Tony Awards: Go behind the scenes with the Broadway sound mixers They sit behind a console that looks like the bridge of a spaceship and use complicated technology to bring words from the actors mouth to the audience's ears.

When you can hear every word, thank the sound mixers

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LAUREN FRAYER, HOST:

Tony awards will be handed out in New York this evening. But some Broadway workers are ineligible for a trophy. Reporter Jeff Lunden visited a few of them - they're sound mixers.

JEFF LUNDEN, BYLINE: Songwriter Irving Berlin once said of Ethel Merman, you better write her a good lyric, because when she sings a word, the guy up in the last row of the second balcony is going to hear every syllable of it.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "I GOT THE SUN IN THE MORNING")

ETHEL MERMAN: (As Annie Oakley, singing) Still I think I'm a lucky girl. I got the sun in the morning and the moon at night...

HEATHER AUGUSTINE: It's fascinating to see the way that shows have changed just because of now you have the technology of microphones, where back in Ethel Merman's day, musicals were written, and the music was written, so you had a pocket for voices to sit in. So it was easier to hear things acoustically.

LUNDEN: That's Heather Augustine, the sound mixer for "The Outsiders," the Tony-nominated musical based on the popular book and movie, which uses a lot of electric instruments and a lot of microphones.

AUGUSTINE: It's no longer stressed as much for actors to learn how to project because they're like, oh, you'll have a microphone.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "TULSA '67")

UNIDENTIFIED GROUP #1: (As characters) This is Tulsa 1967. And there's just one thing you need to know...

LUNDEN: Augustine, like all the sound mixers I spoke with for the story, works hard to give the audience a sonic experience equivalent to listening to a recording as they watch a Broadway musical unfold live. Sean Woods is the sound mixer for "Hell's Kitchen," the semi-autobiographical Alicia Keys musical with 13 Tony nominations.

SEAN WOODS: People have good headphones now. AirPods have a good sound to them. And everyone's used to, you know, a good stereo recording, and now that needs to be the standard at this point. People are used to that, so, you know, not so great clarity doesn't really fly.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "GIRL ON FIRE")

JACKIE LEON, VANESSA FERGUSON AND CHRIS LEE: (As characters, singing) This girl is on fire.

LUNDEN: The sound mixers stand behind consoles with multiple computer screens that look a lot like the bridge from the USS Enterprise on "Star Trek." From there, they control all the inputs from mikes on the band and performers, which then go out to speakers all over the theater. And at a show like "Hell's Kitchen," there are a lot of speakers, says Sean Woods.

WOODS: Between 230 and 240, which I think is - at the moment, at least - the most on Broadway.

LUNDEN: One reason for the big number of speakers is that "Hell's Kitchen" uses special software to generate a surround-sound experience for the audience.

WOODS: Everyone in the show wears little trackers, and that kind of puts them in three-dimensional space onstage.

LUNDEN: Which means that the audience can hear exactly where the sound is coming from onstage.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "EMPIRE STATE OF MIND")

MELEAH JOI MOON, SHOSANA BEAN AND BRANDON VICTOR DIXON: (As characters, singing) New York - concrete jungle where dreams are made of. There's nothing you can't do. Now you're in New York...

LUNDEN: There's a similar 3D setup over at "The Outsiders." At "Illinoise," a dance musical with four Tony nominations, the setup is complicated, too. The singers and musicians perform on a split multi level bandstand above the stage. Garth MacAleavey not only runs the soundboard, but designed the show's sound.

GARTH MACALEAVEY: This is like a real music concert - rock show sometimes, chamber music concert sometimes.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "COME ON! FEEL THE ILLINOISE!")

ELIJAH LYONS AND THE ORIGINAL CAST OF ILLINOISE: (As character, singing) Oh, great intentions, I've got the best of interventions.

LUNDEN: The work for a sound mixer starts about an hour and a half before every show. MacAleavey runs pink noise, a sound that plays all the audible frequencies the human ear can hear, through speakers to make sure everything's working.

MACALEAVEY: Sounds good. Sounds good.

LUNDEN: And then he needs to make sure that every microphone is working for the singers and the band. Good check. Banjo, please.

We have no less than two banjos in the show. Sometimes we joke we could use a few more.

LUNDEN: And after everything's checked, the show begins.

(SOUNDBITE OF ORCHESTRA WARMING UP)

LUNDEN: While every song and scene has a computer setting triggered by either a button or a foot pedal, the sound mixers are constantly riding levels, bringing vocals up or down or even lines of dialogue. It's a ballet, using just fingers. Heather Augustine follows along on an iPad with a lot of notations.

AUGUSTINE: I like color codes a lot. So everything in red is for mics, where I'll underline if I know somebody's a little quiet, and I need to push them a little bit more.

LUNDEN: There are hundreds of cues to get just right before the final curtain.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "STAY GOLD")

UNIDENTIFIED GROUP #2: (As characters, singing) Stay gold...

LUNDEN: Heather Augustine, Sean Woods and Garth MacAleavey are all making their Broadway debuts with these shows. For Augustine, who spent 10 years on the road and contributes to a blog called Sound Girls that encourages women to participate in the industry...

AUGUSTINE: I wouldn't trade this job for anything. It has something special where I get a feeling mixing a show when you get it just right that you don't get anywhere else.

LUNDEN: For NPR News, I'm Jeff Lunden in New York.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "STAY GOLD")

UNIDENTIFIED GROUP #2: (As characters, singing) I have had some time for thinking...

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