4,361 posts
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Post by shady23 on Sept 1, 2017 7:53:30 GMT
I don't go to my local theatres Sunderland/Newcastle as much as I used to, purely because there's not that much on I want to see. The same shows just go round and round and round again....
I may be in the minority up here but I live near Newcastle and if there's a show on in Sunderland I will travel over to see it. I assume others must not as a few months later the same show will then come to Newcastle, and vice versa. These places are only half an hour away from each other.
Also, ticket prices seem to be going up with many touring shows charging fifty quid a ticket. I can't justify that for most of these productions. Especially not just cause "someone minor from the telly" is in it. Funny Girl was a rare exception when I was happy to pay silly prices. The rest of them? Forget it.
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341 posts
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Post by adrianics on Sept 1, 2017 9:01:13 GMT
We don't go to the theatre as often as we used to and rely heavily on discounts/ticket clubs largely because of affordability. Especially since we bought a flat and that's started to gobble up all of our money, it suddenly dawned on me that £30 per ticket being considered 'affordable' is bonkers, particularly considering the cost of travelling to Central from zone 6 and the necessity of buying food, drinks etc since we have to go straight from work on a weeknight.
Case in point: I really want to see The Toxic Avenger and have heard amazing things, but the ticket prices are completely obscene. The best deal I can find for this, considering it's a pretty obscure show, is £39 per ticket to sit right at the back. It's crazy and I refuse to believe demand and sales are justifying this cost.
Ultimately, though, it's the audience. In my experience, the standard of behaviour has been in a sharp decline over the years and this shows no sign of stopping. I cannot put into words how much I resent paying somewhere around £70 for a pair of tickets, then £12.40 for tube travel, then roughly £20 on a quick dinner, then (if we're feeling extravagant) another £10 on a drink each, only to end up once again sitting next to a group of arseholes whose conversation simply has to happen *right there and then* and cannot wait for the interval or the journey home. The entire experience, when all is said and done, often costs upwards of £100 and can be completely ruined in an instant by one person in 1,000.
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3,578 posts
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Post by showgirl on Sept 2, 2017 3:58:52 GMT
Newcastle will be the only place with theatre I could just about reach during my week away - though it'd be a long, slow trip so would mean a matinee. However, the only production I could find on that basis is going to London next, so pointless to make such efforts to see it elsewhere; plus not really my sort of thing anyway. In principle however I'd love to see and support regional theatre.
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