Where did all the energy of the Universe come from? We don't know - maybe it was "borrowed" through a quirk of quantum mechanics from "nothingness" (this isn't as crazy as it sounds BTW). Maybe some supernatural being (i.e god or even the Abrahamic God) created it. Regardless, however, this question has nothing to do with the either the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics or the the Theory of Evolution.
It seems you have a bigger problem with the First Law of Thermodynamics which states that the total energy of an isolated system is constant. Even this law, however, doesn't work well with the creation of the Universe because it is derived from time translational symmetry and there can be no symmetry across time=0.
Now, the most interesting question about the 2nd Law and the early stages of the Universe is that the entropy of the Universe at its initial state needed to be low, but not too low. Entropy in particle physics has to do with the distribution of particles within a volume, and if the entropy was too low initially, the Universe would have collapse back on itself immediately. If it was too high, the particles would have been to dispersed to clump together into galaxies, stars, planets and really matter in general.
As for the Nobel Prize, you must remember there are too types of Nobel Prizes - the academic awards for Physics, Medicine, Economics, etc. and the Peace prize. The first set are given by the Sweden. the second by Norway and is not an original Nobel. Gore won the second, along with Yasser Arafat earlier...