The 2017 Tony Awards delivered many powerful moments, but few reached the emotional intensity of Ben Platt performing “Waving Through a Window” from the Broadway phenomenon Dear Evan Hansen. For songwriter Justin Paul, who co-created the show’s music, it was not just another live performance—it was a moment of artistic truth so raw that it left even its creators shaken.
Paul later recalled watching from the wings, overcome with emotion as Platt stepped onto the stage at Radio City Music Hall. In front of roughly 6,000 members of the Broadway elite, Platt did something extraordinary: he didn’t simply perform the song—he became it. The line between actor and character disappeared as he fully embodied Evan Hansen, a teenager struggling with overwhelming anxiety and isolation.
A Performance That Silenced Broadway
From the first note, there was a noticeable shift in the room. The usual grandeur of the Tony Awards faded into the background as Platt delivered the opening lines with a trembling vulnerability. His voice, often praised for its technical precision, became something far more visceral—an instrument of emotion that cracked, surged, and soared in ways that felt almost too real for a staged performance.
As the song progressed, Platt’s physicality intensified. He appeared to hyperventilate, his body shaking as if he were experiencing Evan Hansen’s panic in real time. Sweat, tears, and breath all became part of the performance. There were no backing tracks to cushion the moment, no safety net to soften the edges. Every note was live, exposed, and deeply human.
The most astonishing aspect was his vocal control amid that chaos. Even as he visibly broke down, Platt navigated demanding octave leaps with precision, channeling emotional strain directly into his singing. It was not polished in the traditional sense—it was better. It was honest. The imperfections became the performance’s greatest strength, making the audience feel as though they were witnessing something unfiltered and deeply personal.
Inside the theater, the reaction was unlike anything typical of an awards show. The audience did not erupt immediately into applause. Instead, there was a stunned silence—a collective pause as 6,000 seasoned theater professionals processed what they had just seen. In an industry built on performance, they had just witnessed something that transcended it.
Backstage, Justin Paul and his songwriting partner could barely breathe. To see their work interpreted with such emotional intensity was overwhelming. Paul later described it as watching someone “shatter his own heart entirely,” a phrase that captures both the beauty and the cost of what Platt gave on that stage.
When the applause finally came, it was thunderous, but even that felt secondary to the moment itself. That six-minute performance did more than showcase a song—it redefined what live theater could achieve. Ben Platt didn’t just sing “Waving Through a Window.” He made the entire room feel what it means to be unseen, unheard, and desperately reaching out.