Frontmezzjunkies reports: 69th Annual Drama Desk Awards Have Been Announced

Nominations for the 69th Annual Drama Desk Awards were announced today on Spectrum News NY1 by stage and screen star Norm Lewis, Spectrum News NY1 On Stage” host Frank DiLella, and anchor Rocco Vertuccio. The full list of nominees is available below.

In keeping with the Drama Desk’s mission, the nominators considered shows that opened on Broadway, Off-Broadway, and Off-Off Broadway during the 2024-2025 New York theater season, which the Drama Desk determined ended as of April 27, 2025. Productions must run for 21 or more live performances to be considered eligible.

In determining the eligibility of plays or performances from prior seasons, the nominating committee considered only those elements that constituted new work. These productions included Buena Vista Social Club, Hold On to Me Darling, Job, Odd Man Out, Our Class, Still, Teeth, The Christine Jorgensen Show, and Yellow Face. While some members of the Floyd Collins creative team also worked on the original 1996 Playwrights Horizons production, the nominating committee determined their contributions to this revival were eligible as new work.

This year’s awards, hosted by Debra Messing and Tituss Burgess, will be held on Sunday, June 1 at 6:15pm at NYU Skirball (556 LaGuardia Place). Staci Levine and Jessica R. Jenen return as Executive Producers of the Awards.

2025 DRAMA DESK NOMINATIONS

(l-r) Jon Michael Hill (Naz), Kara Young (Aziza), and Harry Lennix (Solomon) in Steppenwolf’s PURPOSE on Broadway. Photo by Marc J. Franklin

Outstanding Play

Blood of the Lamb, by Arlene Hutton

Deep Blue Sound, by Abe Koogler

Grangeville, by Samuel D. Hunter

John Proctor is the Villain, by Kimberly Belflower

Liberation, by Bess Wohl

Purpose, by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins

Helen J Shen and Darren Criss in Broadway’s Maybe Happy Ending. Photo by Matthew Murphy & Evan Zimmerman.

Outstanding Musical

BOOP! The Musical

Death Becomes Her

Just in Time

Maybe Happy Ending

Music City

Olivia Washington (center) with the cast of CSC’s Wine in the Wilderness. Photo by Marc J. Franklin.

Outstanding Revival of a Play

Eureka Day

Garside’s Career

Home

Wine in the Wilderness

Yellow Face

André De Shields (center) and the cast of Cats – The Jellicle Ball at PAC NYC. Photo by Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman.

Outstanding Revival of a Musical

Cats: “The Jellicle Ball”

Floyd Collins

Gypsy

Once Upon a Mattress

See What I Wanna See

Sunset Blvd.

Paul Mescal and Patsy Ferran in Almeida Theatre’s A Streetcar Named Desire at BAM. Photo by Julieta Cervantes.

Outstanding Lead Performance in a Play

Betsy Aidem, The Ask

Laura Donnelly, The Hills of California

Patsy Ferran, A Streetcar Named Desire

Danny J. Gomez, All of Me

Doug Harris, Redeemed

Patrick Keleher, Fatherland

Louis McCartney, Stranger Things: The First Shadow

Lily Rabe, Ghosts

Jay O. Sanders, Henry IV (Theatre for a New Audience)

Sarah Snook, The Picture of Dorian Gray

Paul Sparks, Grangeville

Olivia Washington, Wine in the Wilderness

Jonathan Groff as Bobby Darin in Just In Time. Photo by Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman.

Outstanding Lead Performance in a Musical

Tatianna Córdoba, Real Women Have Curves

Darren Criss, Maybe Happy Ending

Sutton Foster, Once Upon a Mattress

Tom Francis, Sunset Blvd.

Jonathan Groff, Just in Time

Grey Henson, Elf

Jeremy Jordan, Floyd Collins

Audra McDonald, Gypsy

Jasmine Amy Rogers, BOOP! The Musical

Nicole Scherzinger, Sunset Blvd.

Helen J. Shen, Maybe Happy Ending

Jennifer Simard, Death Becomes Her

Sadie Sink and Amalia Yoo in Broadway’s John Proctor is a Villain. Photo by Julieta Cervantes.

