Monday 9 June 2014

BBC News,World Cup 2014: BBC pundits predict what will happen in Brazil

World Cup 2014: BBC pundits predict what will happen in Brazil

The World Cup starts in Sao Paulo on Thursday and finishes in Rio de Janeiro on 13 July.
Thirty-two teams will contest the tournament, including hosts Brazil, holders Spain and perennial hopefuls England.
But who will get their hands on the famous trophy, how will the Three Lions do this time, and which outsiders could spring a shock?
BBC Sport's TV and radio football presenters and pundits predict what will happen during the next four weeks.

Who will win the World Cup?

Argentina forward Lionel Messi and Brazil striker Neymar
Gary Lineker
Gary Lineker: I just get a feeling this might be Lionel Messi's time, andArgentina's World Cup. They are a bit lightweight defensively but have a good coach in Alejandro Sabella and some brilliant forward players.
I think Messi was saving himself the last few months of the season and he will take some stopping. And they have got a nice easy group so will probably get to the knock-out stages without wasting too much energy.
Alan Shearer: I'm going for Brazil. They had a great Confederations Cup and have a manager in Luiz Felipe Scolari who has done it all before. If Neymar performs, which he did last summer, then they have a great chance.
Chris Waddle
Chris Waddle: Spain and Argentina will go close but my pick is Brazil.They are the hosts and they have a very powerful squad.
They are on a mission as well because of all the problems and protests there have been over whether they should be hosting the World Cup and is it money wasted or not. I think they have got to win it, otherwise there will be a lot of questions to answer.
Phil Neville: The conditions are a reason I am favouring South American rather than European teams and Argentina are my favourites. They have one of the best if not the best player in the world in Messi and also have a settled system that suits him as well.
Pat Nevin: Playing in South America means the European teams will have to change their style of play - Spain tried to play at their usual tempo in the Confederations Cup and it just did not work. They will have to adapt. Brazil have a very good team anyway but having home advantage too means they are the favourites for me.
Robbie Savage
Robbie Savage: Messi is not the only reason I am going for Argentina.They also have Sergio Aguero in their attack and going forward they will be able to blow teams away.
They have some class players at the back too and I think they will be ruthless when they have to be.
Brad Friedel
Brad Friedel: I'm having a hard time looking past Brazil. I know it is an easy choice but they have got some exceptional talent and they are going to be able to cope with all the elements like the different weather and travelling around their own country better than the other teams.
Yes, there is a lot of expectation for them to deal with but when Brazilians go into football, they are expected to win. It will be nothing special to them.

Who the other pundits went for:

Brazil: Rio Ferdinand
Argentina: Mark Lawrenson, Danny Murphy, Jason Roberts and Danny Mills
Martin Keown: I was in the Brazil camp for the Confederations Cup last summer and was taken aback by the emotional link between the players and the fans. It is a real force. They have a top quality team too - Neymar will be the tournament's stand-out player.
There is lots of pressure on them, but I think they are good enough to deal with it.

How far will England go?

England trio Raheem Sterling, Adam Lallana and Ross Barkley
Continue reading the main story
If we got to the quarter-finals, I think that would be a really good performance
Gary LinekerFormer England captain
Gary Lineker: If you had asked me about England six months ago, I would have said that I honestly think we are going to really struggle just to get past the group stage.
But, in the last few months, we have seen this pool of young talent emerge - some exciting players that take people on. That gives me a little bit of hope that we could do all right.
If we got to the quarter-finals, I think that would be a really good performance but, if the manager Roy Hodgson lets the players go and gives them wings, we could be quite exciting. We might not do that well in terms of progression right through the tournament but we could certainly give us some kind of hope for the future.
Chris Waddle: The conditions are against England because one thing England sides don't like is the heat and humidity, and I think there is going to be a lot of that. I honestly think if we can get out of our group, then we have done well.
Alan Shearer
Alan Shearer: Expectations are not huge, which could help us, and I like the look of our squad. It is exciting - it has a bit of youth in it and a bit of experience.
Wayne Rooney needs to have a big tournament for people to speak about him in the same terms as Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo and if he does do that I think England will be successful.
I think the starting XI nearly picks itself. In England's first game against Italy, I would start with Joe Hart in goal and Glen Johnson, Gary Cahill, Phil Jagielka and Leighton Baines at the back.
Alan Shearer's England team to play Italy
Alan Shearer's England team to play Italy
I would have Steven Gerrard and then either Jordan Henderson or Jack Wilshere, depending on Wilshere's fitness, in front of the back four.
The three in front of them would be Adam Lallana, Wayne Rooney and Raheem Sterling, with Daniel Sturridge at the top of that.
I think we can get to the quarter-finals and at a push we could get to a semi-final, but what people want to see is some progress and for the youngsters to be given a chance.
Rio Ferdinand
Rio Ferdinand: I know from past tournaments that, when you play for England, you try to keep expectation to a minimum because people get carried away very easily. This time, the expectation seems to be the right level - people are just hoping we do well.
This is a good chance to see the next generation of England players coming through and seeing whether they have really got what it takes at the top level. Reaching the quarter-finals would be a good step.

