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Tenor Boy
- 232 statements
- 44 feature instances
- 73 referencing feature instances
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It's musical theatre law. The frequently good-looking, almost always lovestruck, and without a doubt naive, yet good-hearted young man central to the story must sing with lyrical, boyish grace. In other words: he's a tenor. In a large portion of opera (particularly Verdi and Puccini), The Protagonist is a tenor no matter what his age or personality. Compare the Innocent Soprano, his Distaff Counterpart and probable love interest. Contrast Evil Sounds Deep. |
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Tenor Boy | isPartOf |
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Tenor Boy / int_107f2100 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
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Rodolfo from La Bohème is a poor poet with a heart of gold and a voice of gold. | |
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La Bohème (Theatre) | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_13b6da8c | type |
Tenor Boy | |
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Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog: Subverted. Dr. Horrible is a tenor-voiced dorky, naive, (mostly) innocent, hopelessly romantic Shrinking Violet...who is a Well-Intentioned Extremist Villain Protagonist. | |
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DoctorHorriblesSingAlongBlog | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_141a7410 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_141a7410 | comment |
Subverted hilariously in Over the Garden Wall. During the episode "Songs of the Dark Lantern", the tavern patrons, who only refer to each other in archetypes, label Wirt as "The Young Lover" when he mentions that he is trying to find a lady named Adelaide. As such, they insist that Wirt serenade them with a love song. Wirt, who is established as being obedient to a fault, bows to the peer pressure but the song he improvises ends up being... anything but lovely, with Wirt's attempt at hitting a high note being cringe-worthy. In a later episode, "The Ringing of the Bell", the trope is Played Straight when Wirt sings the romantic duet "Like Ships" with Lorna. |
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Tenor Boy / int_1e7ca85f | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_1e7ca85f | comment |
The title character in Hercules is naive, possesses a muscular physique, and is a Nice Guy, the latter quality attracting his Love Interest Megara. He sings in a tenor voice which is especially showcased in the reprise of his "I Want" Song "Go the Distance". | |
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Hercules | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_26e8b0fd | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_26e8b0fd | comment |
The SpongeBob Musical: SpongeBob fits this trope to a T, though it's largely justified by the fact that his cartoon counterpart similarly has a tenor singing voice and a naively optimistic attitude. | |
Tenor Boy / int_26e8b0fd | featureApplicability |
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The SpongeBob Musical (Theatre) | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_28fba44c | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_28fba44c | comment |
Bobby Strong in Urinetown is a satirical, subverted take on this trope. He is The Idealist in a Crapsack World who falls quickly in love with Innocent Soprano Hope. However, her reminders for him to "follow his heart" lead him to start a violent revolution against the Corrupt Corporate Executive Caldwell B. Cladwell (Hope's father) wherein Hope is used as a hostage, and ultimately makes matters worse for the town's citizens. | |
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Urinetown (Theatre) | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_32fb0c3a | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_32fb0c3a | comment |
Princeton from Avenue Q is a fresh-faced, naive young college grad pursued by kindergarten teacher Kate and a sex worker named Lucy T. Slut. Of course, his singing lies in the tenor range. | |
Tenor Boy / int_32fb0c3a | featureApplicability |
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Avenue Q (Theatre) | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_3953baf0 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_3953baf0 | comment |
Quasimodo from The Hunchback of Notre Dame may not be especially good-looking (Ugly Cute, maybe), but he is a naive Nice Guy who sings with a tenor voice in contrast to Frollo. | |
Tenor Boy / int_3953baf0 | featureApplicability |
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The Hunchback of Notre Dame (Disney) | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_41579148 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_41579148 | comment |
Behind the Candelabra: While we don't hear him sing, Scott Thorson's younger and hotter romantic rival for in-all-but-name husband Liberace is summed up by Scott: | |
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Behind the Candelabra | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_42cc8840 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_42cc8840 | comment |
Troy in High School Musical but only the first film. His songs were written for a tenor but Zac Efron ended up cast - and he is a baritone. So Troy sings tenor in the first film, with Drew Seeley dubbing the vocals, and baritone in the remaining films. | |
Tenor Boy / int_42cc8840 | featureApplicability |
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High School Musical | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_43d5d8e7 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_43d5d8e7 | comment |
The title character of Pippin is usually cast as a tenor, to represent his innocence. Originally the part was played by a baritone, though this required a few high notes to be sung in falsetto or otherwise dodged. | |
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Tenor Boy / int_447bd64d | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_447bd64d | comment |
