really enjoyed this show catch it while you still can , be yourself was a highlight , title song agree bit wasted sumptious show and great cast
will be a loss to the west end - rob g
01 Aug 11
It must be difficult for a cast to have to keep performing with total enthusiasm after their show has posted an early closing notice. It is to the credit of everyone involved with Lend Me a Tenor that standards appear to be maintained, although Matthew Kelly's accent goes missing occasionally. Farce is not really suited to a musical as it depends on maintaining a high speed rather than stopping for a song but this is only really a farce for part of the second half. The book and lyrics by Peter Sham are creaky and clumsy and the title song is awful and makes no sense, but Be Yourself is a genuinely good song, particularly as a duet for both tenors, and Sophie-Louise Dann's cod opera is terrific fun. The set, especially the hotel suite, is lavish but the lighting is too bright and the sound over-amplified. It seems that London audiences are are increasingly reluctant to embrace unfamiliar shows if the far superior Betty Blue Eyes is also apparently struggling to sell tickets but the audience at the Gielgud gave Lend Me a Tenor a rousing reception and it's sufficiently entertaining to deserve to have run until the end of summer. - David Baxter
28 Jul 11
To all the cast, production team, financial backers and Gielgud staff; I'll be there on the closing night (6th Aug.) for a third and most enjoyable visit to your show. Criminal. Love - Stevie
27 Jul 11
I booked my tickets for "The umbrellas of Cherbourg" - but it finished before we arrived in London. But I wanted to see Joana Riding - and so I bought two tickets in the stalls for the show "Lend me a tenor"... and had so much fun! We saw all the new West End-Shows in one week, even Betty Blue Eyes, The Wizard of Oz, Ghost etc. - but this one was the most funny show I ever saw in London! The dancing is extraordinary good, the music is simply wonderful ("Be yourself" gives you goozebums)and the cast ist superb! There are two showstoppers in this show - and I have to say: Well deserved Standing Ovations, Bravos and cheers for the whole cast at the end of the show! Thanks once again for this great night!!! Can`t wait to buy the CD!!! - Yvonne Hoeffgen
20 Jul 11
Sorry forgot to give it 5 stars - Stephen
19 Jul 11
I have seen this WONDERFUL show twice and would happily sit through it again and again.....the 6 Principals are all amazing!!! You'll have a grin on your face from start to finish. The Best New Musical so far this year! Sorry to gush but I just can't praise it enough. - Stephen
19 Jul 11
Please don't wait, run and catch this joy of a West End show, it is a lesson in what musical comedy is all about and has a first rate/top draw company...
Do not miss it.
Thinking Betty Blue or this? Tenor wins hands down! - musicalmadman
12 Jul 11
A second visit tonight, this time with a non-theatre-going lady friend that loved every minute, we laughed and chuckled all the way through. And so we should have since it’s hard to see what more the production can do to improve, ..and please the cynics. When reading the negativity over at Whingers one wonders if a person that slags off nearly every theatrical production should give up on theatre and try another form of entertainment? Tenor is worth seeing for the lush chocolate box set and costumes alone, coupled with a highly talented cast with many excellent voices the genre of farce was brilliantly delivered. Comments that Mr. Kelly is miss-cast are off mark, I’m no fan and was pleasantly impressed; the show also delivers a quaint message courtesy of Damian Humbley. Mass standing ovations and very loud cheers from full stalls and 60% dress circle, hopefully the contented will spread the word. NO! I don’t have connections with the show as is some individuals’ retort to kind reviews. [Nota Bene: seat price and satisfaction are interlinked, if uncertain buy a seat in the Gods and return to enjoy a second time, often seats are upgraded FOC anyway. It’s surprising how much more enjoyable a second viewing to any show can be, picking up on missed expression, lines, and the double entendre. The Gods at Tenor are just £11.75 inc. online, the show is well worth £30+] - Stevie
12 Jul 11
A total delight from start to finish. One of the most attractive and winning casts I have seen in a very long while. Lavishly produced show and the wonderful sense of fun and entertainment begins the moment the curtain goes up to the glorious finale and bows which had many people on their feet. A real surprise and one which I will return again to see. - Owen
07 Jul 11
Great cast, great fun show up with the best in the west end you will laugh and laugh. Deserves to run and run but more people need to go and enjoy this ensemble skilled piece. Well done! - RT
07 Jul 11