England are World Cup rookies

Only six of England's 23 players - Wayne Rooney, Frank Lampard, Joe Hart, James Milner, Glen Johnson and Steven Gerrard - have previously been in a World Cup finals squad
Phil Neville: I think England will do really well. A lot of the England players going to the World Cup haven't been to a major tournament before so they haven't been scarred by failure.
Hodgson has done a fantastic job of evolving the team. We have got some young players who are coming to this tournament with no fear and they are ready to ignite.
Robbie Savage: I don't think England will get beaten but I don't see them getting out of their group. They will beat Costa Rica but so will everybody else and, depending on goal difference, draws against Italy and Uruguay might not be enough to put them through.
Danny Mills
Danny Mills: If England can get out of their group then the last 16, where they are likely to face Colombia or Ivory Coast from Group C, does not look too bad. After that, it gets difficult and we are thrown in with the big boys - possibly Brazil, Netherlands, Spain or even Chile in the last eight.
Making the quarter-finals would be successful, to go beyond that would be an outside bet to say the least.
Danny Murphy
Danny Murphy: We will get out of the group stages, I am really positive about that. We have an abundance of attacking talent now and energetic and talented players who can go into games against Italy and Uruguay with a confidence and spring in their step after playing so well in the Premier League last season.
With a bit of luck in the last 16, we could get through to the quarter-finals. That would be a real success, and fantastic experience for the young lads to hold them in good stead for future tournaments.

England in Group D

14 June: v Italy, Manaus
19 June: v Uruguay, Sao Paulo
24 June: v Costa Rica, Belo Horizonte
Martin Keown: I don't think we should get too caught up in how far we are going to go. It is our first group game against Italy that could decide whether we get out of the group. Win and you think how positive it will be for the players - lose, and our next opponents Uruguay become the team we have to finish above, so the games just get bigger and bigger.
Brad Friedel: England are well positioned. Their attacking flair is something they haven't had in previous World Cups. Joe Hart is a outstanding goalkeeper and they have a solid defence. If they can get off to a good start in their first game against Italy, you never know where that can take them.
Pat Nevin: I would not say they will definitely do it but England are good enough to get out their group and, if they do, they are capable of beating whoever they play from Group B in the last 16.
If they reach the quarter-finals and lose, then I think most people will think that they have done as well as can be expected.
Jason Roberts
Jason Roberts: The likes of Adam Lallana, Daniel Sturridge, Raheem Sterling and Ross Barkley have the talent to change games by themselves.
Because of the attacking players England have, I see them as potentially being the tournament's surprise package.

Who will be the surprise package?

