The 2017 Tony Awards nominations boasts 34 first-time nominees. While about half are those nominated for their Broadway debuts, there are also the first-timers who have built lives in the theatre. Undoubtedly, a nomination is always special, but what meaning does it hold after charting a career onstage? Here, we recognize the veteran actors who have earned their first Tony nomination. For more information, visit TonyAwards.org.
Michelle Wilson, Sweat
Nominated for: Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Play
Her character: As Cynthia in Lynn Nottage’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play about friends who have spent their lives alongside each other on the factory floor, Wilson balances her portrayal of a woman discovering her own agency, crippled by the struggle of choosing between the opportunity she has earned and the friendships to which she’s bound.
Her résumé: Wilson made her Broadway debut in the 2014 revival of A Raisin in the Sun, understudying the role of Ruth Younger. But Wilson has cultivated a long career in theatre from Fahrenheit 451 and For Colored Girls at Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre to Detroit ’67 at New York’s Public Theater. She’s worked on productions at New Jersey Performing Arts Center, Classical Theater of Harlem, the Goodman Theatre, Premiere Stages, and the O’Neill Conference.
How the nomination feels: “I still am waiting for someone to say, ‘Psych!’ I’m waiting for it all to fall apart and say, ‘We punked you.’ But it’s awesome and it’s particularly awesome getting recognized for this piece and with this ensemble. It’s quite lovely, but it’s still surprising. I’m still not used to it yet. [Co-star Alison Wright]’s been known to poke me and say, ‘It’s real. Enjoy it!’”
Michael Aronov, Oslo
Nominated for: Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play
His character: As bombastic Uri Savir, Aronov embodies the brazen Israeli negotiator whose presence initially disrupts and then progresses the back-channel peace process that led to the Oslo Accords.
His résumé: Aronov made his Broadway debut in 2012’s Golden Boy, also at Lincoln Center. Still, Aronov has been building his career Off-Broadway and across the globe. He wowed in LCT’s Off-Broadway Blood and Gifts, earned praise for his solo performance in Manigma, and has worked on such stages as New York’s Signature Theatre, Cherry Lane Theatre, Lucille Lortel Theatre, and Inside the Actor’s Studio.
Richard Thomas, The Little Foxes
Nominated for: Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play
His character: As husband to the ruthless Regina Giddens, Thomas provides a humanity and decency crafted as the ideal foil to either Cynthia Nixon or Laura Linney on any given night.
His résumé: The Little Foxes marks Thomas’ 13th Broadway credit, including such roles as Hildy Johnson in the 1986 revival of The Front Page, Charles Strickland in Mamet’s Race, and patriarch Paul Sycamore in the most recent revival of You Can’t Take it With You.
How the nomination feels: “I’m thrilled. It’s wonderful. It’s always good news, right? The first big award I won was my Emmy [for The Waltons] when I was 22 years old and that was wonderful to have that experience as a young actor, but there’s something maybe even more precious to me about getting this nomination after all these years of working in the theatre in New York. It’s such a good production and the company is so good. It’s very gratifying.”
John Douglas Thompson, Jitney
Nominated for: Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play
His character: Playing the owner and seeming patriarch of the jitney station, Thompson epitomizes the fortitude and earnestness of the self-made man and deeply wounded father at the center of August Wilson’s play.
His résumé: Jitney marks Thompson’s fourth Broadway outing (he made his debut opposite Denzel Washington in Julius Caesar), and his name signifies a theatrical warrior. In 2015, he was awarded the Drama Desk Special Award “for invigorating theatre in New York through his commanding presence, classical expertise, and vocal prowess [particularly his] exceptional versatility in Tamburlaine the Great, and The Iceman Cometh. The year prior he won the Drama Desk for Solo Performance for his work in Satchmo at the Waldorf. He has an Obie Award and a Lortel Award to his name and has carved out roles in such notable institutions as the Public Theater and Shakespeare in the Park.
How the nomination feels: “It's truly a tremendous honor. And it is especially significant to earn a nomination for my work in an August Wilson play. I was inspired to become an actor many years ago after watching August Wilson's Joe Turner's Come and Gone at Yale Rep. So this nomination represents a full circle event in my life. Somehow in my stage career one play often seems to feed and inform the next. From Othello to Emperor Jones to Tamburlaine to Satchmo, and many in between, and now to Jitney; each project has prepared me for the next challenge in a way that I could have never planned or expected. So in my heart of hearts this Tony nomination is not only for the work in Jitney but also a confirmation of the body of work that led to it.”
Read More: HOW BEING STOOD UP PROPELLED THIS TONY-NOMINATED JITNEY ACTOR TO BROADWAY