Six Doors Slamming, Two Tenors Singing, Everyone…Confused. Hilarious!
Who’d
a thunk that Othello could be so funny? Okay, maybe Shakespeare’s tragedy
remains one of the most painful of his plays to watch, but if you just get the
H out of the way Otello the opera can become a real laugh riot when it is at
the heart of the Ken Ludwig’s farcical “Lend Me A Tenor.”
Mistaken
identities, quick costume changes, romance and bromance, alarums and
excursions, along with six (count ‘em, six) stage doors banging open and
slamming shut go back to Menander’s ancient Greek comedies, which were passed
along through the Romans and Shakespeare to our day and ended up, plop, in Ken
Ludwig’s lap. As the worthy heir of an ancient tradition this modern master of
farce is well served by Director Charles Burr, who knows how to bring it all to
life on the Round Barn stage.
The
play is set in a time when opera was the life blood of a theatre, especially
because, then as now, the rich and well-heeled support it not so much because
they love it but because it’s simply that’s what’s done. It is September of
1934 and the Cleveland Grand Opera Company is expecting to reap a financial
harvest of overwhelming proportions when it scores the coup of landing the
famed Tenor Extraordinaire from Italy, the stupendous Il Stupendo, Tito
Morelli.
At
the play opens Max, Factotum and Tenor Wannabe, is panicked because Il Stupendo
seems to have missed his train. Played by DeBryant Johnson, we watch in awe as
a Milquetoast gradually grows a spine, becomes a Master and wins his
truelove’s, well, hand. Johnson’s debut in Nappanee is a triumph.
Danae
DeShazer charmingly plays Max’s erstwhile fiance Maggie, who gives her heart
and soul to Il Stupendo -- or so she thinks! DeShazer is both demure and
demonstrative in turn, turning her character’s course on a dime.
The
real Tenor, aptly played by Christopher Cherry, falls into a deep stupor in the
wake of his wife Maria’s walk out. Chloe Solan as Maria and Cherry excel in
portraying the sort of love that both survives and perpetuates constant
conflict!
Saunders,
the entrepreneurial giant (with the heart of a mouse) assumes Il Stupendo is
dead, and sees his imagined good fortunes crumble into ruins in a moment.
Tucker Curtis, who plays Saunders, is a sure-handed performer who dominates the
scene even as all seems lost -- until he gives in to Mad Max’s plan to replace
Il Stupendo himself! He’s also the father who only thinks he controls his
daughter.
Travis
Bird, versatile as always, performs a star turn as the Bellhop who is both an
opera aficionado and an efficient servant. Rita Kurtz returns to the Round
Barn, and is hilarious playing the dowager Julia, who is monarchical
and a sensual tiger -- at least in her own mind.
And
no opera company is complete without its own local Diva -- in this case named
Diana, played by Hannah Williams. Williams skillfully navigates the clever but
difficult trail of double-entendre’s in a scene where she attempts to use Il
Stupendo as a stepping stone to her own imagined pedestal.
“Lend
Me a Tenor” represents the Round Barn’s annual departure from musical theater
for a more conventional drama, but there sure is a lot of singing for a stage
play, and that’s to the good, because Christopher Cherry, DeBryant Johnson, and
Travis Bird sparkle in their operatic moments.
Ludwig
signs off on this riotous comedy with a fantastically fast recap of the entire
show, doors opening and closing with a rapidity reminiscent (at least to my
generation) of Laugh-In’s slam bang one-liners. Taut and tight, this play
delivers.
The
Book for Lend
Me A Tenor is by Ken Ludwig, Produced by
special arrangement with Samuel French. At
the Round Barn Theatre at Amish Acres through November 4th. For reservations
and information call 800-800-4942 or go to www.amishacres.com.