Arturo Vidal of Chile, Belgium's Jan Vertonghen and Arjen Robben of the Netherlands
Rio Ferdinand: Whoever I speak to in football, they say "Oh, Belgiumhave got some great players, and a great pool of players to pick from". But who actually gets picked to play in Brazil, what kind of shape they take up and how they get on is going to be really interesting.
Phil Neville
Phil Neville: Chile have got a really good team and they will go far in the competition.
I am not sure they will win it, but I think they could get to the quarter-finals and even the semi-finals. Uruguay, who are in England's group, have got a dangerous team too.
Chris Waddle: Chile, because of the way they play and because they have got players in form like Arturo Vidal at Juventus and Alexis Sanchez at Barcelona. People might not realise how many good players they have got who are already playing in Europe.
Plus, they play a very exciting attacking game, with lots of fast movement and passing. They create a lot of chances and are a very exciting side to watch.
Pat Nevin
Pat Nevin: I don't think they will win it but I am expecting Switzerland to do well with their group of players that have progressed together.
They are a team rather than a group of outstanding individuals.
Robbie Savage: I fancy Cameroon to get out of their group behind Brazil and, if they do make the last 16, they have got enough about them to give whoever they play out of Group B - either Spain, Netherlands or Chile by the looks of things - a scare.
Continue reading the main story
This might be one tournament too early for the Belgians
Brad FriedelFormer USA goalkeeper
Brad Friedel: I play with three Belgium players at Tottenham - Jan Vertonghen, Nacer Chadli and Mousa Dembele - so I know how exceptionally talented they are, and they seem to have real depth to their squad too.
This might be one tournament too early for the Belgians because they are very inexperienced in these type of events. But they will definitely get out of their group. Then, in the knockout stages, you just don't know what is going to happen.
Danny Mills: The Netherlands are not being talked about as one of the favourites this time but the Dutch are always very strong, and could cause little bit of a surprise if they get their act together and get out of a group that also contains Spain and Chile.
Also, don't rule out France. They have a relatively easy group and some very talented young players too.
Mark Lawrenson
Mark Lawrenson: The United States are in a tough group but I fancy them to get through ahead of Portugal.
If Portugal fall flat then that leaves the door open and, having spent a bit of time with US manager Jurgen Klinsmann, I am backing them to make it out of the group.
The US will be so well prepared and their team spirit is second to none. I think they will see off Ghana and reach the last 16.
Lawro will be predicting the outcome of every game throughout the tournament in his World Cup Predictions.

Male faces 'buttressed against punches' by evolution

Male faces 'buttressed against punches' by evolution


broken jaw
The jaw bone is frequently fractured in fist fights and was strengthened in some of our evolutionary ancestors

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A new theory suggests that our male ancestors evolved beefy facial features as a defence against fist fights.
The bones most commonly broken in human punch-ups also gained the most strength in early "hominin" evolution.
They are also the bones that show most divergence between males and females.
The paper, in the journal Biological Reviews, argues that the reinforcements evolved amid fighting over females and resources, suggesting that violence drove key evolutionary changes.
Fossil records show that the australopiths, immediate predecessors of the human genus Homo, had strikingly robust facial structures.
For many years, this extra strength was seen as an adaptation to a tough diet including nuts, seeds and grasses. But more recent findings, examining the wear pattern and carbon isotopes in australopith teeth, have cast some doubt on this "feeding hypothesis".
"In fact, [the australopith] boisei, the 'nutcracker man', was probably eating fruit," said Prof David Carrier, the new theory's lead author and an evolutionary biologist at the University of Utah.
Masculine armour
Instead of diet, Prof Carrier and his co-author, physician Dr Michael Morgan, propose that violent competition demanded the development of these facial fortifications: what they call the "protective buttressing hypothesis".
In support of their proposal, Carrier and Morgan offer data from modern humans fighting. Several studies from hospital emergency wards, including one from the Bristol Royal Infirmary, show that faces are particularly vulnerable to violent injuries.
Paranthropus boisei, "nutcracker man"The strong brow ridges, cheek bones and jaw of early hominins like "nutcracker man" (Paranthropus boisei) may have evolved as a defence against the fists of other males, instead of for other reasons such as diet
"Jaws are one of the most frequent bones to break - and it's not the end of the world now, because we have surgeons, we have modern medicine," Prof Carrier explained. "But four million years ago, if you broke your jaw, it was probably a fatal injury. You wouldn't be able to chew food... You'd just starve to death."
The jaw, cheek, eye and nose structures that most commonly come to grief in modern fist fights were also the most protected by evolutionary changes seen in the australopiths.
Furthermore, these are the bones that show the most differences between men and women, as well as between our male and female forebears. That is how you would expect defensive armour to evolve, Prof Carrier points out.
"In humans and in great apes in general... it's males that are most likely to get into fights, and it's also males that are most likely to get injured," he told BBC News.
Long-running debate
Interestingly, the evolutionary descendents of the australopiths - including humans - have displayed less and less facial buttressing.
This is consistent, according to Prof Carrier, with a decreasing need for protection: "Our arms and upper body are not nearly as strong as they were in the australopiths," he explained. "There's a temporal correlation."
The facial buttressing idea builds on a previous observation by Prof Carrier and Dr Morgan that the early hominins were the first primates to evolve a hand shape compatible with making a fist - and thus, throwing a punch.
Human and ancestral skull reconstructionsStronger facial bones appear in the australopiths (second and third rows) at about the same time as shifting hand proportions enabled our ancestors to clench their fists, then decline in parallel with upper body strength
That earlier paper attracted criticism from some other researchers, and Prof Carrier expects this new contribution may also prove controversial. He says that debate about the role of violence in human evolution is not new.
"[Our paper] does address this debate of whether our past was violent or peaceful," he told the BBC. "That's an argument that's been going on for a very long time."
"The historical record goes back a short time, the archaeological record goes back a few tens of thousand years more... But the anatomy holds clues to what selection was important, what behaviours were important, and so it gives us information about the very distant past."

