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Kirk Tatum /“Tito” thinks Trinity Windows & Doors may lend all matching doors and hardware. ... Those of us just arriving learn that Kirk Tatum/”Tito Merelli,” the tenor, will not be with us this night. Kirk, a service writer for a local vehicle ... I’m actually doing it “off book” with the script in my pocket,
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c is so excited to join this talented cast of Lend Me A Tenor. As a graduate of Northeastern, you may have see her in Musical Comedy Murders of The 1940’s, The Importance of Being Ernest and Dancing at Lugnasa to name a few. ... For starters, the script written by Ludwig is superb, filled with witty lines and punctual...
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Lend Me a Tenor is, as director Walter Learning explains in his notes to the production, a recent (1985) addition to a long tradition of classical farce which can be traced back at least as far as the Roman dramatist Plautus. ... All that said, I have to admit that I was disappointed with the script. The Broadway production...
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I enjoy Ken Ludwig's "Lend Me a Tenor" so much that I'm almost afraid that indulging in it isn't good for me. All that seductive wish-fulfillment, all that fluffy sweetness -- does it go straight to my hips? ... Much credit must go to the Ludwig script, but the Lyric gives a masterful demonstration of how to make the most...
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"Lend Me a Tenor" has a great script with some wonderful comic moments. OBT capitalizes on many of them, and the play is quite funny -- but in the end, one gets the feeling it should have been funnier than it was.
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Lend Me A Tenor was produced in London by Andrew Lloyd Weber's Really Useful Co., and was nominated for the Olivier Award. It opened on Broadway in March 1989 and was nominated for seven Tony Awards, including Best Play. ... As someone who has attempted to write a play, I appreciate a well-constructed script. As an actor...
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ORLEANS - Quirky characters and a convoluted plot fuel the laughs in Ken Ludwig's 1989 Tony Award-winning comedy ''Lend Me a Tenor.'' The bush-league Cleveland Opera Company is trying to make a name for itself by featuring the world-famous Italian tenor, ... The only detraction in Ludwig's script is some gratuitous profanity.
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