Boring. formulaic. amateur. Hated it. - Jeremyvandstone
24 Jun 11
Brilliant musical comedy with a superb cast and wonderful set. The songs were good especially the tile number Lend me a Tenor and the Be Yourself duet between Damian Humbley and Michael Matus which was superbly sung by both. Sophie - Louise Dawn on the night we went had a show stopping ovation after her opera audition song. Something I have not see in a westend musical for quite some time. It is a shame the the theatre was not full but on exit we were given buy one get one free tickets if you telephone 0844 4825130 and quote 2 for 1. This is well worth seeing. So go and see it you will love it too. - ils
22 Jun 11
Best thing I've seen in the West End. Outstanding cast - Kieran Grant
21 Jun 11
And I thought Conveney's reviews were ridiculous... - JW
18 Jun 11
What a great night out and this deserves to be another BIG HIT like Betty Blue Eyes--both excellent fun.I saw this in the 1980s as a comedy play and that was good but as a Musical is even better. Superb Sets and great cast and songs--all great fun and not one moment was boring at all. AS always Matthew Kelly shows his versatility on stage in comedy as he does in drama and all the cast were really good in their roles but I have to say that my favourite was Sophie-Louise Dann in the scene where she wants to show her Operatic versatility and sings parts of all the Top Operas----really hilarious. Hope this show lasts for years and it really deserves it.|Can't wait to book to see it again. - Joe Spiteri
18 Jun 11
Wonderful evening out. So much fun, the whole audience was belly laughing. Just the tonic within all the worldy doom and gloom. It's not the new Les Mis, but its a brilliant night out.The songs really are fab. I have recommended to everyone, its been a while since I have done that. - paul henley
17 Jun 11
Great an old fashioned musical comedy - a show with no greater aim than to entertain the audience for a couple of hours - it succeeds brilliantly. Much funnier a show than Shrek that also opened this week. Great fun - Chris
17 Jun 11
Honestly they need to review the rating system. One star??? The four of us who saw this the other night loved this production. HUGE FUN! out of Shrek and this I would see this again. Outstanding performances especially from the tenors, Sophie and Joanna Riding. The audience was laughing out loud!
- Mike Hume
17 Jun 11
OK. Own up bill, who do you work for... You're very evidently not a member of the general public... Or shall I tell people... - Richard Voyce
16 Jun 11
How can anyone not love this show? It's gloriously funny, the dance and song numbers are terrific, it looks a million dollars and the cast is superb. A cracker! - Graham
16 Jun 11
The best musical comedy I have seen since The Producers. Great cast, songs, sets ! Never laugh so much so much. - Roy Tan
16 Jun 11
agree with the review, there are some gems performer wise with little more to do in this show than the ensemble of Aspects of Love! - bill
16 Jun 11
a brilliantly funny night out in the theatre. a brand new old fashioned musical comdedy! - iain
16 Jun 11
As ever, the WOS reviewer misses the point of the show. Simon Edge thinks this breaks the rules of farce? IT ISN'T A FARCE, IT'S MUSICAL COMEDY! Even Coveney would have spotted that. And not just any old musical comedy. This is the best written, most tuneful and infectiously uplifting show to have opened in the West End certainly this year, and very probably in several.
Also, this review id just plain factually wrong! 'the title song makes no sense when put in the mouth of Maggie, a character who has no need of anyone to lend her a tenor' Really??? Did the review pop out to the loo at that moment?
LMAT has the best crafted opening number of any show currently playing, and one to rival many an opening from the 'golden age' of musical theatre, which this wonderful show unashamedly aims to compete with.
The sets, though sumptuous, are just the icing on the cake. The real intensity of the show comes from its heart. The characters are well drawn, likable, and moreover completely believable. The performances are excellent, but would be nothing without a fantastic book, and this show has one, having improved Ken Ludwigs play exponentially and made his cardboard cut-out characters real human beings.
I suspect that this will be another one of those shows where the word of mouth gets bums on seats rather than fading reviews by jaded reviewers. Let's hope so. After all, didn't WOS give Tenor's predecessor in The Gielgud 4 stars? And look what a turkey that turned out to be! Perhaps what you need to do is to have your star system moderated, so that at least there is some consistency about your rating system. Otherwise it is in severe danger of becoming completely meaningless and irrelevant to anyone wishing to have an accurate view of the worth of a production.