Mario Cavaradossi from Puccini's Tosca, though because he's a spinto tenor, he'll hardly be boyish. But he qualifies for all the characteristics of a tenor: young, in love, an artist, and good-hearted. | |
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Tosca (Theatre) | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_4881d1f2 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_4881d1f2 | comment |
In the opera Salome, this is zigzagged. Salome's beloved Jokanaan is a baritone, while Herod the king is a tenor. Played straight with Narraboth, the young Syrian who moons after her. | |
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Salome (Theatre) | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_48ba7eac | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_48ba7eac | comment |
In the Handel oratorio Semele, the male lead is the god Jupiter (aka Zeus)—chief of the Roman pantheon, womanizer extraordinaire, and of course the god of thunder. But since he's portrayed as a lover in this story, he's a tenor. | |
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Tenor Boy / int_554e431b | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_554e431b | comment |
Henrik from A Little Night Music is a tenor and a naive, sheltered young man studying for the priesthood who has a secretly requited crush on his very young stepmother Anne. | |
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A Little Night Music (Theatre) | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_58b57e58 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_58b57e58 | comment |
Lensky from Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin: Innocent. Naive. Poet. Tenor. | |
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Eugene Onegin | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_5d880aee | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_5d880aee | comment |
Rigoletto subverts the trope. The Duke is a good-looking tenor that all the girls fall for, but he's the opposite of an innocent - he's a Manipulative Bastard who doesn't care what happens to the women he seduces and abandons. | |
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Tenor Boy / int_5dbd6bc5 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_5dbd6bc5 | comment |
Macheath in The Threepenny Opera is sometimes played like this ironically, and many performances have him singing the "Epitaph" in a sincere tenor, just to accentuate what a two-faced bastard he is. | |
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Tenor Boy / int_5dbd6bc5 | |
Tenor Boy / int_6c4031ea | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_6c4031ea | comment |
Any prince worthy of getting the girl and lines of song in Disney films is a tenor, but the Prince in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs might be the tenorest of the tenors: he has only a few lines altogether, but dang if some of those aren't used to establish his bright and youthful timbre to complete a duet with Snow White's own Innocent Soprano. To Opera-Savvy viewers the more gruesome accusations about his motives and character simply don't make any sense. | |
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Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_6e6f5d8b | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_6e6f5d8b | comment |
In the 1933 film 42nd Street, Billy Lawler is a charming, fresh-faced young Broadway matinee idol who sings in a tenor voice and has a romance with The Ingenue Peggy. Interestingly, in the 1980 Screen-to-Stage Adaptation, the Will They or Won't They? couple is changed to Peggy and Julian, the director. And in the original novel both the film and stage play are based on, Billy and Julian are a couple, but that type of relationship would not fly with the Moral Guardians, so both men were portrayed as heterosexual in subsequent adaptations. | |
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Tenor Boy / int_6eb8058d | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_6eb8058d | comment |
In The Most Happy Fella, Herman is the naive Butt-Monkey of the workers and eventual male half of the Beta Couple, and his light tenor voice is the highest of the male quartet that sings "Standing In The Corner." | |
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Tenor Boy / int_704aab9e | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_704aab9e | comment |
Porgy and Bess: Inverted. Porgy, an ingenue in love if not in age, is a bass-baritone; the bad guy Sportin' Life is a tenor. | |
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Tenor Boy / int_764e5099 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_764e5099 | comment |
The Jack Benny Program always had a tenor on board to sing popular songs, and he was always a Manchild and The Ditz. Dennis Day (replacement for Kenny Baker, who replaced Frank Parker) was the longest-running and best-developed of these, and once lampshaded this trope by saying "Tenors are a dime a dozen". | |
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Tenor Boy / int_89465e75 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_89465e75 | comment |
Percy's actor in the musical version of The Lightning Thief will usually be this, using a higher range, impetuous belting, and boyish diction to convey the impression of a much younger person. Percy the character is twelve, but due to child labor laws and the sheer difficulty of getting someone that age who can carry a show, he's typically played by a youthful tenor in his twenties. | |
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Percy Jackson and the Olympians | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_90f7114 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_90f7114 | comment |
