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Post by capybara on Aug 28, 2024 17:15:45 GMT
Hoping to catch this concert matinee but given the number of seats still on sale, I had hoped there would be some discounts available.
Has anyone else found any reduced price tickets?
Strong cast so likely I will go regardless…
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Post by FrontroverPaul on Sept 2, 2024 12:47:58 GMT
Hoping to catch this concert matinee but given the number of seats still on sale, I had hoped there would be some discounts available. Has anyone else found any reduced price tickets? Strong cast so likely I will go regardless… The evening performance has sold very well but the matinee now just 24 hours away and still no discounts AFAIK. Will be very last minute if done at all - maybe it's for the promoter to decide ?
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Post by capybara on Sept 2, 2024 14:37:30 GMT
Yes, seen more £41 tickets have become available but, given the number of seats unsold, quite astonishing they’ve not reduced prices now.
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Post by FrontroverPaul on Sept 3, 2024 10:31:10 GMT
Yes, seen more £41 tickets have become available but, given the number of seats unsold, quite astonishing they’ve not reduced prices now. A price reduction now would make it tight to get to the Gillian Lynne in time for the matinee from where I live in Kent so I've decided to give Spies Are Forever a miss. I've read the plot synopsis on Wiki and it doesn't particularly interest me plus the whole show seems to be on You Tube. I'll start watching it at exactly 2.30 and just travel later for my booked show this evening. Hope you and everyone else there has a great time !
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Post by capybara on Sept 3, 2024 16:09:30 GMT
You made the right decision, Paul. Oh dear, what a mess that was. In the end I paid £35 for a read stalls seat thanks to TodayTix’s gold tier ‘surprise upgrade’. There were plenty of spaces so moved closer to the stage for the second act.
Hmmm. At face value, this musical comedy is bogged down by some really bad songwriting and a very unfunny script. I wanted to see this because it felt in a similar vein to Operation Mincemeat and Police Cops - both of which I love - but I’m afraid to say I didn’t laugh once.
The compositions themselves weren’t too bad and there’s one or two catchy hooks buried in a painfully bland score. But lyrically, the piece was appalling and utterly inane. We’ve discussed the price structure and lack of discounts further up the thread - the prices for this concert are borderline offensive, in hindsight.
I’m a huge fan of Jak Malone, Claire-Marie Hall and Evie Hoskins. They’re extremely talented individuals but even they couldn’t save this turkey of a show. Admittedly, Malone had the standout moment as Baron von Nazi singing the mildly-amusing ‘Not So Bad’. However, it did not earn its Act Two reprise.
The main trio - the Tin Can Bros, I believe - were pretty glib in both delivery and vocals, while I found Dean John-Wilson as forgettable as his performance in the Death Note concert. However, Emily Ooi put in a strong turn as Barb and I’d like to have seen her get more stage time. She did actually have some comic timing.
In short, this concert ought to demonstrate why this show has no future in London. Maybe a short fringe run? Can someone explain to me its history? From what I can tell, it was crowdfunded and released on YouTube initially but is it that background alone that has built its fanbase?
The audience was very passionate, shall we say. Screaming for every character entrance and near enough every moment thereafter. Many chose to sing along or say lines before the actor was able to. Lots of phone use keeping the FOH busy and generally obnoxious behaviour. I’d be interested to know where this show’s fandom has sprung up from because they seem very, very young and gave the impression this is the only show (as well as Starkid) they are interested in.
One star. Dire.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Sept 3, 2024 16:13:56 GMT
I assumed it was a concert of Bond themes. Looked at the YouTube… oh dear.
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Post by capybara on Sept 3, 2024 16:24:38 GMT
I actually think it might have surpassed Berlusconi (which I left in the interval) to be officially the worst thing I’ve ever seen.
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Post by Steve on Sept 3, 2024 17:00:04 GMT
I respectfully disagree with capybara, as I had a great time at the matinee. It did remind me very much of "The Naked Gun" movies in terms of its bright zany comic insincerity, and like the "Police Cops" musical, it packs in and makes fun of all the clichés of its genre, though there were no needed sight gags as the book here was cut to the bone. Some spoilers follow. . . This production was all the songs, but the book was hacked to bits, with co-creator Brian Rosenthal (who ceded his main bad guy character from the original to Jak Malone) filling us in on missing bits of the book as narrator. The runtime was 1 hour, 55 minutes, including a twenty minute interval. I haven't seen the film of this, but it's easy to follow, and it was very funny, with known West End performers joyously and impishly inhabiting most of the leads. There was a large contingent of diehard fans of the franchise present, anticipating and appreciating, with whoops, cheers and roars, moments from the show that they loved. For them, it was apparent that Joey Richter (playing 2 characters, broadcaster Vanger Borschitt and arms dealer Sergio) was the beloved star of the show, even though I suspect he has given up some of his parts to the West End actors. I would agree with them that Richter is a top comic performer, broadly playing all his characters' attitudes to the scene-chewing comic hilt, wincing performatively as the fearful arms dealer and preening cheesily as the vain broadcaster. The West End Performers were why I booked, and Dean John-Wilson delivered in spades as the monotonal monosyllabic macho besuited Deadliest Man on Earth (and announcing his stage entrances with the boastful exclamation, "The Deadliest Man"), who burst into passionate song but only when it was about "killing." Staring down the audience with Roger Moore eyebrows getting ever more upright, chest-puffed and Statham-esque with each glare, he was a comic highlight, and his early departure from the storyline was regrettable lol. Also firing on all comic cylinders was Evelyn Hoskins as a Russian Spy, a Nikita/Villanelle caricature with a backstory more exaggerated than either of those. A comic highlight for her was when she and the lead American spy, Mega, loveably played with a benign, incompetent, Leslie Nielsen style, lack of awareness by Obioma Ugoala, more like his dim dumb Kristoff than his smart aware George Washington, sang a love song, during which Hoskins hilariously did her deadly breathy assassin schtick to little avail on the blank Mega. Claire M Hall did some wonderfully silly mugging as Mega's ancient Mum, shuffling around hoping for a love-match for her son; Oliver Ormson was archly humorous as Mega's partner; Emily Ooi excelled at brightly making googoo eyes at the ultra-uninterested Mega, and pink-trousered Jak Malone delivered his standout song, "Nazi's are not so bad" with the campness of a full production of "Springtime for Hitler." I put this squarely up there with "Police Cops the Musical" in the parody musical genre, although without the sight gags due to the eviscerated book. I laughed loudly at all the bullseye comic performances, silly songs, and was buoyed by the raucous enthusiasm of the cheering diehard cult followers of the musical. I had 3 and a half stars of fun, and would likely give it 4 stars with added sight gags and action.
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Post by gotalotofnerve on Sept 8, 2024 15:44:29 GMT
I actually think it might have surpassed Berlusconi (which I left in the interval) to be officially the worst thing I’ve ever seen. Agree, hated it. Mostly because of the audience. Disagree on it being similar to police cops, the humour was just so basic and foundational. Very disappointing
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