BBC,Sony 'overtakes' rival Nintendo in console sales

Sony 'overtakes' rival Nintendo in console sales


Wii UThe Wii U has failed to match Nintendo's sales projections for the console

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Sony has overtaken Nintendo for the first time in eight years, based on the total number of game consoles sold.
Sony sold 18.7 million systems in the last financial year - which ended in March - compared to Nintendo's tally of 16.3 million video games machines.
The data was first reported by Japan's Nikkei business news site.
It is based on figures published by Nintendo ahead of a shareholders meeting, and a previously released earnings statement from Sony.
The news is not surprising.
Sony's PlayStation 4 has emerged as the bestselling "new-gen" console. But demand for Nintendo's Wii U - with its touchscreen controller - has lagged far behind the original Wii, which was the most popular hardware of the last generation.
The figures also include sales of the older PS3 and original Wii, in addition to Nintendo's 3DS and Sony's PlayStation Vita handhelds.
Sony, Nintendo and their US rival Microsoft will all be announcing new titles this week to coincide with the E3 video games expo in Los Angeles.
Job cuts
The Nikkei's report followed Nintendo's announcement that it was closing its European headquarters in Germany.
Super Smash Bros 4Nintendo hopes the release of Super Smash Bros 4 will boost demand for its consoles
The firm said on Friday that it planned to axe 130 jobs as result of the decision to close both its office and warehouse in the Bavarian city Grossostheim.
It added that some work would be shifted to Frankfurt, but that there would also be the "outsourcing and reorganising" of other functions.
The news came a month after Nintendo reported a net loss of 23.2bn yen ($229m; £135m) for the financial year ending 31 March.
The firm will make further cost savings by opting to unveil details of forthcoming games via a video news release rather than host a physical press conference at E3, repeating a step it took last year.
Nintendo is renting significant floor space at the event, however, including an area set aside for a tournament to promote its much-anticipated fighting title Super Smash Bros 4, due for release on the Wii U and 3DS later this year.
"It's a title you have to keep your eye on as it's an epic franchise," said Lewis Ward, a video games analyst at the IDC consultancy.
"But it's going too far to say it will turn around Nintendo's fortunes. By my projections the Wii U will remain in third place," he added referring to the PS4 and Xbox One.
Nintendo's president Satoru Iwata will not be attending E3.
Satoru IwataNintendo's president will not be attending E3 this year
The firm said last week that the 54-year-old's doctor had told him not to fly in the immediate future.
It declined to provide more detail beyond telling the Wall Street Journal that Mr Iwata did not have a "major health problem."
Japan turnaround
While the PS4 may have a solid lead in terms of global sales, the picture is different in its home market.
Figures from the market research firm Media Create indicate that the Wii U has enjoyed a solid lead over the PS4 in recent weeks.
According to figures released for the last week of May, 19,312 Wii Us were bought in Japan compared to just 6,022 copies of the PS4. That may be partly explained by fact the popular racing game Mario Kart 8 was just released by Nintendo.
But the Wii U outsold its rival the prior week as well despite the fact the PS4 only launched in Japan in February.
"Hopes that the PlayStation 4 can achieve a reasonable degree of Japanese success hinge on the introduction of big titles that appeal to the nation's tastes," blogged The Motley Fool writer Keith Noonan.
PS4 on sale in JapanThe PS4 has been outsold by the Wii U in Japan in recent weeks
"The current lack of such titles has been well documented, and the deficiency looks to be an ongoing problem for the console throughout the year."
PlayStation chief Andrew House alluded to the issue in an interview with Edge magazine, in which he said the decision to launch the PS4 in Japan after most other territories was in part due to the initial lack of content from Japanese publishers as well as the greater popularity of handheld consoles in the country.
But he added: "The initial audience that's buying PS4 in Japan is much younger than we'd first anticipated.
"We're seeing a sweet spot anywhere from the mid-to-late teens through to the mid-20s, and that is considerably younger than where we've seen consoles traditionally being played in Japan. It says to me that there is the opportunity for a revival of console gaming for a whole new audience. "
The Xbox One is due to be released in Japan on 4 September.
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Analysis from E3: Dave Lee, Los Angeles
E3Attendees have begun to arrive at the expo centre ahead of E3 opening on Tuesday
There's few things sweatier than a pasty British technology journalist touching down in LA.
But while I'm feeling more than a little hot under the collar, it's nothing compared to what the higher powers at Microsoft must be experiencing right now.
The knock-on effect of last year's E3 cannot be underestimated.
It was Sony's year. Its press conference announcing the PlayStation 4 drew whoops and cheers, while Microsoft's Xbox One announcements managed just a patter of awkward applause. As a result, Sony enters this event in a far stronger position.
In some markets, sales of the PS4 have outnumbered the Xbox One by an enormous five consoles to one.
Microsoft will be desperate to stem that flow - another year of being out-muscled could leave it in tricky territory.
Take this comparison: recent major release Watch Dogs sold around 1.9 million copies on PS4, but around 900,000 on Xbox One.
Microsoft - and the solid band of Xbox fans already turning up two full days ahead of E3 opening - will hope for a Rocky-esque comeback over the coming days.
As I had a pre-show nose around the Los Angeles Convention Center, the smattering of loitering games fans were coy about who they were backing. One of them, 22-year-old Louis from, aptly enough, Louisiana, told me he hoped the neck-and-neck console race would make for better games as both companies worked under pressure.
We'll soon find out. Game on.
E3A new title in the gory Mortal Kombat fighting series is one of the games on show
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Breast cancer survivors 'do not exercise enough'

