• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

MarionMade

People, Places, Products, Programs

Visit Us On FacebookVisit Us On TwitterVisit Us On YoutubeCheck Our FeedVisit Us On Instagram
We Are Having Fun!We Are Generous!We Are Presidential!
  • Get Involved
  • About
  • Events
    • MarionMade! 5k Sign Up
  • People
  • Places
  • Products
  • Programs
  • Links
  • Contact

Marionaires Make Sweet Music in Harmony

By MarionMade! on August 1, 2022

Marionaires Group Photo
Caption: Front row from left to right – Jr. Heimlich, Michael Bishop, John Hoch, Neil Miller, Dennis Swartz, Tim Garner, Ken Heimlich, and Doris Berube (director).  Back Row: – Pat Pierce, Marvin Smith, Jim Cramer, Richard Carsner, Clair Zimmerman, Dan Wade, and Mark Smith.

When Ken Heimlich graduated from Cardington High School in 1949, he was recruited to sing in a barbershop quartet for the ceremony.

“I was hooked. It’s so much fun!” Heimlich exclaimed.

In 1980, Heimlich was one of the founding members of the Marionaires. Decades later, Heimlich and 16 other members are still making music.

“When you get four parts on a chord and you get it locked in just right, it sends chills up my spine. That’s why a lot of people like it,” said Mark Smith of Green Camp, the president of the Marionaires Board of Directors.

John Hoch of Prospect is another original member who is still actively involved. For him, singing was a family tradition.

“My dad was a barbershopper in Marion before us. They used to take me to the Buckeye Four quartet chorus practice. I would fill in for the lead at practice when he was running late,” Hoch remembers.

The Marionaires
The Marionaires serenaded Mia Prater and her mother, Dr. Coleen Denton Prater, for Valentine’s Day. Back row: Dennis Swartz, Dick Carsner, Mark Smith and Junior Heimlich.

Virgil Rankin of Marion graduated from high school in 1957. After he retired in 2012, Duane Kline invited him to join the group. Rankin was happy to accept.

“I’ve always loved it!” Rankin says, now in his 80s.

The newest members are Mike, Carson, and Connor Neff of Marion. They saw the Marionaires performing at the Marion Noon Kiwanis Pancake Day this spring and decided to get involved. Though Carson only graduated from Harding High School in 2020, the 20-year-old brings a lot of experience including show choirs and the All-State Choir.

“I’ve been singing forever,” Carson Neff said. “Every time I ran into Dennis Swartz, he told me I had to join the group. It’s been such a good decision to join!”

“For me, it’s really nice to sing with my kids,” Mike Neff said.

This all-male group has its first female director. Doris Berube of Columbus is a certified Sweet Adeline and Barbershop Director. She had directed a barbershop group in Delaware that did joint performances with the Marionaires before she joined here.

“She’s the prettiest director we’ve had,” said Heimlich.

“We have a lot of fun,” Berube. “My husband encouraged me to take the role of director. He asks me, ‘Are you going to go be with your men tonight?’”

“Some of us, our wives want us to get out of the house!” another member joked.

The Marionaires
The Marionaires sang the National Anthem at the Columbus Clippers game on June 3, 2022.

Berube was too shy to sing in high school.

“Then someone invited me to come to a rehearsal and I was hooked!” Berube said. After singing with a Columbus chorus for decades, she finds it worth the drive to Marion to direct these singers.

While COVID-19 has interrupted their annual performance in April at the Marion Palace Theatre, they do other appearances, including the Summer Concert Series at McKinley Park.

Another annual tradition is providing singing Valentines each February. Quartets from the group drop by homes and workplaces with roses and romantic ballads.

“You get all kinds of responses,” said Smith. “Some are pleased. Some are a little embarrassed. In a business, everyone pops their heads out of their office doors to see the performance.”

While interest in barbershops has waned, and the COVID-19 pandemic has added additional challenges, many long-time members say they are sticking with the Marionaires. Steve Ward of Green Camp has been in the Marionaires for more than 20 years.  At 91, original member Heimlich said singing in the Marionaires is one of his keys to a long life, along with “a little schnapps before bed.”

A mixture of laughter and harmony makes the essence of the Marionaires. This uniquely American music was originated by African-Americans in the 1800s in the south, according to the Barbershop Harmony Society. The Marionaires are a member of this association working to keep and preserve this tradition. Women are invited to sing locally and nationally.

Anyone who is interested in joining the Marionaires can call Dennis Swartz at (740) 225-5499 or email him at osu6162@gmail.com, or call Mark Smith at (740) 225-0408.

Recent MarionMade! Stories

  • Lowell Sherer

    It might be said that Lowell Sherer has a love of things with wheels and racing in his blood. But his life didn’t start out that way and his parents were not excited about this passion.  Lowell was born in 1928 in Monticello, Ohio, in Van Wert County.  In 1931, at the age of three, […]Read More »
  • Marion Popcorn Festival

    The Marion Popcorn Festival has been celebrating Marion for 37 years. The Popcorn Festival started in 1981 with a mission to bring nationally known entertainment to perform for the residents of Marion free of charge. The popcorn theme was chosen because Wyandot Inc., one of the largest exporters of popcorn in the world, was in […]Read More »
  • Home Again Stained Glass

    HOME AGAIN STAINED GLASS: 10 YEARS IN DOWNTOWN MARION  . Sherrie Haver moved to Colorado in 1972, where she opened her first stained glass retail shop. Colorado was enjoyable and the size felt right for some time; but, Marion was always home. In 2006, Sherrie and her husband came home for Thanksgiving and never looked […]Read More »
  • Marion Young Professionals

    Get Connected with Marion YoPro There are MarionMade! people all around us, and Marion YoPro is one of many community groups that bring those people together. Marion YoPro (Young Professionals) is a group of individuals in their 20s, 30s, and 40s who work or live in Marion County. The YoPros have three primary goals: connecting […]Read More »

Share Your MarionMade! Story

Click Here to share your story about MarionMade! people, places, products, and programs!
  • Get Involved
  • About
  • Events
  • People
  • Places
  • Products
  • Programs
  • Links
  • Contact

Marion Area Convention & Visitors Bureau Downtown Marion Love INC Marion Public Library Marion Area Chamber of Commerce Marion CANDO! Marion Community Foundation United Way of Marion County Marion Technical College

© 2025 · MarionMade! is a community initiative led by Marion Technical College · Website is powered by Neighborhood Image