As Detroiters flocked to see The Lion King at the Detroit Opera House and marvel at the spectacle, they should know that an alumna from Detroit Mercyās Theatre program is helping make that magic happen.Ā
Amelia Rose Glenn ā21 is working backstage as dresser to actors playing the villainous lion Scar and the self-important African horned red-bill, Zazu.Ā Ā
āScarās costume has hooks, snaps, layers and a robotic head, and itās my job to make sure the actor is in it and itās on right and the mic pack is where it needs to be,ā Glenn said. āIt can be stressful, but itās fun.āĀ
Glenn, who could be seen both onstage and backstage during her time with the Detroit Mercy Theatre Company (DTMC), finds joys in both.Ā
āIf I had to pick a favorite, I would say Iām more comfortable backstage,ā she said. āIt gives me an opportunity to explore all aspects of the performing arts.āĀ
Glenn was a theater kid in high school and found herself at home at DTMC.Ā
āThe program is a lot smaller than many others, but I found that to be very beneficial because the professors have a lot of connections in professional theater and that is really helpful for people who want to work in the arts,ā Glenn said. āBecause it is smaller, it gives everyone a chance to learn lots of different things and to take on roles of leadership.āĀ
In fact, she got her first paying gig ā as costume designer for āEvil Dead: The Musicalā in 2019 ā through Associate Professor of Performing Arts Greg Grobis, who directed the bloody, campy musical in Detroit.Ā
Grobis also factors into the backstage work with Lion King by connecting Glenn with Mary Ellen Shuffett, who, as a Marygrove College student, earned a theatre degree in 1980 through University of Detroit. Sheās been the head of the wardrobe department at the Detroit Opera House for nearly 25 years.Ā
Since mid-January, Glenn has been working under Shuffett as a seamstress and now as a wardrobe supervisor, helping build costumes for the Michigan Opera Theatreās season that includes the operas Frida, a new opera about legendary painter Frida Kahlo, the classic La Boheme, and X, Life and Times of Malcolm X.Ā Ā
The costume department also is called upon to run the wardrobe for national tours that play at the Opera House, which thrills Glenn.Ā
Glenn says she knows sheās blessed to be working in the theatre as a new graduate and she thanks the connections Detroit Mercy has in the theatre community for it.Ā
āThis is my first big professional show,ā Glenn said. āThis show is responsible for so many innovations in theater and itās really cool to see how everything works together. Itās such a mystical experience.āĀ