Broadway61004 said: "I think the other thing that helped Nine was that Dreamgirls opened so much earlier in the season, Nine was sort of the "shiny new toy" that voters watched right at the end before they cast their votes. Not to say that the hype for Dreamgirls had died down much, but it had still been so hyped since opening in December of that year and had been the "it" show for so long that Nine arriving was the next big thing and a bit of fresh air into the spring theatre season. So with it fresh in their minds like that, I'd guess that likely influenced a lot of votes. Also, Tommy Tune had still been relatively unrecognized from an awards standpoint in terms of his direction and choreography (he had won for Hollywood... already, but this was prior to My One and Only, Grand Hotel, Will Rogers, etc.) whereas Bennett had been recognized quite regularly by the Tonys. So all that together added up to Nine having the momentum by Tony night."
Really agree with this. I was young at the time, early teens, but I recall the big deal over Nine so well that I forgot for years Dreamgirls had opened the same year. When it arrived, there seemed to bee so much media coverage about it saving the idea that the musical was still a viable commercial form on Broadway. Which seems silly now, maybe seemed silly to older, more reasonable minds then. But the press was huge.
I only saw a bus-and-truck of the original Bennett staging and I've only seen the videotape of the Tune staging, but from the perspective of staging and text, I vastly prefer Nine. Doesn't mean I don't like Dreamgirls, but the latter strikes me as mostly fluff, whereas Nine hits on some deep issues. IMO.