
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For more information, interviews, etc., please contact:
Marsha Hanna, Artistic Director
marsha@humanracetheatre.org
(937) 461-3823, ext. 3111
LEND ME A TENOR’S
RAPID-FIRE ROLLICKING FUN COMING TO THE LOFT
DAYTON, OH - August 25 - “It’s all about the doors,” says Joe Deer, director of The Human Race Theatre’s upcoming production of Lend Me A Tenor. “When a door opens, you know someone’s coming through it, and it’s always the very worst person it could be.” Worst for the characters, that is – best for the audience.
There are six doors in the set of Ken Ludwig’s Tony-winning farce about the incredible things that go wrong with the Cleveland Opera Company’s 1934 gala fundraiser, and one or more of them is bound to be opening, closing or, mostly, slamming pretty much all the time. In front of the doors, there’s a zany chain-reaction of mistaken identity, double entendres, innuendoes, and just plain goofiness, as anything that could go wrong does so with a bang.
There are bodies that aren’t really quite dead, and plenty of moments when the characters wish they were, when opera manager Saunders brings the world-renowned tenor Tito Morelli, aka Il Stupendo, to town, setting off the mayhem.
Deer has assembled a cast made for merriment. Chicago-based Richard Marlatt, as Il Stupendo, and Human Race Resident Artist Tim Lile, as Saunders, are on their third time around as a guffaw-inducing team at The Loft – the first two being the hilarious productions of The Underpants and Moonlight and Magnolias.
Want a young couple with natural chemistry? The boy-girl set in Tenor, Max and Maggie, is Aaron Vega and Claire Kennedy, relative newlyweds in real life. And there’s another real-life couple involved, with Deer’s wife, Caitlin Larsen, back on stage after a brief hiatus since Picasso at the Lapin Agile (okay, a decade, but who’s counting), playing the fiery Mrs. Morelli.
Deb Colvin-Tener, a veteran of many Loft shows, most recently Seussical, plays opera board president Julia. Newcomers in the cast are Allison Moody, frequently seen on Indianapolis stages, as the not-particularly-chaste Diana and recent Wright State grad Jeff Newman as the bellhop (singing variety).
Dick Block designed the set, including all the doors. Technical Director Scott Kimmins and Tristan Cupp are responsible for making sure that when the doors slam, the walls don’t collapse. David Covach designed the costumes, which occasionally go on and off and get switched around. Lighting is by Resident Artist John Rensel, sound by Nathan D. Dean.
Lend Me A Tenor preview night is September 10, with the official opening September 11 and performances through September 27 at The Loft Theatre, 126 N. Main St., downtown Dayton. Tickets are available by calling Ticket Center Stage at (937) 228-3630 or toll-free (888) 228-3630, at the Schuster Center Box Office, or via www.humanracetheatre.org.
Production sponsors for Tenor are Morris Home Furnishings, Houser Asphalt & Concrete, Connexion Marketing & Design, Beth & Alan Schaeffer, Bob & Lucy Wallace, and Requarth Lumber Company.
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Aaron Vega and Claire Kennedy in LEND ME A TENOR Photo: Scott J. Kimmins |
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Claire Kennedy, Richard Marlatt and Aaron Vega in LEND ME A TENOR Photo: Scott J. Kimmins |
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Founded in 1986, The Human Race Theatre Company moved to the Metropolitan Arts Center in 1991, taking up residence at the 219-seat Loft Theatre. In addition to the Eichelberger Loft Season, The Human Race produces for the Victoria Theatre’s Broadway Series, the Musical Theatre Workshop series, and special event programming. The Human Race, under the direction of Artistic Director Marsha Hanna and Executive Director Kevin Moore, also maintains education and outreach programs for children, teens and adults, as well as artist residencies in area schools, The Muse Machine In-School Tour, Youth Summer Stock, and The Human Race Conservatory. Human Race organizational support is provided by Culture Works, Montgomery County Arts and Cultural District, Shubert Foundation and the Ohio Arts Council. The Ohio Arts Council helped fund this organization with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans.