Julia Louis-Dreyfus Gets a Big Laugh With ChatGPT Quip While Presenting the Best Play Category at the 2026 Tony Awards

Credits: @officialjld via Instagram
Credits: @officialjld via Instagram
Julia Louis-Dreyfus had the Tony Awards audience in stitches during the Best Play presentation with a deadpan joke about AI authorship. The 2026 ceremony was already buzzing with anticipation over the Best Play nominees, all of which were deeply human works tackling weighty themes. Louis-Dreyfus, co-presenting alongside Lily Rabe, leaned fully into the cultural obsession with artificial intelligence for maximum comedic effect. The bit landed instantly, capturing the room and sending clips viral across social media within minutes.
While Broadway's biggest night celebrated deeply human storytelling, Louis-Dreyfus arrived at the podium ready to credit an entirely different kind of author.
Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Lily Rabe's AI quip at the 2026 Tony Awards
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Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Lily Rabe took the stage at the 2026 Tony Awards ceremony to present the Best Play category, one of the evening's most anticipated moments. The Radio City Music Hall audience had no idea what was coming when Louis-Dreyfus leaned into the microphone with complete composure. The two were presenting together fresh off their upcoming Broadway revival of Other Desert Cities, giving the bit an extra layer of theatrical irony.
"Extraordinarily, these plays were all brilliantly written by AI," Louis-Dreyfus declared at the podium, completely straight-faced.
Rabe was having none of it, firing back with a firm "No. No, they weren't."
Louis-Dreyfus refused to budge, doubling down with, "Okay, well, you can applaud and hoot and holler as much as you want, but that's not what ChatGPT told me."
Liberation by Bess Wohl took home the Best Play award, a result that made the AI quip even more delicious in hindsight. Wohl's play had already claimed the 2026 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, examining the legacy of the 1970s women's liberation movement with irreverence and emotional precision. Crediting a Pulitzer-winning, intellectually layered work to ChatGPT was peak Louis-Dreyfus comedy: smug, absurd, and perfectly timed against Broadway's most prestigious category.
While Liberation proved human storytelling at its most powerful, the night reminded audiences that not every deserving performance gets its due recognition.
Tony Awards snubs that kept the 2026 ceremony talking
The 2026 Tony season was not without its contentious omissions. Adrien Brody went unnominated for his emotionally demanding turn in The Fear of 13, a wrongful conviction drama that critics acknowledged for its intensity. Ayo Edebiri's restrained, psychologically precise performance in Proof was similarly overlooked, as was Keanu Reeves' in Waiting for Godot. These absences sparked significant conversation about whether the Tonys consistently reward theatrical depth or default to familiar metrics of recognition.
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Lea Michele's vocally strong performance in Chess also failed to earn a nomination despite widespread technical praise. The pattern across the 2026 season suggested that minimalist or interiorised performances continued to struggle within an awards framework built around visible transformation. Julia Louis-Dreyfus may have joked that AI wrote the plays, but the real conversation the Tonys left behind was about which human performances the ballots simply forgot.
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What are your thoughts on Julia Louis-Dreyfus's ChatGPT quip and the 2026 Tony Awards snubs? Let us know in the comments.
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Edited By: Itti Mahajan
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