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Post by Deleted on Jun 3, 2018 15:25:09 GMT
We hear so much about the bad behaviour of fellow patrons, but I thought it might make a change if we could flip things and shout out for that Really Nice Person you sat next to when you went to a show…
It's prompted by my experience yesterday afternoon at the Southwark Playhouse. We’re walking into the theatre when I spot someone I think I recognise at one of the tables outside. Not famous, but I definitely remember them from somewhere…
Once seated, I tell Annas, “Okay, look left: second row, four seats along. I know him. Do you?” Annas says he doesn’t, so I start thinking of where I might know him from. His mannerisms look very familiar, but he’s not giving me any signs that he recognises me. It’s really bugging me, and I start mentally ticking off all the places where we might have met. Even the dodgy ones… But no.
At the interval this chap approaches me and says, “We know each other, don’t we?” And we both start going through where we might know each other from. He doesn’t think he recognises Annas, so we start asking each other questions to prompt the answer. Name? No. Where do you come from? No. (He lives miles away.) He asks if I know “Caroline” (it turns out he means O’Connor) but I don’t. How about the Sondheim Society? No, I’m not a member. "Do you come into London for midweek matinees?" I ask, to which he replies, “Sometimes…”
Anyway, we obviously both spend the second act wondering, and resume this charade after the show. Next question from him: am I in publishing? No… We’re about to give up when he eventually asks, “Do you like Maria Friedman?” which nudges me immediately to the more permanent solution to our problem. We'd sat at the same table for Maria Friedman’s show at Zedel! And we’d had a lovely chat about all the musicals we were fans of, and which productions we’d seen, and which ones Maria had been in, who else was in it, and who was the understudy… (Annas, it turns out, was there but I’d done most of the talking apparently so that’s why the penny hadn’t dropped for him...)
But this chap had really made my evening at Zedel. A Really Lovely Person in the Next Seat.
And I’ve met quite a few in my time- the nice man who’d travelled down from Manchester to see The Ferryman, the nice old gent whose wife had died so he’d taken to going to the theatre alone (The Caretaker), the couple of “Panto Queens” (their words, not mine!) just behind us for Dick Whittington…
Sometimes the people around you can make a real difference to your afternoon or evening.
So, over to you…
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Post by Phantom of London on Jun 3, 2018 16:54:49 GMT
Oh that was a build up to a damp squib.
I was expecting you to say in a very last ditch attempt and say “do you post on theatreboard”. And it turns out to be Theatremonkey, Ryan or Burleybear. But not to be.
Ironically I was in the Southwark Playhouse last night and recognised no one.
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Post by Phantom of London on Jun 3, 2018 16:57:17 GMT
A while back I was at the London Palladium for I Can’t Sing and the very nice person next to me sensing my pain, gave me there very last diazepam.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 3, 2018 17:04:20 GMT
I very rarely talk to people near me, because I'm grumpy and anti social and I don't like humans very much. But a year or two ago I was in the Crucible studio for a Welsh thing about a load of blokes stuck down a mine after a pit accident, and at the interval I sat back and breathed out in an 'oh my god that was tense' kind of a way, just as the old man next to me did the same, and we then spent the interval raving about how good the first half was, and what other stuff we'd seen recently. He said that that play reminded him of one he'd seen years ago in Sheffield about some blokes trapped under a Sheffield hotel during the Blitz and that if I ever got the chance to see it, I should. We talked plays for a good half hour again after the play finished and he was really interesting. Weirdly, a week or two after that Sheffield announced their new season, including a revival of the play about the blokes stuck under the hotel (Operation Crucible) and I went to that and it was really good. Haven't seen the old man again since though, or not yet.
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Post by wickedgrin on Jun 3, 2018 17:44:54 GMT
The really nice person in the next seat...… would definitely not be me! I'm a grumpy old git!
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Post by Deleted on Jun 3, 2018 18:05:08 GMT
On the flipside, I'm that person who chats to everyone around me. I love sitting next to another solo theatre goer as usually they like a chat. Some of them have even become friends, I've gone for drinks afterwards with them. I love sharing experiences with new people. When my photo was on here, I got recognised a few times and people from the board would chat to me, which I loved as I an put a person to a comment and it makes me feel like Beyoncé if someone recognises me.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 3, 2018 18:07:44 GMT
Noooooo, wickedgrin ! I’d got you down as one of our chirpy chappies with a lovely smile... I’m sure we’d have lots to chat about. And sorry to disappoint you, Phantom of London ... Actually I have asked, “Do you post on theatreboard?” in the past but have always been met with a no, although I have actually spotted several Theatreboarders from their avatars. (I’m too shy to introduce myself!) I suppose the moral of my story is, although we often think we’re the only people going to see things in theatres up and down the country, where we might run into Ryan or our resident monkey or bear at any moment, we have to remember that we are just a teeny, tiny community of theatre-goers. There are thousands and thousands of them out there who’ve never heard of us! And a lot of them are Really Nice People too!