Breast cancer survivors 'do not exercise enough'

Woman runningAdults should exercise regularly, guidelines say

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Exercise can aid recovery after breast cancer but many women are not active enough, a study suggests.
Being active is known to be beneficial but US researchers, writing in the journal Cancer, said they had found many women did too little.
Only a third met recommended activity levels.
UK breast cancer groups said women here also needed more support to keep active after having the disease.

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Although this study was conducted in America rather than the UK, the results suggest that women who have received a breast cancer diagnosis need better support to keep active”
Caroline Dalton,Breakthrough Breast Cancer
The American study looked at the pre and post-diagnosis exercise levels of 1,735 women aged 20-74 who had breast cancer between 2008 and 2011 in North Carolina.
In the US and the UK, adults are recommended to do at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity or 75 minutes of vigorous-intensity physical activity each week.
But this study found only 35% of women who had experienced breast cancer met the physical activity guidelines.
'Helps patients cope'
In the UK, campaigners said women here also needed to exercise more.
Caroline Dalton, of Breakthrough Breast Cancer, said: "Physical activity after a breast cancer diagnosis has been shown to improve a patient's chances of survival and there is also some evidence that it may help to reduce the risk of breast cancer returning.
"Keeping active may also help patients cope, both during and after treatment, by improving general health and wellbeing."
She added: "Although this study was conducted in America rather than the UK, the results suggest that women who have received a breast cancer diagnosis need better support to keep active."
"There are no specific guidelines in place at the moment to tell us precisely how much physical activity is needed after a breast cancer diagnosis, but Breakthrough Breast Cancer suggests aiming for 3.5 hours per week, after checking with your treatment team to see what is appropriate for you."
Baroness Delyth Morgan, chief executive at Breast Cancer Campaign, said: "This study serves as a reminder of how important it is that women with breast cancer are made aware that physical activity can improve their chances of survival.
"Recent research has shown that even small increases to the amount of exercise done after a breast cancer diagnosis can give women a better chance of survival.
"This is why it is essential that women are given a clear written follow-up care plan, which should include practical advice about diet and exercise."

Shailene Woodley kicks Tom Cruise's butt at box office

Shailene Woodley kicks Tom Cruise's butt at box office

fault in our stars amsterdam ap.jpg
Ansel Elgort, left, and Shailene Woodley appear in a scene from "The Fault In Our Stars."The Associated Press
Moviegoers have fallen in love with Fox’s "The Fault in Our Stars” with Saturday estimates as high as $58 million for the U.S. opening weekend of the Shailene Woodley-Ansel Elgort romance reports Variety.

The well-reviewed film outperformed earlier forecasts on Friday with $26.1 million, including $8.2 million from Thursday night showings. With an “A” Cinemascore indicating strong word of mouth, “The Fault in Our Stars” should eclipse the $54 million that Woodley’s “Divergent” scored in its March 21-23 opening weekend.