At least when we get reviews from Coveney we know what he likes and dislikes so can make our judgement accordingly.
- Richard Voyce
16 Jun 11
its Cassidy JANSON not Jackson!!!! - jenny
16 Jun 11
a great time.
LOVED it all.
songs, cast, design & the choreography & dance numbers were show-stopping!
CONGRATS all around. Will be a BIG HIT here & everywhere else (including B'way) they decide to take it...lucky audiences around the GLOBE! - Caralie Melon
15 Jun 11
Matthew Kelly's enthusiasm in his promotional interviews persuaded me to go along and I'm so glad I did. Its a smashing show with all the right ingredients for a good night out. The previous reviews almost say it all - I would just add that Joanna Riding's superb performance is a bonus as is the 'tingle factor' from Sophie-Louise Dann's top notes! If you need your spirits lifted this is the show that'll do it! - Mags
15 Jun 11
Minutes into the frenetic first scene of this musical farce, memories of seeing the Ken Ludwig play on which it is based 25 years ago in the same theatre came flooding back and the thought ‘what am I doing here?’ went round and round in my head. I hated the play; what made me think it might make a good musical?! Gaudy sets and costumes (a mauve and gold colour scheme! – designer Paul Farnsworth) with flats that wobble and shimmer unintentionally (?), OTT performances, Italian stereotypes with shaddap you face accents, dodgy wigs, mistaken identities and more slamming doors than you’ve seen since the last farce you went to. Yet, somehow I succumbed to its old-fashioned innocent charms and found myself smiling, then giggling, then belly laughing. It turned into a guilty pleasure.
We’re in Cleveland in 1934 awaiting the arrival of Italian superstar tenor Tito Merelli, whose one-night-only performance will rescue the opera house…..provided nothing goes wrong. Of course, it does – he’s late, he’s sick, he likes a drink and forever rows with his wife. The Opera House owner’s daughter is besotted with him, as are his three ex-wives who run the opera guild, the soprano singing Desdemona to his Otello and most of the chorus. Oh, and the shrimps for the post-performance reception are on the turn!
Of course, he can’t perform and prompter Max (the opera house manager’s daughter’s suitor!) pretends to be him. As broad musical comedy morphs into farce in the second act, we get three Otello’s in costume entering and exiting the six doors as is both customary and mandatory in farce. Impersonating the tenor as Otello, manager Henry ends up with the soprano and Max with his daughter. Tito’s wife returns and the denouement unfolds…..
The real reason for seeing this is a full set of fine musical comedy performances and the slickness of the comedy timing. Sophie-Louise Dann makes a terrific American broad / diva and her opera greatest hits ‘mash-up’ is a highlight of the evening. Damian Humbley and Michael Matus are excellent as Max and Tito respectively, with voices good enough to get away with the pseudo operatic demands. It’s great to see fringe favourite Cassidy Janson get a shot at a big role and she doesn’t disappoint as Maggie. Matthew Kelly presides over this as an old pro totally in command of his material. Joanna Riding’s undoubted talents are a bit wasted in the smallish part of the tenor’s wife (for the second time this year in this very theatre, having been wasted in The Umbrellas of Cherbourg immediately before this). Amongst the supporting cast, it’s great to see Gay Soper again.
The only other musical farce I can recall is Sondheim’s A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. It doesn’t have a score that good, but Brad Carroll’s music is decent enough, Peter Sham’s book & lyrics are good and the 24 strong cast and 15 piece band get the best out of them. Ian Talbot’s experience as a director and actor with both musicals and comedy means it runs like a well oiled machine and the cast’s enthusiasm is infectious.
It won’t change your life, it’s unlikely to be your highlight of the year, but there are a whole lot of less enjoyable evenings in the West End and for me this one was a pleasant surprise. - Gareth James
15 Jun 11
A hoot! I thoroughly enjoyed this crazy show. A cross between a Whitehall farce and the Drowsy Chaperone! It looked great - fabulous cossies and what a set! They must have bust the budget with the gold leaf alone. Sure it has some cringe inducing moments, but it also has many more hilarious ones too. It's a fun night out for all the family....sounds like I'm one of the producers - well I'm NOT! Forget the troubles of the world for a couple of hours and ENJOY! This would surely do well on Broadway where it surely must be destined? - rds