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Post by Deleted on Feb 1, 2019 23:19:30 GMT
Thanks haha. I'm gonna watch Rukaya's vlog from that day, I'm sure he was there!
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Post by Rukaya on Feb 1, 2019 23:45:47 GMT
Thanks haha. I'm gonna watch Rukaya's vlog from that day, I'm sure he was there! *deletes youtube channel* 😉
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Post by Deleted on Feb 1, 2019 23:54:11 GMT
Thanks haha. I'm gonna watch Rukaya's vlog from that day, I'm sure he was there! *deletes youtube channel* 😉 I will say, and credit to Rukaya, that is one of my favourite photos ever! I love it! 😊
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Post by distantcousin on Feb 4, 2019 21:24:27 GMT
Also, the real question is, if she is 16, how can she afford so many theatre tickets? I'm 30, I work, and can't go to the theatre as many times as I'd like to!
Weekly allowance from Mummy and Daddy?
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Post by Deleted on Feb 4, 2019 21:42:37 GMT
Also, the real question is, if she is 16, how can she afford so many theatre tickets? I'm 30, I work, and can't go to the theatre as many times as I'd like to!
Weekly allowance from Mummy and Daddy?
In the last 24 hours these girls have found out about Lucie in Waitress and now Waitress is their favorite show so should Lucie do the West End run we are set for similar behavior.
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Post by shady23 on Feb 4, 2019 22:09:46 GMT
But it will now be pies being put onto the stage at curtain call and not cupcakes?!
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Post by distantcousin on Feb 5, 2019 8:13:24 GMT
Weekly allowance from Mummy and Daddy?
In the last 24 hours these girls have found out about Lucie in Waitress and now Waitress is their favorite show so should Lucie do the West End run we are set for similar behavior.
EEEK!
It's fascinating what behaviour certain shows bring out in certain people. From a psychological aspect.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 6, 2019 13:29:47 GMT
I've just walked past the theatre and there was a bunch of teens hanging around stage door, and I saw on Instagram yesterday too some teens waiting outside stage door before the show ended, who hadn't even been to the show last night.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 6, 2019 14:58:03 GMT
I must admit I've done that before. Just once. I wanted to meet Michelle Visage and it was my only chance, as I had everything booked and wasn't willing to pay for this again. But I'm a drama-free, respectful stagedoorer.
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Post by No. on Feb 6, 2019 20:59:42 GMT
As a continuation from the Jamie thread: as a 16 year old myself stage dooring makes me anxious for a few reasons, one of them being the cliques that become possessive over it. It’s almost like there’s a sense of superiority because they ‘know the cast’.
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Post by shady23 on Feb 6, 2019 21:09:49 GMT
Somebody needs to write a book.
I've never seen Six, Heathers, Bat or Jamie but I knew who it would be before searching. There can't be so much smoke without fire. But they certainly aren't the only ones. They are not all female either!
It's very rare for performers and shows to call out people so it must have got to a very bad level for that to happen.
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Post by northernhomo on Feb 6, 2019 21:10:34 GMT
There’s certainly a difference between Stage Door Johnnying and building up a genuine friendship with someone. It becomes a bit obsessive and very one sided.
I met a Former Christine from Phantom at the cinema screening for Phantom 25 and then proceeded to run into every couple of weeks at the Sainsbury’s in Chiswick when I lived there. I were not BFF’s by any means, but we used to say Hi, how you doing? Ect.
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Post by hannechalk on Feb 6, 2019 22:02:20 GMT
I know of a fan who got so obsessed with an actor, she befriended his friends on social media (they later blocked her when they realised), started holidaying in the village he lives in when he was not touring, and one day he went to the supermarket across the road from his house, guess who happened to be in the car park?
When she posted the pic from the car park online her own friends started questioning if it was actually coincidental.
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Post by shady23 on Feb 7, 2019 0:54:50 GMT
Some of the nonsense I read makes me ashamed to say I am a fan of theatre.
Go and see shows. Great.
Occasionally go and get a programme signed and tell the performers you enjoyed their performance. Also great.
All this other competing for constant attention from performers and constant stage dooring day after day after day and the entire circus and drama that it has all become... Well... No!
It really is absolutely ridiculous.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 7, 2019 5:06:12 GMT
Posts removed for discussion.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Feb 7, 2019 8:07:27 GMT
We’ve reinstated some posts but not those which refer specifically or indirectly to individuals or which quote posts that do. We think the best approach here is to keep the discussion general.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Feb 7, 2019 8:24:57 GMT
Anyway I’m forging ahread with my campaign to BAN stage dooring. I’d do this for all troublesome shows, i.e “Jermie”, Wicked, Heathers (if it ever darkens our doors again) and anything containing Miss Carrie Fletcher so thats Cheerleader and Les Mis off the menu too.
And I don’t mean some half arsed ban, I mean doors closed, sign up saying “No cast signings” and everyone leaves the theatre by different exits.
I know some of the cast enjoy this stuff but they’ve just been applauded for three hours and really don’t need any more adoration, and the people who want to intereact with them can do it from behind their keyboards.
