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See All the Winners at the 2026 Tony Awards Here

With the 2025-2026 Broadway season now at an end, there was only one thing left to do: celebrate its very best productions and performances at the 79th Tony Awards. Catch up on all of them here.

By Elliot O·Jun 7, 2026·1 min read
See All the Winners at the 2026 Tony Awards Here

Reported by Vogue.

The 79th Tony Awards landed at Radio City Music Hall on Sunday night, with Pink hosting a ceremony that doubled as a love letter to Broadway's most iconic productions. Tributes to Chicago, The Book of Mormon, and A Chorus Line set the stage — but it was the 2025-2026 season's own contenders that ultimately owned the room, according to Vogue.

On the costume front, Qween Jean took Best Costume Design of a Musical for Cats: The Jellicle Ball, while Jeff Mahshie claimed the play equivalent for Fallen Angels. Schmigadoon! cleaned up in the technical categories, with Doug Besterman and Mike Morris winning Best Orchestrations and Christopher Gattelli taking both Best Direction of a Musical and Best Choreography. Mikaal Sulaiman's sound design for Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman won in its category — a production that loomed large across the nominations all evening.

The Night's Big Stories

The play categories read like a masterclass in prestige casting. Fallen Angels dominated with nominations including Rose Byrne and Kelli O'Hara facing off for Best Actress in a Leading Role in a Play — one of the evening's most competitive matchups. Meanwhile, Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman fielded heavyweights Nathan Lane and Laurie Metcalf alongside Christopher Abbott in featured contention. Best Revival of a Play nominees included Oedipus, Every Brilliant Thing, and Becky Shaw, while the musical revival race came down to Cats: The Jellicle Ball, Ragtime, and Richard O'Brien's The Rocky Horror Show.

Best Musical pitted four distinct visions against each other: the gothic ambition of The Lost Boys, the meta-theatrical absurdity of Schmigadoon!, the Céline Dion fever dream of Titaníque, and the intimate charm of Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York). Best Play nominees — The Balusters, Giant, Liberation, and Little Bear Ridge Road — spanned political allegory to American epic, proof that Broadway's appetite for ambitious new work isn't slowing down.

Whatever your allegiances this season, one thing the 79th Tonys made clear: Broadway is not coasting on nostalgia — it's building something new worth celebrating.


Read the original at Vogue.

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