Main Street Four is a quartet of singers.
Three of us have sung together since high school, and we perform Broadway show music. We have been together in this configuration for years.
Now that we've been rehearsing for several weeks, they are once again seeming like members of the family.
Main Street*Broadway as originally conceived was eight singers with piano accompaniment, sometimes with bass and drums and on one occasion with cello. The group was originally formed in 1991 to perform in Keene, New Hampshire's First Night celebration (an alcohol-free bunch of performances, dinners, artistic demonstrations etc.) in several different venues around town on New Year's Eve. They drafted me the next year when the group was officially named Main Street*Broadway. "Main Street" because Keene's Main Street is a vibrant and lively setting for arts, restaurants and performers and "Broadway" because we sing show tunes in a concert setting.
We did several First Nights, a full concert to kick off the renovations of the Colonial Theater in Keene, we were hired to sing at parties. We were featured in the local newspaper and had quite the reputation for our "wall of sound" vocal excellence and an exciting show. Eventually, First Night went away, probably because in Keene it's just too darned cold to spend any kind of time wandering around outside in the middle of the night from venue to venue on the last day of December. Members of the group moved on to other places. The married couple in the group got a divorce. These things are as inevitable as the tides.
In 1999, the four of us (left to right as you see us in the photo), Scott Clarke (tenor), myself (contralto), Tom Martin (baritone, arranger, pianist, coach) and Joanne Mead (soprano) were hired to sing, in Victorian costume, at the lighting of the community Christmas tree in the center of town. We have sung the national anthem at Swampbats (the local college league team) baseball games.
We love to sing. We love singing together. We love being together. Our families understand and support us so we love them as well.
In a little more than a week, we will set foot on the stage of Keene's Colonial Theater once more to perform a benefit for children's educational outreach programs. For us, it's another fulfillment of a dream from our childhoods.
We spent many Saturday movie matinees in the Colonial or the Latchis (since converted into apartments and stores) or the Scenic Theater (now completely gone -- no more can you shudder in those popcorn-smelling seats in fear of Cruella DeVille) wondering what it would be like to be on the stage. How did the magic happen? What was behind those heavy curtains that whisper open almost soundlessly at the first notes of the overture?
On October 10 at 7:30 we will sing in the Colonial Theater on Main Street in Keene, New Hampshire. The audience will be seated onstage with us and will experience the thrill of a live performance almost as part of the group. They will be co-conspirators in our pursuit of a musical high. We're ecstatic to be taking them with us and I fervently wish all of you could be there, too.
Photo Copyright © 2009 Mark Corliss. All Rights Reserved.


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Comments
Congratulations on living out your childhood dream. And good luck at the concert. No, wait, there has to be a proper benediction: . . . break a vocal chord?
:-)
I too hope that someone can record your show. It would be "cool beans" to share it with all of Open Salon. Congrats, Nancy. :-D
Hmmm. No, Pilgrim, but break a leg does just fine. The other would be awfully hard to recover from. We performed on this stage once before but it's always totally cool to be up there.
Hey Jane, super awesome for sure. They'll be so close that if they bring any rotten tomatoes, we are in trouble!
Owl, I wish I had some audio to post but I don't. We won't be performing with amplification (no need) so recording won't happen. Thanks for the comments on the photo. We had a studio session with a pro friend of ours who's terrific. Sure beats the self-timer.
Buffy, thanks so much. At some point in your life you realize that not doing the things you love makes life much less interesting and fulfilling.
Hey, Julie, thanks! The more the merrier. The money goes to a good cause, to promote theater and arts education for local kids. And I'm sure your friend will enjoy the show.
Zuma, thanks so much. I'll talk to the audio people but I know there aren't any recordings of us in this incarnation at least.
I'll be thinking of all of you as we head into the last week of rehearsals.
You are my favorite contralto in all the world, bar none.
Congrats also on all of your hard work in relocating back to your roots in New Hampshire. I'm sure all the folks in Keene are glad to have you back, even more when they hear you sing again with your friends.