Outstanding Featured Performance in a Play

Greg Keller, Pre-Existing Condition

Julia Lester, All Nighter

Adrienne C. Moore, The Blood Quilt

Deirdre O’Connell, Glass. Kill. What If If Only. Imp.

Maria-Christina Oliveras, Cymbeline

Maryann Plunkett, Deep Blue Sound

Michael Rishawn, Table 17

Jude Tibeau, Bad Kreyòl

Anjana Vasan, A Streetcar Named Desire

Frank Wood, Hold On to Me Darling

Amalia Yoo, John Proctor is the Villain

Kara Young, Purpose

John El-Jor, Rotana Tarabzouni, Ali Louis Bourzgui & Michael Khalid Karadsheh in NYTW’s We Live in Cairo. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Outstanding Featured Performance in a Musical

Brooks Ashmanskas, Smash

Nicholas Barasch, Pirates! The Penzance Musical

André De Shields, Cats: “The Jellicle Ball”

John El-Jor, We Live in Cairo

Jason Gotay, Floyd Collins

Gracie Lawrence, Just in Time

Jak Malone, Operation Mincemeat

Lesli Margherita, Gypsy

Zachary Noah Piser, See What I Wanna See

Jenny Lee Stern, Forbidden Broadway: Merrily We Stole a Song

Michael Urie, Once Upon a Mattress

Natalie Walker, The Big Gay Jamboree

Andrew Scott in Vanya off-Broadway. Photos by Julieta Cervantes.

Outstanding Solo Performance

David Greenspan, I’m Assuming You Know David Greenspan

Ryan J. Haddad, Hold Me in the Water

Sam Kissajukian, 300 Paintings

Mark Povinelli, The Return of Benjamin Lay

Andrew Scott, Vanya

Louis McCartney (Henry Creel) in STRANGER THINGS: THE FIRST SHADOW; Photo by Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman.

Outstanding Direction of a Play

David Cromer and Caitlin Sullivan, The Antiquities

Stephen Daldry and Justin Martin, Stranger Things: The First Shadow

Tyne Rafaeli, Becoming Eve

Jack Serio, Grangeville

Danya Taymor, John Proctor is the Villain

Whitney White, Liberation

Kip Williams, The Picture of Dorian Gray

Tom Francis (center holding camera) and the ensemble of SUNSET BLVD on Broadway at the St. James Theatre. Photo Credit Marc Brenner.

Outstanding Direction of a Musical

Michael Arden, Maybe Happy Ending

Zhailon Levingston and Bill Rauch, Cats: “The Jellicle Ball”

Jamie Lloyd, Sunset Blvd.

Jerry Mitchell, BOOP! The Musical

Alex Timbers, Just in Time

George C. Wolfe, Gypsy

Mason Reeves and Tatianna Córdoba in Broadway’s Real Women Have Curves. Photo By Julieta Cervantes.

Outstanding Choreography

Camille A. Brown, Gypsy

Warren Carlyle, Pirates! The Penzance Musical

Jakob Karr, Ain’t Done Bad

Arturo Lyons and Omari Wiles, Cats: “The Jellicle Ball”

Jerry Mitchell, BOOP! The Musical

Sergio Trujillo, Real Women Have Curves

Jasmine Amy Rogers and the Company of Boop! The Musical on Broadway. Photo by Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman.

Outstanding Music

Will Aronson and Hue Park, Maybe Happy Ending

David Foster, BOOP! The Musical

Joy Huerta and Benjamin Velez, Real Women Have Curves

Zoe Sarnak, The Lonely Few

The Lazours, We Live in Cairo

Jak Malone and Zoë Roberts in Broadway’s Operation Mincemeat. Photo by Julieta Cervantes.

Outstanding Lyrics

Gerard Alessandrini, Forbidden Broadway: Merrily We Stole a Song

Will Aronson and Hue Park, Maybe Happy Ending

David Cumming, Felix Hagan, Natasha Hodgson, and Zoë Roberts, Operation Mincemeat

Adam Gwon, All the World’s a Stage

Marla Mindelle and Philip Drennen, The Big Gay Jamboree

Luis Quintero, Medea: Re-Versed

Megan Hilty, Jennifer Simard, Josh Lamon, and Christopher Sieber in Broadway’s Death Becomes Her. Photo by Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman.

