Ken Ludwig鈥檚 Lend Me a Soprano, a gender-swapped adaptation of Ludwig's 1989 Broadway play Lend Me a Tenor, will be seen at Maryland's Olney Theatre Center February 7-March 10. Opening night is set for February 10.
Directed by Eleanor Holdridge, the production was previously workshopped as part of Olney Theatre鈥檚 Vanguard Arts Fund before its world premiere at Houston鈥檚 Alley Theatre.
The production will star Carolann M. Sanita, Tina Stafford, Rachel Felstein, Dylan Arredondo, Maboud Ebrahimzadeh, Tom Patterson, Donna Migliaccio, and Natalya Lynette Rathnam. Graciela Rey and Benjamin Topa serve as swings.
Ken Ludwig鈥檚 Lend Me a Soprano is set in 1934, when world-famous Italian soprano Elena Firenzi (Sanita) is in town for a one-night-only concert. The performance is the apex of general manager Lucille Wylie鈥檚 (Stafford) career, and she鈥檚 given her assistant Jo (Felstein) one job鈥攌eep Elena away from men and liquor until the curtain rises. As Elena quarrels with her husband Pasquale (Arredondo), charms Jo鈥檚 fianc茅 Jerry (Ebrahimzadeh), and offers a road out of Cleveland for star tenor Leo (Patterson), Lucille has the opera鈥檚 president, Julia (Migliaccio), breathing down her neck and a star-struck bellhop (Rathnam) getting in the way.
Said Olney Theatre Artistic Director Jason Loewith in a statement, 鈥淜en Ludwig and Olney Theatre have long been a match made in theatre heaven. When Ken approached us about helping to transform Lend Me A Tenor into a woman-centered story, we were thrilled to provide the artistic R&D space through the Vanguard Arts Fund. And with Eleanor Holdridge鈥攚ho directed the show鈥檚 world premiere at the Alley鈥攁t the helm, Ken Ludwig鈥檚 Lend Me A Soprano is going to be sheer comedy delight.鈥�
The creative team also includes music director Chris Youstra, set designer Andrew Cohen, costume designer Sarah Cubbage, lighting designer Alberto Segarra, sound designer Matt Rowe, fight choreographer Robb Hunter, wig designer Larry Peterson, intimacy choreographer Helen Aberger, and dialect consultant Melissa Flaim.
Ben Walsh is the stage manager, and Tori Niemiec is the assistant costume designer. Opening night will be punctuated by a conversation between Ludwig and Loewith.
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