On the other hand, it's actually averted in Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street: naive, good-hearted young sailor Anthony Hope, half of the romantic subplot along with Innocent Soprano Johanna, is a baritone, the same as Anti-Hero Sweeney Todd and Big Bad Judge Turpin. While he is sometimes played by a tenor with a flexible low range in standard musical theatre productions, he is always firmly a baritone when it's produced in opera houses. The aversions go further with the actual tenor parts in the show: Toby is the closest to a traditional male ingenue tenor, though with the twist that his innocence is enforced by his being somewhat mentally disabled. And then in the very end, he snaps and murders the title character. He is also sometimes played as a child, either by an actual child or by a woman, which is a different type of aversion. Adolfo Pirelli, Sweeney's rival, is a conventional operatic tenor, specifically because he's parodying the traditional operatic type. He's also an abusive boss/guardian to Toby and a total fraud. Beadle Bamford, Judge Turpin's chief stooge, is typically played by a lyrical high tenor. He's also a nasty piece of work who helped Turpin rape Sweeney's wife Lucy and regularly threatens Anthony from getting too close to Johanna. Pirelli and the Beadle sing a particularly eerie falsetto duet together in the final rendition of "The Ballad of Sweeney Todd", using their high voices together to create the exact opposite of the usual intent of this trope. |
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Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Tenor Boy / int_90f7114 | |
Tenor Boy / int_91923998 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_91923998 | comment |
Subverted with Anatole in Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812. Anatole is introduced as a pretty boy Love Interest with a wide tenor range who embarks on a whirlwind romance with The Ingenue and Innocent Soprano Natasha. However, it is later revealed that he is already married and is mostly into the affair because he is bored and does not care if Natasha's reputation gets permanently ruined in his quest for his next thrill-seeking exploit. | |
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Tenor Boy / int_942aaccf | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_942aaccf | comment |
The tenor roles in Donizetti's three opere buffe: Nemorino in L'elisir d'amore, Tonio in La fille du régiment and Ernesto in Don Pasquale. All are tenors, and in classic comedic style, total innocents. | |
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Tenor Boy / int_9ab064e6 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_9ab064e6 | comment |
Marius Pontmercy in Les Misérables is rather tricky to place. He fits the stereotype perfectly as the lovestruck and boyish innocent, but he is listed as a lyric baritone. However, he is often played by tenors whose vocal range is too low to fit the classic "tenor boy" mold. | |
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Tenor Boy / int_9bb469a4 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_9bb469a4 | comment |
In The Book of Mormon, Elder Kevin Price is a handsome, All-American guy who is optimistic and devoted to his faith, and sings in the tenor range. | |
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Tenor Boy / int_9bb469a4 | |
Tenor Boy / int_a13a0bb0 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_a13a0bb0 | comment |
Wylan in Six of Crows is the youngest and the most optimistic and naive member of the crew, and has secretly spent the book harboring a crush he doesn't know what to do with. Naturally when he sings it's with a "shimmering, perfect tenor". | |
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Tenor Boy / int_a13a0bb0 | |
Tenor Boy / int_a47889a2 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_a47889a2 | comment |
Orpheus from Hadestown is another classic example, particularly Reeve Carney's take on the role. Doubly so when he's singing the refrain from the Epic triad. Triply so any time his voice is thrown into contrast with that of Mr. Hades. | |
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Hadestown (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Tenor Boy / int_a47889a2 | |
Tenor Boy / int_a88418fd | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_a88418fd | comment |
Stephen Sondheim: Hero in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum is a Played for Laughs version of this archetype. The sheltered patrician's son (played by a tenor of course) falls in Love at First Sight with The Ingenue and Innocent Soprano Philia, and this motivates his actions for the rest of the show. Henrik from A Little Night Music is a tenor and a naive, sheltered young man studying for the priesthood who has a secretly requited crush on his very young stepmother Anne. On the other hand, it's actually averted in Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street: naive, good-hearted young sailor Anthony Hope, half of the romantic subplot along with Innocent Soprano Johanna, is a baritone, the same as Anti-Hero Sweeney Todd and Big Bad Judge Turpin. While he is sometimes played by a tenor with a flexible low range in standard musical theatre productions, he is always firmly a baritone when it's produced in opera houses. The aversions go further with the actual tenor parts in the show: Toby is the closest to a traditional male ingenue tenor, though with the twist that his innocence is enforced by his being somewhat mentally disabled. And then in the very end, he snaps and murders the title character. He is also sometimes played as a child, either by an actual child or by a woman, which is a different type of aversion. Adolfo Pirelli, Sweeney's rival, is a conventional operatic tenor, specifically because he's parodying the traditional operatic type. He's also an abusive boss/guardian to Toby and a total fraud. Beadle Bamford, Judge Turpin's chief stooge, is typically played by a lyrical high tenor. He's also a nasty piece of work who helped Turpin rape Sweeney's wife Lucy and regularly threatens Anthony from getting too close to Johanna. Pirelli and the Beadle sing a particularly eerie falsetto duet together in the final rendition of "The Ballad of Sweeney Todd", using their high voices together to create the exact opposite of the usual intent of this trope. |
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Tenor Boy / int_c1a0f861 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_c1a0f861 | comment |
