Viola Davis, Marin Ireland & More To Present Awards At The 55th Annual Obie Awards
By: Gabrielle Sierra Apr. 16, 2010
The Village Voice, the nation's largest alternative weekly newspaper, announced today that the 55th Annual OBIE Awards will take place on Monday, May 17, 2010 at Webster Hall in the East Village.
The OBIES will be co-hosted by Anika Noni Rose & Michael Cerveris.Anika Noni Rose won an OBIE in 2001 for her performance in Eli's Comin'. Most recently, you may have heard Anika as the voice of ‘Princess Tiana' in Disney's The Princess & The Frog. She won acclaim in the film version of Dreamgirls, for which she received an NAACP nomination, and she received raves both Off- and on Broadway for her portrayal of Emmie Thibodeaux in Caroline or Change. She subsequently starred on Broadway in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and as Mma Makutsi in the HBO series The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency, shot entirely on location in Botswana.The Awards Will Be Presented By:
J. Smith CameronViola Davis
Marin Ireland
Linda Lavin
Sam Rockwell
Michael Shannon
Kerry Washington
Jennifer Westfeldt*
WITH TWO RARE PERFROMANCES FROM THE HIT SHOW FELAFor the past 55 years, The Village Voice OBIE Awards, founded by Jerry Tallmer in 1956, have honored the best of Off Broadway and Off-Off Broadway. Structured with informal categories that can change annually, The Village Voice OBIE Awards recognize persons and productions of excellence. Unlike most theater awards, The Village Voice OBIE Awards list no nominations publicly. In the conviction that creativity is not competitive, the judges may give several OBIES in each category, and may even invent new categories to reward exceptional artistic merit.
The evening will culminate with a celebratory after-party featuring live music and art, which will celebrate this year's honorees. More information on the after-party will be made available soon at obies.villagevoice.com and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/obieawards Tickets for The Village Voice's 55th annual OBIE Awards are $25 and on sale now through Brown Paper Tickets at obies.villagevoice.com. For more information please visit obies.villagevoice.comAbout The Village Voice:
Founded by Dan Wolf, Ed Fancher, and Norman Mailer in October 1955, The Village Voice introduced free-form, high-spirited, and passionate journalism into the public discourse. As the nation's first and largest alternative newsweekly, the Voice maintains the same tradition of no-holds-barred reporting and criticism it first embraced when it began publishing. The recipient of three Pulitzer prizes, the National Press Foundation Award, and the George Polk Award, among others, the Voice has earned a reputation for its groundbreaking investigations of New York City politics, and as the premier expert on New York's cultural scene. Writing and reporting on local and national politics, with opinionated arts, culture, music, dance, film, and theater reviews, daily web dispatches, comprehensive entertainment listings, and unrivaled classifieds, the Voice is the authoritative source on all that is New York. The Village Voice has also created such celebrated events as the OBIE Awards, the Siren Music Festival, and Choice Eats, as well as producing the most anticipated issues and guides of the year, including the annual Pazz and Jop music poll, Best of NYC, and the paper's Spring, Summer, and Fall Preview guides. The Voice is New York's most influential must-read alternative newspaper, both in print and online at www.villagevoice.com, where the site averages 2 million unique users each month.
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