I find it interesting that they chose to do Sit Down Your Rockin The Boat for the Tony Award 2009 as they did the same number for the last revival.
I was wondering why the chose that over some of the other numbers from the show.
BTW I have been watching select moments from the Tony Awards on You Tube
Likewise, why did Legally Blonde decide to showcase the same number that was done two years ago on the awards broadcast?
It suddenly strikes me as funny that Legally Blonde has managed to get the same number featured on the Tonys in two different years despite the fact that it was never nominated as a Best Musical in the first place.
I think the reason "they" chose to perform "So Much Better" from
Legally Blonde - as well as "Dancing Queen", "Sit Down Your Rockin' The Boat" and even the
Jersey Boys medley - is that those songs are the "Greatest Hits". If
Wicked had been featured, I have a feeling "Defying Gravity" would have been performed again too. (And I would not have minded seeing that again.)
Some people don't mind seeing - and hearing - the same songs over and over again. -How many YouTube clips have you watched more than once? Additionally, I'm sure that there was a good chunk - well, maybe a small chunk - of the viewing audience that hadn't seen those numbers before. -I've actually missed the previous televised performances of "What's Up, Duloc?" from
Shrek. However...
I think both "Dancing Queen" and "So Much Better" were not well-served by the staging - having the soloist(s) out on the dais, and the rest of the company back on the stage. Just too much "space".
bk - The key for "Dancing Queen" has always been that "low" - lots of mixing, no belt. It's not meant to be a "show-off" number in the show - it's a fun, friendly, "girl power", woman-bonding number. In the show proper, it's sung in the bedroom (like it was in the movie), and in the curtain call it's meant to feature the spandex.

The curtain call version of "Waterloo" would have had more energy.