On Monday, Mankato educator Bryce Stenzel will slip into the black trench coat his sister made from an old Minnesota Orchestra tuxedo, don a stovepipe hat, comb the beard he has sported for 20 years and hit the Twin Cities as the nation's hottest ex-president.
Stenzel will probably perform the impersonation four score and seven times this month as the nation celebrates today's 200th birthday of Abraham Lincoln with the kind of fervor usually reserved for rock stars and royalty.
From Ford's Theatre to Fort Snelling, events across the country will honor the 16th commander in chief. Four new Lincoln stamps were issued this week. Steven Spielberg is planning a Lincoln biopic with Liam Neeson in the title role and a script by Pulitzer-winning playwright Tony Kushner. Dozens of documentaries and nearly 100 books this year will focus on a man who historians say is the most popular figure in American literature.
"It's a testimony to the American dream that people are still fascinated with him," said Stenzel, who will recite the Gettysburg Address to the Legislature on Presidents' Day, between meet-and-greets in the Capitol rotunda. "There's a spirit about him that people admire, this man who started off with so little and overcame such adversity."
Stenzel isn't the only one swept up in Abe-o-mania.
Minneapolis native Ronald White, author of the critically acclaimed tome "A. Lincoln: A Biography," said he is granting a half-dozen interviews a day and lecturing every night on a road trip that includes stops at Hope Presbyterian Church in Minneapolis on Sunday and the Bookcase bookstore in Wayzata on Monday. The tour will take him to Germany, Italy and, most surprising, the Deep South, an area that had never previously extended an invitation to the longtime Lincoln expert.
"It hasn't happened to Lincoln authors before," White said. "Perhaps it's a generational change. There are people there now looking at Lincoln with new eyes."
Joe Martin, 25, a graduate student at the University of Minnesota, says the qualities Lincoln stood for resonate deeply with those of his generation.