Benedict Cumberbatch and Mark Rylance nominated for Best Actor at Olivier Awards

Stars of the stage Benedict Cumberbatch and Mark Rylance will go head to head for the Best Actor gong at the Olivier Awards.

It is the first Olivier nomination for Cumberbatch, for his performance as Hamlet at London's Barbican last year.

Farinelli And The King star Rylance has been nominated eight times and won twice.

Also in the category for Best Actor are Sir Kenneth Branagh for The Winter's Tale, Adrian Lester for Red Velvet and Kenneth Cranham for The Father.

Nicole Kidman is in the running for her star turn in Photograph 51, earning her first Olivier nomination.

Nicole Kidman has been nominated for the first time for her role in Photograph 51. Credit: Alessandro Tocco/NurPhoto

She is joined in the Best Actress category by Gemma Arterton for Nell Gwynn, Denise Gough for People, Places And Things, Janet McTeer for Les Liaisons Dangereuses, and Lia Williams for Oresteia.

Girls Just Want To Have Fun singer Cyndi Lauper could find herself returning again and again to the stage, to perform and also - perhaps - to pick up some gongs of her own.

Kinky Boots, with lyrics by the Grammy and Tony Award-winning singer-songwriter, is up for seven awards, including MasterCard best new musical.

Lauper herself will perform twice during the awards evening at the Royal Opera House in London's Covent Garden on Sunday, both on her own and as part of a "unique collaboration", organisers have said.

Best actress in a musical nominee Imelda Staunton will open the show with a number from the multi-Olivier Award-nominated musical Gypsy, having received her 11th Olivier Awards nomination after starring as Mama Rose.

Gypsy is up for awards in eight categories, leading the nominations.

There will be performances from all productions nominated in the best musical revival category, including Bugsy Malone, Guys And Dolls and Seven Brides For Seven Brothers.

Veteran actress Dame Judi Dench has bagged her 15th Olivier Award nomination, this time in the best supporting actress category for The Winter's Tale, and will be hoping to add to her collection of six awards and one special award - the most Oliviers earned by any performer.

The 40th Olivier Awards, hosted by Michael Ball, will also feature a special performance to mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death, with Rory Kinnear introducing Jack Savoretti to perform Sonnet 18.