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Post by mrekko on Nov 11, 2024 8:47:13 GMT
Are £15 tickets still available for this today? It currently shows as Sold Out for the day.
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Post by Dave B on Nov 11, 2024 9:03:18 GMT
Are £15 tickets still available for this today? It currently shows as Sold Out for the day. They go on sale at 9.00 (or sometimes a couple of minutes before).
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Post by samuel1980 on Nov 11, 2024 9:20:52 GMT
I was position 62 in the queue at 9am but was unsuccessful. I imagine the demand was very high today being the last Monday performance. Will keep checking in case any drop back on sale but not too optimistic. Will have to wait for the transfer as it's sold out for the rest of the week.
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Post by robs on Nov 11, 2024 9:53:41 GMT
I was position 62 in the queue at 9am but was unsuccessful. I imagine the demand was very high today being the last Monday performance. Will keep checking in case any drop back on sale but not too optimistic. Will have to wait for the transfer as it's sold out for the rest of the week. Stick with it, you need to refresh the page continually....I've just got a stalls place at 0945...I didn't even bother queuing at 9am this time
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Post by andrew on Nov 11, 2024 10:05:37 GMT
I can't make any promises but DM me if you're interested in this evenings performance as later on I may have a spare ticket for tonight for the £15 face value.
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Post by samuel1980 on Nov 11, 2024 10:21:25 GMT
Stick with it, you need to refresh the page continually....I've just got a stalls place at 0945...I didn't even bother queuing at 9am this time Ah well done! I kept refreshing until 9.20am and then gave up, should have stuck with it. I can't make any promises but DM me if you're interested in this evenings performance as later on I may have a spare ticket for tonight for the £15 face value. Thank you Andrew, I will DM you.
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Post by Rory on Nov 11, 2024 16:23:51 GMT
Does anyone know to which theatre this is transferring?
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Post by blamerobots on Nov 11, 2024 16:41:25 GMT
I'm guessing either the Noel Coward or the Harold Pinter, possibly April/May time? Going off of actor's schedules
Either one would be great.
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Post by parsley1 on Nov 11, 2024 20:37:45 GMT
Such a shame Romola Garai is off tonight
Has affected the dynamic significantly
The stand in is good enough
But it’s not ideal
Like going to get married
And finding there is a someone else instead of your spouse
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Post by parsley1 on Nov 11, 2024 22:04:08 GMT
Whilst the acting is top rate
The play leaves a lot to be desired
The themes explored are well established
And I personally feel a play is a very basic way of trying to tackle what is effectively exploration of human hatred
Some people don’t like marmite
Is it just inane and has no justification and is immune to endless debates
In fact they briefly touch on this
And then skate away quickly
For me there was about 10 minutes of really excellent dialogue
With the rest being circulated themes to the extent of recycling until stale
What I did take away was how a view of someone’s “work” (in the broadest sense of that term) can be affected by their beliefs and what they say and their views
But again this is not so complex really and doesn’t need endless analysis
Dahl was just a good children’s writer AND anti semite
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Post by samuel1980 on Nov 11, 2024 22:55:05 GMT
Managed to get a ticket to see this tonight thanks to fellow board member Andrew!
Yes it was unfortunate that Romola Garai was off as I really wanted to see her. We had Tessa Bonham Jones standing in for her and the assistant stage director taking over Tessa’s role to save the show.
John Lithgow is simply superb in this. He gives such a commanding, cranky and cantankerous performance! Rachel Stirling is also very good.
I’m glad I saw it but I wasn’t completely blown away if I’m honest despite the raves on here. The acting is excellent and the dialogue is sharp in places but it’s a bit one note. I thought Act 2 was stronger.
I saw Damian Lewis in the interval (also saw him at Abigail’s Party a few weeks ago). We must stop bumping into each other!
