”


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