Outstanding Book of a Musical

Will Aronson and Hue Park, Maybe Happy Ending

David Cumming, Felix Hagan, Natasha Hodgson, and Zoë Roberts, Operation Mincemeat

Warren Leight and Isaac Oliver, Just in Time

Bob Martin, BOOP! The Musical

Marla Mindelle and Jonathan Parks-Ramage, The Big Gay Jamboree

Marco Pennette, Death Becomes Her

The cast of Broadway’s Pirates! The Penzance Musical. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Outstanding Orchestrations

Will Aronson, Maybe Happy Ending

Doug Besterman, BOOP! The Musical

Joseph Joubert and Daryl Waters, Pirates! The Penzance Musical

Andrew Resnick and Michael Thurber, Just in Time

Michael Starobin, All the World’s a Stage

Leanne Best, Ophelia Lovibond, Helena Wilson, and Laura Donnelly in Broadway’s The Hills of California. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Outstanding Scenic Design of a Play

Miriam Buether, Glass. Kill. What If If Only. Imp.

Miriam Buether, Jamie Harrison, and Chris Fisher (illusions and visual effects), Stranger Things: The First Shadow

Rob Howell, The Hills of California

Johan Kølkjær, Dark Noon

Grace Laubacher, Life and Trust

Matt Saunders, Walden

Adrian Blake Enscoe (center, leaping) and the Cast of SWEPT AWAY. Photo by Emilio Madrid.

Outstanding Scenic Design of a Musical

Clifton Chadick, Music City

Rachel Hauck, Swept Away

Dane Laffrey and George Reeve, Maybe Happy Ending (includes video design)

Derek McLane, Just in Time

David Rockwell and Finn Ross (projections), BOOP! The Musical

(clockwise from top left): Andrew Garman, Amelia Workman, and Julius Rinzel in The Antiquities at Playwrights Horizons. Photos by Emilio Madrid.

Outstanding Costume Design of a Play

Brenda Abbandandolo, The Antiquities

Dede Ayite, Our Town

Christopher Ford, The Beastiary

Camilla Lind, Dark Noon

Karl Ruckdeschel, Twelfth Night

L to R: Amanda Lee, Jillian Mueller, Marla Mindelle, Olivia Puckett, and Natalie Walker in The Big Gay Jamboree. Photo Credit Matthew Murphy.

Outstanding Costume Design of a Musical

Gregg Barnes, BOOP! The Musical

Sarah Cubbage, The Big Gay Jamboree

Toni-Leslie James, Gypsy

Qween Jean, Cats: “The Jellicle Ball”

Paul Tazewell, Death Becomes Her

Catherine Zuber, Just in Time

KILL: Deirdre O’Connell in GLASS. KILL. WHAT IF IF ONLY. IMP at The Public Theater, NYC. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Outstanding Lighting Design of a Play

Isabella Byrd, Glass. Kill. What If If Only. Imp.

Jon Clark, Stranger Things: The First Shadow

Natasha Katz, John Proctor is the Villain

Tyler Micoleau, The Antiquities

Paul Whitaker, SUMO

Cole Vaughan, Wade McCollum, Clyde Voce, and Jason Gotay in Floyd Collins. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Outstanding Lighting Design of a Musical

Kevin Adams, Swept Away

Adam Honoré, Cats: “The Jellicle Ball”

Jack Knowles, Sunset Blvd.

Philip S. Rosenberg, BOOP! The Musical

Scott Zielinski and Ruey Horng Sun (projections), Floyd Collins

Sarah Snook in The Picture of Dorian Gray, adapted, written and directed by Kip Williams. Photo by Marc Brenner

Outstanding Sound Design of a Play

Paul Arditti, Stranger Things: The First Shadow

Johnny Gasper, Two Sisters Find a Box of Lesbian Erotica in the Woods

Matt Otto, All of Me

Bray Poor, Glass. Kill. What If If Only. Imp.

