Leith, Logan and Lucas Curtis work in the kitchen; Lauren Curtis is responsible for the front counter; and Lindsey Curtis handles the lobby and dining area of the restaurant where the quintuplets work in Potterville. Their mother calls the arrangement "McCurtis."
It started about a year ago when boss Renee Draves asked Lucas Curtis a question she often poses to her younger workers: Did he and his co-worker/sister have any siblings looking for a job? She was floored by Lucas' answer.
"She wondered if we had any other siblings, and, funny enough, we did," Lucas said, smiling.
Yet few customers are aware that the non-identical fivesome, who make up 11 percent of their senior class at Potterville High School, are related. They represent about half the restaurant's staff on a typical Sunday, but only recently has word spread about their unique relationship.
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"Up until this point, nobody knew," said their father, Leith Curtis, a police officer in nearby Lansing who himself is a twin.
Draves, who owns four McDonald's restaurants in the area, said she couldn't be happier.
"Being a quintuplet, they know teamwork probably better than anyone else," she said. "To have quintuplets working collectively, all at the same time, I would go out on a limb and say we are the only McDonald's that's ever had quintuplets."
Plus, Draves noted, she has a mathematical advantage. "If I have a shift that I need covered, I can call their house, and it's a one-in-five shot that I'm going to get one of them in," she said.