The film will generate impressive profits for Fox, given the $12 million budget. “Twilight” producers Wyck Godfrey and Marty Bowen produced “The Fault in Our Stars,” from a script by Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber.
Woodley’s star power, combined with the young-female fanbase of John Green’s novel about two cancer patients, has enabled “The Fault in Our Stars” to easily outshine the opening of Warner Bros.’ Tom Cruise tentpole “Edge of Tomorrow.”

Friday estimates for Warner Bros.-Village Roadshow sci-fier came in at $10.6 million for a weekend bow in the $29 million to $31 million range. “Edge of Tomorrow,” with a $178 million budget, generated a B-plus Cinemascore with A and A-minus grades for younger moviegoers.
On the foreign front, “Edge” added $19 .3 million on Friday, bringing the international cume to $60.3 million.

Disney’s second weekend of Angelina Jolie’s “Maleficent” looks likely to finish ahead of “Edge of Tomorrow” for the second slot in the U.S. The fantasy took in an estimated $10.1 million on Friday, lifting its U.S. cume to $104 million, putting it on track for a weekend of around $34 million.

Fox’s third weekend of “X-Men: Days of Future Past” will lead the rest of the pack with around $15 million, including $4.5 million on Friday. The mutant tentpole will wind up the weekend with a U.S.  cume around $190 million.

Universal’s second weekend of “A Million Ways to Die in the West” was fading fast, heading to fifth place with a 59% decline to about $6.8 million following a Friday take of $2.2 million. Its domestic total should wind up the weekend around $30 million.

Warner’s fourth frame of “Godzilla” stomped into sixth with an estimated $6.3 million following a $1.8 million Friday. The domestic total should hit $185 million and the worldwide will go past $400 million by the end of the weekend.

Audra McDonald wins record sixth Tony Award(BBC News)

Audra McDonald wins record sixth Tony Award

Audra McDonaldMcDonald paid tribute to Billy Holiday in her acceptance speech

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US actress Audra McDonald has won a record sixth Tony award, at a star-studded ceremony in New York.
McDonald cried as she accepted the best dramatic actress award for her role as jazz singer Billie Holiday in Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill.
Her latest win matched the record of late actress Julie Harris, who also won six Tonys, including a special lifetime achievement award.
Bryan Cranston won best dramatic actor for his Broadway debut in All the Way.
The Breaking Bad star played US President Lyndon B Johnson in the production, which was also named best play.
Bryan CranstonCranston had been the favourite to win
McDonald is the first person to win a Tony in each of the four acting categories.
In a tearful acceptance speech, she said: "I want to thank all the shoulders of the strong and brave and courageous women that I am standing on," she said.
"And most of all Billie Holiday. You deserve so much more than you were given when you were on this earth."
Cranston alluded to his role as a drug dealer in hit TV drama Breaking Bad in his speech: "When you can effect emotional change in the audience it's like a powerful drug. It's as strong as blue crystal meth."
Satire A Gentleman's Guide to Love & Murder tied with rock musical Hedwig and the Angry Inch for the most awards, each winning four Tonys.
A Gentleman's Guide... is about a poor man who manages to eliminate the eight heirs ahead of him for a title.
Darko Tresnjak was honoured as best director, while the production won best musical, against stiff competition from Disney's Aladdin and Beautiful: The Carole King Musical.
Jessie Mueller was named best actress for her title role in the latter.
Mark Rylance won his third Tony for playing the countess Olivia in Twelfth Night.
"It means a lot to me to be appreciated for my Shakespeare work, " he told the BBC. "I've loved him since I first came across the plays."
Sophie OkonedoIt was a first win for British actress Sophie Okonedo
Kenny Leon won his first Tony for directing the revival of A Raisin in the Sun, and one of the play's stars, Sophie Okonedo, was named best featured actress in a play.
She thanked producer Scott Rudin for believing that a "Jewish, Nigerian Brit" could play the iconic role of Ruth Younger.
Hedwig and the Angry Inch, about a glam rock band fronted by an East German transgender singer, saw How I Met Your Mother star Neil Patrick Harris win his first Tony - best actor in a musical.
Hugh Jackman hosted the ceremony at New York's Radio City Music Hall for the fourth time.
The show included performances by Tony nominee Idina Menzel, Gladys Knight and Sting, who performed a song from his upcoming Broadway debut musical, The Last Ship.
Tony voters include voting members of The Broadway League and the American Theatre Wing.