DARREN CRISS - Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical Winner | Maybe Happy Ending | The 78th Annual Tony Awards | June 08, 2025
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DARREN CRISS - Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical Winner | Maybe Happy Ending | The 78th Annual Tony Awards | June 08, 2025
HwaBoon in his Broadway debut in Maybe Happy Ending
with permission from @bikinibottomdayz
Never Fly Away
Plant buddies
Is seymour a little man or is oliver a big robot ? yiu may decide !!!!!!!
Maybe Happy Ending | 78th Annual Tony Awards | June 08, 2025 | 📸 by Mike Coppola, Arturo Holmes, Jemal Countess, John Nacion
Best Musical Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical (Darren Criss) Best Direction of a Musical (Michael Arden) Best Book of a Musical (Will Aronson and Hue Park) Best Original Score (Will Aronson and Hue Park) Best Scenic Design of a Musical (Dane Laffrey and George Reeve)
never fly away little robot 🤖💕🎇🌱
just some maybe happy ending fanart in celebration of their tony win!! i haven’t gotten to see the show yet but their performance made me want to see it even more lolol
🕯️maybe happy ending will win all of their tony nominations 🕯️
Maybe Happy Ending: Tiny Desk Concert | NPR Music
Mitra I. Arthur | March 5, 2026 What can robots teach us about humanity and about love? Maybe Happy Ending, the 2025 Tony Award winner for best musical, tells the unlikely story of two humanoid robots, portrayed by Helen J. Shen (Claire) and Darren Criss (Oliver), as they fall in love while on a road trip. The show’s creators, Hue Park and Will Aronson, fill the musical with a sense of yearning, not specifically for romance (though that does happen), but for connection and self-actualization: Our heroes try to understand what it means to actually live once your purpose for existing is over. Backed by a ten-person orchestra, the four cast members present selections from the show at the Tiny Desk. The repeated whimsical refrain of “Where You Belong” pulls us into Olivier’s imagined reunion with his former owner James, portrayed by Marcus Choi. The banter between Shen and Criss for “The Rainy Day We Met” is charming — and just a glimpse into how perfectly they play off each other. Park and Aronson introduce “A Sentimental Person,” performed by Dez Duron who plays the suave, Sinatra-esq jazz crooner Gil Brentley. Brentley serves as a musical avatar for Criss’ “Oliver,” facilitating the complex emotions that Oliver is unable to articulate. They close the set with “When You’re in Love,” a tear jerker of a duet from Criss and Shen. And as the music swells, you’re right there with them in the moment: They don’t have to wait for an invitation to your heart; they, and this show, are there already.