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Post by Deleted on Jun 3, 2018 18:26:49 GMT
I don’t often talk to people next to me at shows as I don’t usually go on my own but when I do I usually talk to the people next to me. However I always talk to people when I queue up for days seat and it is just lovely to talk to people who are there for the same reasons as you and just chat away the hours waiting. Most if not all the people I have met while dayseating have been nice.
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Post by talkingheads on Jun 3, 2018 18:38:38 GMT
Not at the theatre per se, but a gig; Brian Downey (Thin Lizzy drummer) has a new group playing Thin Lizzy music, a gig last year at a small club in Camden. The pub next door was rammed but, seeing a couple with Thin Lizzy t-shirts at a table with two free seats, me and Mum approached and asked if we could join them. What followed was a wonderful evening chatting about various rock bands we'd seen and then enjoying the gig together, rock gigs always seem to be the most sociable of occasions I find.
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Post by lynette on Jun 3, 2018 18:40:07 GMT
It was the beginning of a romcom, then not so sure! I do have a go at pleasantries at the Theatre. I mean you are sitting closer to a person by chance than you probably would to someone by choice! I can say with confidence that a nice guy to sit next to is Neil. Met at the Donmar and the rest is history. 😂
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Post by Tibidabo on Jun 3, 2018 18:47:07 GMT
On a boiling hot day at the Chocolate Factory last year, we sat next to a lovely lady of advanced years who had made a stiflingly long, hot coach trip down south to see Felicity Kendal in a stage version her favourite TV programme, Rosemary and Thyme.
Except she'd got the wrong herbs.
We were at Lettice and Lovage.
She was so sweet though, and happy to make the best of her mistake. And she loved Felicity. (Well, someone had to.)
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Post by Deleted on Jun 3, 2018 18:54:04 GMT
I love this thread! I am generally happy to chat to whoever sits next to me especially if I'm on my own.
Not sitting next to me, but weirdly last year at the National I ran into not one but two people from Cardiff who I'd met only recently at theatre also. It's a small small world sometimes.
My favourite random people next to me were the group of older ladies who kind of 'adopted' me at 'The Boy From Oz' when I was a wee 19 year old...as a group they took me with them for a drink after and put me in a taxi back to my hotel. Bless.
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Post by viserys on Jun 3, 2018 19:37:34 GMT
I tend not to chat to my seat neighbours since I'm super shy really and usually stick my nose into the programme or Kindle, but I do have one story from many years ago when I sat in the queue for returns for the Hugh Jackman "Oklahoma" at the National Theatre...
There was a fairly chatty elderly lady beside me who kept telling me that I really needed to see "Show Boat" (then at the Prince Edward Theatre). I had had zero interest in that one, but since I wasn't really sure what to do with myself the next evening, I ended up getting a half price ticket for Show Boat indeed... and had a wonderful evening. So whoever she was, I am still grateful to her that she talked me into going to see that one.
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Post by daisy24601 on Jun 3, 2018 20:41:52 GMT
I once had a nice chat with someone about theatre and ticket buying etc. in the dayseat queue for Memphis. He told me about a useful site called theatremonkey...
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Post by haz23 on Jun 3, 2018 20:54:23 GMT
When I was a student I was curious to see The King's Speech on stage having loved the film but it didn't interest any of my friends so I went to see it on my own at the Theatre Royal in Newcastle. I was sitting next to a lovely elderly man who was astounded someone so young would be attending this kind of theatre ("don't you want to see Mamma Mia?") so I mentioned I was studying theatre and was keen to see as much as possible. We had a nice chat afterwards during the interval.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 3, 2018 23:32:34 GMT
I always try to say something friendly to the person sat next to me.
I still remember once being sat next to a miserable scouser who kept saying the show was not his kind of thing. He was only here for the wife. Not his kind of music at all and shaking his head. This spoilt the show slightly and certainly the memory of the show. This was eight years ago and I still remember it.
I watched Hamilton recently and was sat next to a couple from South Korea. They asked what I thought about the show and one thing I said was `It is a bit long`. For the past two weeks I have been regretting this. And thinking, was I the miserable negative man that put a downer on the show ?
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Post by Dr Tom on Jun 4, 2018 0:14:34 GMT
I won’t initiate a conversation but will make an effort if someone talks to me. Providing it’s not one of those people who thinks it’s weird to go to the theatre on your own or if you’ve seen a show before.
