NEW YORK — There was plenty of applause heard during the Tony Awards — and perhaps no place louder than from as far away as Pittsburgh.
Seven alumni from Carnegie Mellon University took home Tonys, a glittery haul that was both a school record and a huge source of pride for a theater department that turns 100 next year.
Billy Porter, Patina Miller and Judith Light each took home acting Tonys, while Ann Roth got one for best costume design, and partners Jules Fisher and Peggy Eisenhauer won for best lighting design of a play. Martin Platt also won as producer of the best play winner, "Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike."
"We've had a bumper crop," said Peter Cooke, head of the university's school of drama. "I'm just delighted that they received rewards from their peers. It was just a terrific night."
The seven wins means Carnegie Mellon took bragging rights from the better-known Yale University School of Drama, which had four Tony winners Sunday: costume designer William Ivey Long, actor Courtney B. Vance, set designer John Lee Beatty and playwright Christopher Durang.
In addition to Carnegie Mellon winners, there were plenty of alumni serving as presenters and performers: "Newsies" lead Corey Cott graduated last year, "Star Trek" reboot star Zachary Quinto is from the class of 1999, and Megan Hilty, who recently starred on NBC's "Smash," is a 2004 graduate.
"You're looking at a broad continuum of talent that's come out of this school," said Cooke, who has hosted representatives from theater schools as far away as Estonia and Brazil. "They're coming to us to ask, 'What are you doing?' and 'Can you help us?'"
Founded in 1914, the Carnegie Mellon University School of Drama is the oldest conservatory training in America and the country's first degree-granting drama institution.