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So macho...Harry Potter's all grown-up with stubble on his face
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16 June 2008
His boyish charms as the world’s most famous wizard have won him legions of female admirers, but Daniel Radcliffe’s seems keen to ditch those youthful looks and adopt a more manly appearance.
The Harry Potter star revealed a face of stubble while attending the theatre world’s most prestigious awards, the Tonys, in New York yesterday.
Looking smart in a tuxedo, the diminutive actor, 18, is clearly aiming for a more adult appearance as he leaves his teens behind and makes the difficult transition from child star to grown-up actor.
A grown-up looking Daniel Radcliffe at the 62nd Annual Tony Awards in New York yesterday
He has already attempted to make the cross-over in his career, namely with his theatre debut in February 2007 in the West End play Equus where he appeared nude on stage.
Radcliffe was presenting an award with fellow British actor Richard Griffiths.
British actor Mark Rylance, 48, was named best leading actor in the French farce Boeing Boeing for his performance as a nerdy visitor to Paris in the comedy, which transferred to Broadway after a hugely successful run in the West End.
How he was: Radcliffe, aged 11, with his Harry Potter co-stars Emma Watson and Rupert Grint
The play also received best revival of a play award at the ceremony at the Radio City Music Hall in New York. It beat Harold Pinter's The Homecoming, Les Liaisons Dangereuses and Macbeth.
Mark Rylance with his award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play for 'Boeing-Boeing'
In his acceptance speech, Rylance, who was the first artistic director at Shakespeare's Globe Theatre, eschewed the normal thank-yous to wax lyrical about the delights of wearing a uniform. It is likely to have left the audience a little nonplussed.
Rylance declared: "When you're in town wearing some kind of uniform, it's helpful - policeman, priest. ...
"If you're in the woods - some place far from any human habitation - it is a good idea to wear orange and carry a gun, or depending on the season, a fishing pole or a camera with a big lens otherwise ... it might appear that you don't know what you're doing, that you're just wandering the earth with no particular reason for being here and no particular place to go. Thanks very much."
The original London production of Boeing Boeing, written by Marc Camoletti, opened in London in 1962 and was revived last year to great critical acclaim. It transferred to Broadway last month with Rylance reprising his London role.
Rylance beat two British actors - Rufus Sewell in Tom Stoppard's Rock'n'Roll and Patrick Stewart in Macbeth - to the award.
Rylance on stage in the West End with Tasmin Outhwaite during the play's hugely successful run in London
There was also disappointment for Stoppard who was nominated for best play but lost out to Tracy Letts's August: Osage County, a very American play about a dysfunctional family in Oklahoma.
Sinead Cusack, who attended the awards with her husband Jeremy Irons, failed to win best performance by a featured actress in Rock 'n' Roll.
One of the big winners was a revival of the musical South Pacific which won seven Tonys.
Whoopi Goldberg raises some laughs as host at the Tony Awards as she reenacts a scene from Mary Poppins (right)
It won nine when it first ran in 1950. The musical In The Heights, a joyous celebration of Latino life in the upper reaches of Manhattan, took four awards and another musical, Gypsy, took three.
The five Tonys for August: Osage County, were not unexpected since it has already won major US awards, including the Pulitzer Prize for drama and the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award.
Visions in white: Glenn Close and British actress Alice Eve at the Tony Awards
Thanking the show's producers, Letts said: "They did an amazing thing. They decided to produce an American play on Broadway with theatre actors."
There is speculation the play will move to London later this year.
Liza Minnelli and Marisa Tomei add glamour to the theatre's world top award show
BROADWAY WINNERS
Best play: August: Osage County
Best musical: In The Heights
Original Score (music and/or lyrics): In The Heights
Best revival of a play: Boeing-Boeing
Best revival of a musical: South Pacific
Best actor in a play: Mark Rylance, Boeing-Boeing
Best actress in a play: Deanna Dunagan, August: Osage County
Best actor (musical): Paulo Szot, South Pacific
Best actress (musical): Patti LuPone, Gypsy
Best direction (play): Anna D. Shapiro, August: Osage County
Best direction (musical): Bartlett Sher, South Pacific
Choreography: Andy Blankenbuehler, In the Heights
Featured actor (play): Jim Norton, The Seafarer
Featured actress (play): Rondi Reed, August: Osage County
Featured actor (musical): Boyd Gaines, Gypsy
Featured actress(musical): Laura Benanti, Gypsy
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