Jeremy O. Harris' 'Slave Play' Goes Winless At Tonys Despite 12 Nominations
By Ryan Shepard
September 27, 2021
Heading into the 74th Annual Tony Awards, many theater critics believed Jeremy O. Harris and company would come home with the night's top prize for their work on the Broadway hit, Slave Play. However, these bold predictions ended up falling short of reality. Despite earning a record-breaking 12 nominations, Slave Play went winless at the 74th Annual Tony Awards. This turn of events sparked a discussion that has grasped much of Broadway.
"Slave Play doesn’t need recognition from this messy establishment to live on as a challenge to artists to write about what scares you, to cut yourself open and let audiences stare at your beautiful and bloody guts," Pulitzer Prize finalist Michael Breslin tweeted.
"The Slave Play shutout is embarrassing. And not for Slave Play," author Mark Harris added.
Whether you enjoyed the show or not, the fact that Slave Play was the most Tony-nominated show in Broadway history, yet won 0 trophies, should raise questions about the actual purpose and value of these awards.
— Lil Uzi Hurt 🥺 (@lostblackboy) September 27, 2021
I think it’s quite obvious that SLAVE PLAY should win for “Best Play” but also, they don’t call it the Great White Way for nothing. #TonyAwards
— Saeed Jones (@theferocity) September 27, 2021
While many were upset that the production was shut out after receiving a dozen nominations, others were relieved that it did not win any awards. Written by Harris, the film explores the intersections of race, power, culture and economics, but it has been heavily criticized for the treatment of Black women throughout the play.
"The disconnect between white and black people over Slave Play is fascinating and indicative of how little black people are actually listened to in matters of anti-racism. Major award shows are biased against black creatives but lets not hitch ourselves to a burning wagon," USA Today's Dean P.E. Stephens tweeted.
Any black person endorsing "Slave Play" is not to be trusted.
— Torraine Walker (@TorraineWalker) September 27, 2021
The translucents really upset because a slave play didn’t win awards??? https://t.co/1y6TJV6DZM pic.twitter.com/h388enbDSD
— L E X (@iamlexstylz) September 27, 2021
In the midst of this back and forth regarding Slave Play's Tony Awards shutout, Harris hopped on to Twitter to share a few thoughts on the matter.
Slave Play has never won one of the major awards of any of the great voting bodies but changed culture and has inspired thousands of ppl who didn’t care about theatre before," Harris tweeted.
"I saw someone randomly reading the play in Slovenia. We already won."
In addition, Harris announced that Slave Play would be returning to Broadway this fall.
“‘Slave Play’s return engagement marks for me a chance for New York and the world to re-meet a play that many met at New York Theatre Workshop and Broadway in 2018 and 2019, and that thousands of others met in its published edition in a year when theaters around the world were dark," Harris said in a statement to Variety.
“To be doing it in 2021 with the Kaneisha who originated the role at Yale and members of the original cast fills me with the same joy I had I had watching the play for the very first time in a classroom five years ago.”
Get the latest news 24/7 on The Black Information Network. Listen now on the iHeartRadio appor click HERE to tune in live.