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Post by Jon on Apr 1, 2019 21:06:31 GMT
It’s a tricky balance, they get no funding and they pay equity minimum so they have to make sure they’re making money or at least break even.
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4,631 posts
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Post by Phantom of London on Apr 11, 2019 16:07:44 GMT
You can get £27 tickets on TodayTix.
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Post by NeilVHughes on Apr 17, 2019 21:33:53 GMT
Picked up an great seat through the TodayTix reduced price ticket offer.
Excellent central performances by Penelope and Ophelia really made this an enjoyable evening. A play that raises a lot of questions, providing few answers as it ponders duty and freedom and the way we frame the decisions we make.
At the TodayTix price we’ll worth a punt.
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Post by learfan on Apr 18, 2019 4:14:51 GMT
Picked up an great seat through the TodayTix reduced price ticket offer. Excellent central performances by Penelope and Ophelia really made this an enjoyable evening. A play that raises a lot of questions, providing few answers as it ponders duty and freedom and the way we frame the decisions we make. At the TodayTix price we’ll worth a punt. Glad you liked it but were there still empty seats?
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Post by NeilVHughes on Apr 18, 2019 6:43:56 GMT
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Post by Someone in a tree on Apr 18, 2019 7:30:18 GMT
Not bad considering the ticket prices and the fact Hare's plays are very often staged
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Post by joem on Apr 27, 2019 22:45:26 GMT
This play falls between two stools - is it a play of ideas about art or is it a play about personal relationships? I hoped for the former but ended up mostly with the latter. Penelope Wilton sounds as if she is on a permanent audition to be the next Maggie Smith. I ended up not understanding why this English battleaxe - except she was Russian and had lived her early life in France - was so posh and domineering and something of a bete noire whilst her daughter was downtrodden and dowdy. The casting was dubious - didn't really see the romantic relationship at the centre of the plot as credible in the least.
Other than that, it was ok. If anyone can confirm that the large painting on stage had something to do with Dido and Aeneas I'd be grateful. Theatre was almost full for the matinee.
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