Clemence Williams, The Picture of Dorian Gray

Fan Zhang, Good Bones

Beth Leavel, Bernadette Peters, and Joanna Riding perform “You Gotta Get a Gimmick” in Stephen Sondheim’s Old Friends. Photo by Matthew Murphy.

Outstanding Sound Design of a Musical

Adam Fisher, Sunset Blvd.

Peter Hylenski, Just in Time

Scott Lehrer, Gypsy

Mick Potter, Stephen Sondheim’s Old Friends

Dan Moses Schreier, Floyd Collins

Khaila Wilcoxon, Michael Park, Idina Menzel, Zachary Noah Piser, and De’Adre Aziza in REDWOOD. Photo Credit: Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman for Murphy Made.

Outstanding Projection and Video Design

Nathan Amzi and Joe Ransom, Sunset Blvd.

Jake Barton, McNeal

David Bergman, The Picture of Dorian Gray

Jesse Garrison, The 7th Voyage of Egon Tichy [redux]

Hana S. Kim, Redwood

Red Concepción, Kris Bona, Paco Tolson, Ahmad Kamal, and Scott Keiji Takeda in SUMO at The Public Theater. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Outstanding Wig and Hair

Alberto “Albee” Alvarado, SUMO

Charles G. LaPointe, Death Becomes Her

Sabana Majeed, BOOP! The Musical

Nikiya Mathis, Cats: “The Jellicle Ball”

Nikiya Mathis, Liberation

Cavern Wide, Wakka Wakka’s Dead as a Dodo (Under the Radar Festival, NYC). Photo by Erato Tzavara.

Outstanding Puppetry

Dorothy James, Bill’s 44th

Tom Lee, See What I Wanna See

Simple Mischief Studio, Small Acts of Daring Invention

Amanda Villalobos, Becoming Eve

Kirjan Waage, Dead as a Dodo

Kenneth Branagh (director and King Lear) and cast in King Lear, The Shed, New York, October 26, 2024 – December 15, 2024. Photo: Marc J. Franklin. Courtesy The Shed.

Outstanding Fight Choreography

Drew Leary, Romeo + Juliet

Chelsea Pace and James Yaegashi, SUMO

Rick Sordelet and Christian Kelly-Sordelet, Pirates! The Penzance Musical

Bret Yount, King Lear

Tommy Dorfman in NYTW’s BECOMING EVE. Photo by Matthew Murphy.

Outstanding Adaptation

Becoming Eve, by Emil Weinstein

Cymbeline, by Andrea Thome

Medea: Re-Versed, by Luis Quintero

Pirates! The Penzance Musical, by Rupert Holmes

The Devil’s Disciple, by David Staller

The cast of The Jonathan Larson Project at Orpheum Theatre, NYC. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Outstanding Revue

Forbidden Broadway: Merrily We Stole a Song

Mama, I’m a Big Girl Now!

The Jonathan Larson Project

The World According to Micki Grant

Joshua William Gelb in The 7th Voyage of Egon Tichy [redux]. Photo by Maria Baranova.

Unique Theatrical Experience

Odd Man Out

The 7th Voyage of Egon Tichy [redux]

The Picture of Dorian Gray

The Voices in Your Head

The Wind and the Rain: A Story about Sunny’s Bar

L to R: Susannah Flood, Irene Sofia Lucio, Adina Verson, Kristolyn Lloyd, Betsy Aidem, and Audrey Corsa in Roundabout Theatre’s Liberation Off-Broadway. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Special Awards

Ensemble Award

The ensemble of Roundabout Theatre Company’s Liberation (Betsy Aidem, Audrey Corsa, Kayla Davion, Susannah Flood, Kristolyn Lloyd, Irene Sofia Lucio, Charlie Thurston, and Adina Verson) for bringing to vibrant life the specific and universal stories of women staring across the social battle lines of the 1970s from their perch “somewhere in Ohio” in Bess Wohl’s beautiful new play.