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Post by andrew on Nov 11, 2024 22:57:30 GMT
When someone walks out on stage to give an announcement, you can’t help but fear the star is ill. Unfortunately one of the leads was off, Romola Garai, but Tessa Bonham Jones was really excellent stepping in (script in hand) and her role was taken by the assistant director who managed to get a mid-scene round of applause with one of her lines. I’d avoided reading much of anything, and was taken aback by just how much of an attack on Dahl this play is, they really don’t hold back on the anti-Semitic stuff. It’s such an interesting counterpoint, Lithgow giving this magical and engaging performance of a beloved author whilst spouting out such vile stuff. The strength of his performance carries the whole thing through, but you can’t help but feel that the play doesn’t really have anywhere to go after the interval, once you’ve established what Dahl said, how he feels about Israel and Jewish people and what those around him are trying to achieve. It touches on the age old riddle of whether you can separate an artist from their work, but doesn’t get too far into it. It touches on where the anti-semitism of Dahl comes from but doesn’t get too far into it. It touches on if you can reason or rationalise a man’s en-bloc hatred of entire races of people, but doesn’t get too far into it. Maybe it needed to pick something and go a bit further. I really enjoyed myself but if you had a less compelling actor in the main role I think the play would look a bit threadbare. I’m really glad I saw it, and especially glad to see it with samuel1980, alongside it turns out Stellan Skarsgard, Damien Lewis, Toby Stephens amongst other faces, not sure how many of those are board members.
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Post by nash16 on Nov 11, 2024 23:18:38 GMT
When someone walks out on stage to give an announcement, you can’t help but fear the star is ill. Unfortunately one of the leads was off, Romola Garai, but Tessa Bonham Jones was really excellent stepping in (script in hand) and her role was taken by the assistant director who managed to get a mid-scene round of applause with one of her lines. I’d avoided reading much of anything, and was taken aback by just how much of an attack on Dahl this play is, they really don’t hold back on the anti-Semitic stuff. It’s such an interesting counterpoint, Lithgow giving this magical and engaging performance of a beloved author whilst spouting out such vile stuff. The strength of his performance carries the whole thing through, but you can’t help but feel that the play doesn’t really have anywhere to go after the interval, once you’ve established what Dahl said, how he feels about Israel and Jewish people and what those around him are trying to achieve. It touches on the age old riddle of whether you can separate an artist from their work, but doesn’t get too far into it. It touches on where the anti-semitism of Dahl comes from but doesn’t get too far into it. It touches on if you can reason or rationalise a man’s en-bloc hatred of entire races of people, but doesn’t get too far into it. Maybe it needed to pick something and go a bit further. I really enjoyed myself but if you had a less compelling actor in the main role I think the play would look a bit threadbare. I’m really glad I saw it, and especially glad to see it with samuel1980, alongside it turns out Stellan Skarsgard, Damien Lewis, Toby Stephens amongst other faces, not sure how many of those are board members. Stellan and Damien definitely still board members. Toby got a suspension, if I recall. Something about nothing in the International thread, of all places. Was invited back, but has logged in maybe twice in the past 4 years. I think his last comment was about Opening Night though, so…
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Post by parsley1 on Nov 11, 2024 23:29:45 GMT
Managed to get a ticket to see this tonight thanks to fellow board member Andrew! Yes it was unfortunate that Romola Garai was off as I really wanted to see her. We had Tessa Bonham Jones standing in for her and the assistant stage director taking over Tessa’s role to save the show. John Lithgow is simply superb in this. He gives such a commanding, cranky and cantankerous performance! Rachel Stirling is also very good. I’m glad I saw it but I wasn’t completely blown away if I’m honest despite the raves on here. The acting is excellent and the dialogue is sharp in places but it’s a bit one note. I thought Act 2 was stronger. I saw Damian Lewis in the interval (also saw him at Abigail’s Party a few weeks ago). We must stop bumping into each other! I think Stirling was outstanding and better than Lithgow
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Post by aspieandy on Nov 11, 2024 23:49:52 GMT
Some people don’t like marmite
It is mostly a dud though, at best, I do feel this account does a reasonable job of exploring the boundary between parody and absurdism. Perhaps its feeding off yesterday’s surprising Streetcar diversion into government subsidies.