In Mamma Mia!, Sky is Sophie's good-looking, Satellite Love Interest fiance who sings in a tenor voice range. | |
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Tenor Boy / int_c55d93bf | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_c55d93bf | comment |
Quasimodo in The Hunchback of Notre Dame stage version and the Movie. While his form is ugly his voice is beautiful; while he looks like a monster his personality is closer to an angel. It carries into the Disney film as well. | |
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The Hunchback of Notre Dame (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Tenor Boy / int_c55d93bf | |
Tenor Boy / int_cd3012da | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_cd3012da | comment |
Likewise, Radames from Verdi's Aida is also a spinto tenor, so he's hardly boyish. | |
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Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_cffa1bda | comment |
Parsifal, Stolzing, and Siegfried — the more "boyish" Wagner tenors. There's a point in one of the operas where Siegfried has to impersonate another character, a baritone. It's notoriously difficult to pull off on stage. Some recordings of the opera get around it by having Siegfried sing the part in his normal voice and then editing it into a baritone. It's also been done on stage by having the actual baritone sing and act the part, then leave stage and "re-enter" as tenor Siegfried, which works since he's also supposed to be in magical disguise. | |
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Richard Wagner (Music) | hasFeature |
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Tenor Boy / int_d716d915 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_d716d915 | comment |
You might not expect Cesare Borgia to sing with lovely high notes, but in Cesare - Il Creatore che ha distrutto, he does. But in a subversion, he's not innocent or lovestruck — he's already showing the personality traits that would later inspire Machiavelli. Take his debate with Angelo over a point of Dante in the classroom scene, where he gives a ruthlessly practical take on things with elegant, lofty flourishes. | |
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Tenor Boy | |
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Christian from Moulin Rouge! has both the range and the standard personality. | |
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Tenor Boy / int_da1208fe | featureConfidence |
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Moulin Rouge! | hasFeature |
Tenor Boy / int_da1208fe | |
Tenor Boy / int_e3b8885 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_e3b8885 | comment |
Hero in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum is a Played for Laughs version of this archetype. The sheltered patrician's son (played by a tenor of course) falls in Love at First Sight with The Ingenue and Innocent Soprano Philia, and this motivates his actions for the rest of the show. | |
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A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Tenor Boy / int_e3b8885 | |
Tenor Boy / int_e93b2f62 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_e93b2f62 | comment |
Played with in the opera adaptation of The Fly (1986). The two male corners of the Love Triangle — dorky, never-been-in-love-before Seth Brundle and manipulative, jealous, worldly Stathis Borans — are a bass-baritone and tenor, respectively. This hints at what each character becomes over the course of the story as Seth mutates into a deranged Half-Human Hybrid and Stathis becomes the despairing Veronica's confidant. The overconfident barfly Marky — whom Seth gruesomely defeats in One-Sided Arm-Wrestling — is also a tenor. | |
Tenor Boy / int_e93b2f62 | featureApplicability |
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Tenor Boy / int_e93b2f62 | featureConfidence |
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The Fly (1986) | hasFeature |
Tenor Boy / int_e93b2f62 | |
Tenor Boy / int_f9025486 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_f9025486 | comment |
Tony in West Side Story. He is, after all, based on Romeo, who by stereotype is incapable of being anything but a tenor. | |
Tenor Boy / int_f9025486 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Tenor Boy / int_f9025486 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
West Side Story (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Tenor Boy / int_f9025486 | |
Tenor Boy / int_fb173de | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_fb173de | comment |
Raoul from The Phantom of the Opera has gradually become an example of this, though as written he's more of a flexible baritone role intended as a strapping heroic type (in contrast to the male ingenue his book counterpart is). Ironically The Phantom himself is usually a tenor (see below). | |
Tenor Boy / int_fb173de | featureApplicability |
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1.0 | |
The Phantom of the Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Tenor Boy / int_fb173de | |
Tenor Boy / int_fbaafac1 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_fbaafac1 | comment |
Billy Crocker from Anything Goes is a lovestruck tenor who attracts both the beautiful heiress Hope Harcourt and the sexy, sassy nightclub singer Reno Sweeney. | |
Tenor Boy / int_fbaafac1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Tenor Boy / int_fbaafac1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Anything Goes (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Tenor Boy / int_fbaafac1 | |
Tenor Boy / int_fc2bd439 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
Tenor Boy / int_fc2bd439 | comment |
Lampshaded in Utopia, Limited, with Captain Fitzbattleaxe's song about how you can't sing in those high ranges if you're actually overcome with emotion instead of just acting. | |
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Tenor Boy / int_fc2bd439 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Utopia, Limited (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Tenor Boy / int_fc2bd439 |
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