Sam Norkin Off-Broadway Award

The incredibly versatile Stephen Michael Spencer for his electric and empathetic performances in two of this season’s strongest new Off-Broadway musicals. In Medea: Re-Versed, Spencer’s funny yet revelatory take on a character we all thought we knew allowed us the rare opportunity to actually understand Jason’s motivations. And then in Music City, Spencer was almost unrecognizable as TJ, a charismatic singer-songwriter who we couldn’t help but root for.

Susannah Flood and Anthony Edwards in Roundabout Theatre Company’s THE COUNTER. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Additional Special Awards

Pregones/PRTT: Pregones (founded in 1979) and the Puerto Rican Traveling Theater (founded in 1967) merged in 2014 to become a powerhouse producer of Latinx shows on two NYC stages: one in Manhattan’s Theater District, the other in the South Bronx, both evoking an atmosphere of warmth and inclusivity. This season brought the blazing world premiere of Matthew Barbot’s the beautiful land i seek (la linda tierra que busco yo), a history-inspired fantasia about two Puerto Rican freedom fighters that deftly explores colonialism while riffing on Waiting for Godot, plus dozens of one-offs showcasing Latinx artists and culture.

Lighting designer Stacey Derosier for her deeply intimate and consistently gorgeous work across this season’s Off-Broadway stages. Whether lighting the minimalist theatricality of The Welkin and Grangeville, or the rich naturalism of The Counter and Danger and Opportunity, Derosier shows us not only that less is often so much more, but also that just a single light can have such a profound impact in the darkness.

The team behind Danger and Opportunity – playwright Ken Urban, director Jack Serio, and ensemble Juan Castano, Julia Chan, and Ryan Spahn – for their genuinely serious, deeply moving consideration of the messy implications of a three-way relationship, done in an imaginatively immersive way that made such a small-scale story feel like a meaningful event.

Audra McDonald in GYPSY – Photo by Julieta Cervantes.

Productions with Multiple Nominations

11 Nominations

BOOP! The Musical

9 Nominations

Just in Time

Maybe Happy Ending

7 Nominations

Cats: “The Jellicle Ball”

Gypsy

Sunset Blvd.

5 Nominations

Death Becomes Her

Floyd Collins

Pirates! The Penzance Musical

Stranger Things: The First Shadow

The Picture of Dorian Gray

4 Nominations

Glass. Kill. What If If Only. Imp.

John Proctor is the Villain

The Big Gay Jamboree

3 Nominations

Becoming Eve

Forbidden Broadway: Merrily We Stole a Song

Grangeville

Liberation

Once Upon a Mattress

Operation Mincemeat

Real Women Have Curves

See What I Wanna See

SUMO

The Antiquities

2 Nominations

A Streetcar Named Desire

All of Me

All the World’s a Stage

Cymbeline

Dark Noon

Deep Blue Sound

Medea: Re-Versed

Music City

Purpose

Swept Away

The 7th Voyage of Egon Tichy [redux]

The Hills of California

We Live in Cairo

Wine in the Wilderness

Jenny Lee Stern and Danny Hayward in Forbidden Broadway. Photo by Carol Rosegg.

As was the case last year, all performance categories are gender-free. The updated gender-free categories are: Outstanding Lead Performance in a Play, Outstanding Lead Performance in a Musical, Outstanding Featured Performance in a Play, and Outstanding Featured Performance in a Musical. 

Each of these categories has twice as many nominees as the former gendered categories and voters will cast two votes for each category. These categories will also have two winners each. If there is a tie, there may be more than two winners in a category.

Productions deemed not eligible either because they were considered in their entirety in prior seasons or because they did not invite awards consideration included A Child’s Christmas in Wales, All In: Comedy About Love, Bringer of Doom, Dead Outlaw, English, Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha, Invasive Species, Oh, Mary!, On Beckett,and The Dead, 1904. Due to rescheduling factors, Grief Camp and Rheology will be considered in the 2025-2026 season.

Michael Urie, Sutton Foster, and the company of Once Upon a Mattress. Photo by Joan Marcus.

www.DramaDeskAward.com

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