Yep, it spoils it for the majority who know how to behave properly but it sounds like it’s already being spoilt for everyone by the minority anyway.
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Post by MrsCondomine on Feb 7, 2019 9:25:58 GMT
I'm going to say it - I don't understand stage dooring. I realise I am in a TINY minority but I find it a little embarrassing, I suppose. I have done it a couple of times (was 17 for one, a bit younger for the other and went with a friend who LOVED the actor in question - both actors were very pleasant), but I just can't imagine doing it now. Obviously the few who fall about crying and thinking themselves "in love" with these actors are a bit (read: very) sad. I don't understand what I personally would get out of getting an autograph or a photo - it's not like having a fulfilling chat with a friend or something. There are definitely actors I'd like to meet and talk with because I find them very interesting. Maybe I'm just uptight and joyless
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Post by Deleted on Feb 7, 2019 9:34:46 GMT
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Post by kathryn on Feb 7, 2019 10:01:04 GMT
I don't understand what I personally would get out of getting an autograph or a photo - it's not like having a fulfilling chat with a friend or something. There are definitely actors I'd like to meet and talk with because I find them very interesting. Maybe I'm just uptight and joyless I don't stage door often - in fact I can probably count on my fingers the number of times I have done it over the years. When it's not that I'm a particular fan of someone it's because I want to express my appreciation to the cast in a more specific way than applause - particularly if they are not well-known and there's not a big crowd there. For Inheritance pt 2 recently it's because I was so impressed with how much it had come on since the YV run. Autographs are a nice souvenir in those cases but not really the point. When it's someone you're a big fan of an autograph or a photo can have an 'achievement unlocked' quality to it. Particularly if you've been following their career for a long time. And sometimes it's just nice to extend the theatrical experience by chatting to other people who have just seen the show. When I saw The Crucible in NYC I went to stage door and didn't get a single autograph or picture - but I had the most fun just standing talking for an hour with the other people waiting there. I was in NY on my own so didn't have anyone else to do that with - if I'd been with a friend I probably wouldn't have bothered.
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Post by hannechalk on Feb 7, 2019 10:26:00 GMT
I'm going to say it - I don't understand stage dooring. I realise I am in a TINY minority but I find it a little embarrassing, I suppose. Obviously the few who fall about crying and thinking themselves "in love" with these actors are a bit (read: very) sad. I don't understand what I personally would get out of getting an autograph or a photo - it's not like having a fulfilling chat with a friend or something. I never used to do it, but now I go for a quick thank you and hello to performers I love, and always for Blood Brothers. I don't even ask for pics or autographs, and if there are other people there, especially if they are friends/family of cast, I stand back until I'm greeted. I never demand a conversation, I know they've got cars to fetch, public transport to catch, they're tired etc. So if it's a quick hi, that's fine by me.
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Post by alece10 on Feb 7, 2019 10:30:49 GMT
In all my years of going to the theatre I have never stage doored. One reason being that I always want to get home quickly after a show as usually have to be up early in the morning for work. But also I'm not really into joining a scrum. I did walk past the stage door of the Collissium after I'd been to see Sunset Boulevard and thought I thought I'd hang around for a few minutes to see what happened. After 20 mins no one I recognised had come out so I went home.
And many years ago I went to see Patti at Divas at the Donmar. As I was walking out the main exit she was right behind me so I did ask for her autograph which she kindly gave me.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 7, 2019 10:43:03 GMT
I don't really like stage-dooring because no matter how kind the performers are, I always feel like it's a really weird and artificial encounter. I like having books signed by authors though (and have occasionally cornered playwrights and composers to get their signatures on my books), so I get the impulse. It's just about having a moment of connection where you get to say "I appreciate you", they get to say "I appreciate your appreciation", and the autograph is both a souvenir of and a tangible goal for the meeting (imagine if we didn't do autographs, and stage-dooring was literally just about having a brief awkward conversation with no clear "well, you've signed that, that's a good indicator that our interaction has concluded, let's get on with our nights" moment!).
You don't have to understand it yourself, you don't have to want to do it yourself even if you do understand it, you don't even have to therefore condone the people who take it way too far and just won't let the moment come to an end, but it does happen and it does mean something to the people who do it. Live and let live, unless they're taking it way too far, in which case live and let live unless you have an opportunity and/or some standing to say "you are making people uncomfortable, please dial it back".
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Post by hannechalk on Feb 7, 2019 10:53:36 GMT
(imagine if we didn't do autographs, and stage-dooring was literally just about having a brief awkward conversation with no clear "well, you've signed that, that's a good indicator that our interaction has concluded I've known several of the actors for many years, asking them for pics and autographs would feel awkward and weird to me. And I do know when not to overstep the mark, and remove myself. Recently one fan followed an actor to his car when he nipped out between shows, that I'd never do. As you say, live and let live.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 7, 2019 10:55:16 GMT
I used to stage door all the time until Interpol started to get involved.
I love it. It's a great way to see the great unwashed up close. It's like going on a safari and being allowed to get out of the jeep.
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