THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, November 16, 1984 it ing a degree in theater from Western Michigan University, Rosenthal has sung, danced and acted in dinner thea- ter, nightclubs, summer stock, chil- dren's theater, and commercials. She has worked twice before with the M.O.T. — as Pitti-Sing in The Mikado and Gretchen in The Student Prince. ( She also taught drama for a short while to students at an American ' school in Belgium. Not bad for someone who never took voice lessons until she was an adult, was told by a dance teacher at ) the age of 4 that she couldn't dance, and, in high school (at Birmingham Seaholm), participated in only one dramatic production, because she was "too shy. 1 According to Rosenthal, who started life in Oak Park and grew up in Birmingham, her parents never encouraged her to become a singer, al- Ahough they never really discouraged her either. "I always sang," she says. In fact, I I remember, as a little girl, singing every night in bed. My fantasy was 'Doris Day, and I'd lie there, singing L Que Sera, Sera. What started out softly woud get louder and louder until my mother would have to say `Rochelle, please go to sleep.' " "I asked my mother once, 'HI sang every night, why didn't you give me voice lessons?' Instead, I had piano les- sons, like every other kid — but I didn't have any real calling to the piano. She said she just didn't think about it. I guess it just wasn't part of their mentality — I don't know. "My folks never said 'don't,' but they never said `do,' either. I kinda wish that they would've been more encouraging, or more guiding, let's -ay. But maybe if they would have, I probably wouldn't have paid atten- tion." Rosenthal went to New York in 1979, as part of a two-member singing . comedy act with Detroiter Larry Lawrence, whom she met during a dinner theater production at the Botsford Inn in Farmington Hills. "What you do in New York is `showcase,' " she says. In other words, you play for free in restaurants where it's known that agents come to see ta- lent. They usually put you on at 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning, and, if you get a good response, you come back on a weekend — just with the hopes that . somebody will be in there who will see you. After awhile, Larry and I got to be regulars at a place called The Good Times. "But, after about a year, we still ! hand't gotten anywhere financially. "I knew that I really was not happy. I hated being a partner, really didn't feel it was the right thing for me. So, I broke up the partnership." Following the break-up, Rosent- hal stayed in New York, living in a sub-let Manhattan apartment for three years, doing promotional sing- ing for Macy's, working in Manhattan clubs (including Catch A Rising Star and The Improvisation) and appearing at the 18th Street Playhouse. When she wasn't working, she spent the time studying voice, acting and dance. "It's a real common thing for ac- tors to be unemployed," she says. "So you fill up your days with voice les- • i , , . „:v. , -;:s oti , Ttili ,7,,s o ;,,,..,„ - ..,..........,:if;;:vcA*..i,,,:::.:-.4....... ,.. :.;,..,.., ,,,k,....:... ) - 1.. 10 1 sons, dance lessons, acting lessons. And, of course, the creme de la creme of teachers is there. I felt really lucky, because I studied with some excellent people. I'm in an interesting position in that my brother and I own some buildings together. And the rent corn- ing from those enable me to do that, without waiting tables. "But I still wasn't happy. It was like I had a great weight sitting on me. And I felt like my life was in neutral. If I called up an agent and they said, `Don't call us again' — I wouldn't. But you can't do that. You won't get any- where that way. You've got to call them again. But, I kept thinking, can't do this.' "The funny thing is, when I got back here, I had much more gumption than when I left. After the experience of New York, you come back here and people seem like pussycats — even the scariest person you can think of. There wasn't a phone call I was afraid to make once I got back here. Plus, there were some magic words: just got here from New York.' That opened a lot of doors. "I've been working ever since I got back,” she says, smiling, and looking as if she's utterly delighted at the situ- ation she's found herself in. "It's just incredible." Rosenthal says she's looked for- ward to getting the chance to play the role of the Beggar Woman in Sweeney Todd ever since seeing the show for the first time in New York. She sees it as something tailor-made for her and something she can really enjoy doing. "The last role I did for M.O.T. was a little Japanese girl in The Mikado. She was very contained, and it was really a confining role. But this role is just the opposite. It's very flamboyant. The Beggar Woman is half-crazed. She sort of fades in and out of lucidity. I get to crawl around on my knees a lot, trying to sing at the same time." "The M.O.T. and I had a kind of funny beginning," she says. "I sent them a resume back in 1976, as a per- former, and they called me in to do props! I'd never done props before. It was a major undertaking. We were doing Regina that year, which has a ball scene with champagne, and food, and trays and all that. Then, they did Carmen and they begged me to do props again. "But, through that, I found out about auditions for The Student Pr- - ince. And, when I went, I was hearing remarks like `Gosh, we hold auditions and the prop girl comes!' I can re- member being there, getting up on that stage, opening my mouth. I'm a little person, and you don't expect a big voice to come out. I remember looking out into the auditorium (as I was audi- tioning) and there were all these saucer eyes out there. And, ever since, because of that, I've felt we had a cer- tain fondness for each other — maybe they were tickled by that. "Anyway, I got the part in The Student Prince. And then, for The Mikado, they called me. And now, here I am again." After Sweeny Todd, Rosenthal is looking forward to doing work with the Meadowbrook and Attic theaters, and getting into more commercials. Plans, however, definitely do not include a return to New York. .-• .•;;.!4:ot•titifit+toilyv#44 t - eitit. , The Michigan Opera Theatre, now in its 14th year, is enjoying its most successful season. Season tic- ket sales have reached an all-time high of 5,700, and individual ticket sales have increased more than 50 percent in the last two years. Tonight's production of Sweeny Todd will mark the Michigan pre- miere of Stephen Sondheim's Tony award-winning musical thriller. Prior to Sweeney Todd, M.O.T. pre- sented The Merry Widow, with Cleo Laine, and The Magic Flute, featur- ing Jerome Hines. Aida will con- clude the season in April at the Masonic Temple, with Leona Mitchell in the title role. Sweeny Todd will continue through next weekend at the Music Hall. In its efforts to make its prod- uctions more accessible to the com- 49 munity, the M.O.T. has established a number of outreach programs, in- cluding the Michigan Opera Theatre-in-Residence Program, which last year toured southeastern Michigan and the Upper Peninsula and spent two weeks in the Detroit Public Schools, providing work- shops, classes and presentations to students. In further efforts to promote ac- cessibility. M.O.T. was the first company in the Midwestern United' States • to employ English surtitles during one of its productions (the projection and translation of the libretto above the stage was first introduced last season during per- formances ofAnna Bolena). In addi- tion, a number of performances each year are "signed" for the hearing-impaired.