I’ll be friendly when getting to my seat and that sometimes sparks a conversation. It’s usually because someone’s decided there’s a single empty seat next to them, so it won’t possibly be used and they can store their coat/bag etc on it, but turns out they were wrong.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 4, 2018 6:42:53 GMT
January 2015. I was at the Prince Edward waiting for Miss Saigon to start. Two guys arrived to take their seats next to mine and noticed they were speaking Spanish, and I asked the obvious, unnecesary question: "oh, you speak Spanish?" (duh, idiot, of course, can't you hear them?). Turns out they were Spanish theatre nerds just like me, who run a website about musicals. We had a great conversation about theatre and had a drink after the show. I felt amazing knowing I'm not the only crazy Spaniard who spends most of his savings in theatre trips to London. I still check their website every now and then, and would love to meet again.
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Post by shady23 on Jun 4, 2018 10:36:29 GMT
Last time I was attending a gig at Zedel I found myself in a table of four that contained a lovely lady who just happened to grow up in the same small north east town as me.
Very small world!
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Post by Rukaya on Jun 4, 2018 10:52:18 GMT
What a lovely idea for a thread!
I recently saw Sunset Boulevard at the New Wimbledon, and while on the tube heading there I was stood next to a guy I really recognised but couldn't place where I knew him from. I received a seat upgrade from the upper circle to the dress when I got to the theatre and guess who ended up sat next to me, the same guy from the tube! Funnily enough, the seat was actually one he'd booked but being upgraded to the seat right next to him after just being on the tube made me feel like I had to chat to him just to figure out where I knew him from, it turns out he works at The Other Palace so I've likely seen him there. It was really nice to have someone to chat with throughout the evening (not during the show of course) and reminded me how small a world it is when it comes to theatreland!
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Post by Deleted on Jun 4, 2018 11:31:37 GMT
Zedel is good for friendly people to have a chat with - last time I was there to see Rachel Tucker I ended up on a table full of her relatives who were very chatty and determined to make sure everyone had a great night. They were very friendly to me and another person sitting at the table who was also on her own.
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Post by wickedgrin on Jun 4, 2018 13:18:56 GMT
I ended up "minding" the kids at the interval for her Oh she saw you coming! Calpol is wonderful though isn't it!
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Post by bellboard27 on Jun 4, 2018 13:41:31 GMT
I've had endless chats with people seated around me over the years. One of the oddest was at the Wimbledon panto a year or two back, when I was alone (work, review) and the mother in the family next to me adopted me... and I ended up "minding" the kids at the interval for her, plus we had a dance together in the second half 'audience participation' bit. This does sound like the beginning of a very bad romantic novel.
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Post by andromedadench on Jun 4, 2018 16:43:27 GMT
I my (relatively modest - by this forum's standards) experience, British theatre-goers are a very nice, affable and considerate bunch of people. Most of my London theatre trips have been solo, so I'm always happy when someone strikes a conversation as I find it difficult to go a whole day without talking to anybody and also like to compare my own impressions about the show with someone else's. Or just share a random joke with someone. Also, on many occasions, fellow audience members have been very kind and understanding - bringing me the bag and jacket I left behind after leaving mid-show due to a panic attack or chasing after me to give me the garden gnome I forgot under my seat. On another occasion, I let a fellow agoraphobic have my aisle seat as the poor man was obviously in agony and dying of embarrassment, so I got to sit with his wife and share with her tips and tricks on managing panic and agoraphobia in theatre. Although my favourite stranger on whose kindness I depended was a lovely usherette lady at the Watermill Theatre who took pity on me after I recounted her my misadventures around Newbury - getting lost, wandering into a golf course, then into a gutter and finally getting caught in a shower without an umbrella - so she waited for me after the show and gave me a ride to the train station. So, if anyone knows a Pauline from the Watermill, send her all my love. Also, as of last year, I realised I've started recognising people I spotted in the audience at other shows. There's a couple I first noticed at the pie-shop production of Sweeney Todd, mostly because one of them is always so fabulously dressed and styled and has the most infectious laughter.
I love and miss British audiences quite a lot.
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Post by foxa on Jun 4, 2018 16:46:14 GMT
Sometimes I chat to the person next to me and sometimes not....depends. Had a really charming guy next to be for Absolute Hell which I went to see on my own and he came with friends but wasn't seated with them. He made me laugh when as soon as the lights came up for the second interval, he turned to me and said. 'Well, I don't think that progressed matters much!' He was going to see The Inheritance the next day so I was excited for
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