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Post by orchidman on Nov 12, 2024 0:23:20 GMT
It's a 3/5 play elevated to a 4/5 show by a strong cast. (I saw it with Romola Garai.)
It reminds me of that play Hansard which was flavour of the month for 4 or 5 weeks and which subsequently left no trace. It's a decent evening at the theatre, mildly amusing, and well acted but there's not a lot going on under the bonnet. It's a sign of the times if this is the hot play right now.
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Post by parsley1 on Nov 12, 2024 0:34:22 GMT
It's a 3/5 play elevated to a 4/5 show by a strong cast. (I saw it with Romola Garai.) It reminds me of that play Hansard which was flavour of the month for 4 or 5 weeks and which subsequently left no trace. It's a decent evening at the theatre, mildly amusing, and well acted but there's not a lot going on under the bonnet. It's a sign of the times if this is the hot play right now. This is a very astute and accurate assessment What I thought in fact was How conventional and commercial it was And how unlike the RC But in fairness the rest of the programme this year has been stimulating So it’s okay But I did think listening to the comments from audience members around me That thinking this is provoking and shocking and really ground breaking theatre It was quite funny I think a lot of people like to see what they already know dressed up in variations Instead of something genuinely new The audience was also the least diverse of any show under the new AD
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Post by popcultureboy on Nov 12, 2024 10:32:27 GMT
I'm guessing either the Noel Coward or the Harold Pinter, possibly April/May time? Going off of actor's schedules Either one would be great. It will be the Apollo. Romola Garai has been confirmed as leaving the Harold Pinter run of The Years on March 8th, so I would expect the first preview of this at the Apollo to be somewhere in the week beginning March 10th.
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Post by adamkinsey on Nov 12, 2024 19:25:45 GMT
"I think Stirling was outstanding and better than Lithgow"
One of those times I wonder if Parsley just says things for effect, like click bait.
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Post by partytentdown on Nov 12, 2024 20:11:13 GMT
"I think Stirling was outstanding and better than Lithgow" One of those times I wonder if Parsley just says things for effect, like click bait. Yeah welcome to Theatre Board.
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Post by parsley1 on Nov 12, 2024 20:13:57 GMT
"I think Stirling was outstanding and better than Lithgow" One of those times I wonder if Parsley just says things for effect, like click bait. Yeah welcome to Theatre Board. Yes god forbid someone isn’t a sheep and dares to have a different opinion I preferred her acting and the character she portrayed
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Post by Rory on Nov 12, 2024 20:19:43 GMT
I'm guessing either the Noel Coward or the Harold Pinter, possibly April/May time? Going off of actor's schedules Either one would be great. It will be the Apollo. Romola Garai has been confirmed as leaving the Harold Pinter run of The Years on March 8th, so I would expect the first preview of this at the Apollo to be somewhere in the week beginning March 10th. Welcome back popcultureboy!
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Post by jr on Nov 12, 2024 21:15:15 GMT
Yeah welcome to Theatre Board. Yes god forbid someone isn’t a sheep and dares to have a different opinion I preferred her acting and the character she portrayed Haha I read and am truly interested in other people's opinions about plays, actors, etc. and many times they allow me to see other angles or expand my knowledge. But don't care much about "fans" that attack or comment negatively when you don't agree with them. I guess they have twitter for that. I don't.
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Post by andrew on Nov 14, 2024 1:13:41 GMT
I'm guessing either the Noel Coward or the Harold Pinter, possibly April/May time? Going off of actor's schedules Either one would be great. It will be the Apollo. Romola Garai has been confirmed as leaving the Harold Pinter run of The Years on March 8th, so I would expect the first preview of this at the Apollo to be somewhere in the week beginning March 10th. Elliot is doing Hamlet until 29th March.
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Post by Rory on Nov 15, 2024 12:30:49 GMT
Thought they might have announced the transfer before the Royal Court run finishes.
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