19,778 posts
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Feb 25, 2016 20:21:09 GMT
CALM DOWN! I don't mean THAT first time. I mean your first ever memory of going to a theatre.
Mine was as a very very little boy (no idea how old, primary school I imagine) going to the Merlin Theatre in Sheffield. The Merlin was a tiny, gorgeous, little place attached to something called Tintagel House in the leafy suburb of Fulwood. For a little lad from a council estate in the north of the city it was all very very posh. I think the Merlin must have been putting on school productions but I don't remember what we saw. I do remember the theatre building which was circular or maybe octagonal and a bit church-like with tall windows with stained glass . And the grounds which were very lush with beautiful plants and palms that you'd only usually find growing in Cornwall. It was absolutely magical.
There was a mystical feel about the whole thing which I loved. And nowadays I love the mystery of theatre, the sets, the special effects, the 'stagecraft' I suppose. My idea of hell is a production of a serious piece with two actors on a black stage. Zzzzz.
So over to you... What is your first memory of going to a theatre?
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4,369 posts
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Post by Michael on Feb 25, 2016 20:39:01 GMT
The first show I saw was Starlight Express in Bochum - must've been ten years old back then, but I don't remember much - anything, actually. However, the first memory (no pun intended) I have is cats opening my shoelaces at the New London Theatre (I think it was back in 1995). Didn't understand much of the show as I had just finished my first year of learning English at school, but I remember being hugely impressed by what I saw - the dancing, music, set...
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2,051 posts
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Post by infofreako on Feb 25, 2016 20:44:15 GMT
My early experiences of theatre were annual trips to the panto in brighton. My first proper theatre experience was an amateur production of West Side Story aged about 11 then starlight express at the apollo victoria
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243 posts
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Post by musicallady on Feb 25, 2016 20:44:32 GMT
Going to the Theatre Royal, Newcastle to see Dick Whittington staring Tammy Jones,, Norman Vaughan and Ronne Coyles. I spent the entire show mesmerised.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 25, 2016 21:14:17 GMT
I don't remember my first time going to the theatre. I lived in the middle of nowhere where even the nearest cinema was in the town beyond the next town so there wasn't much opportunity to see anything, but I have vague memories of seeing something somewhere several years earlier than the events of the next paragraph.
The first time I remember going to the theatre was when my mother - once a stage actress - took me to London. We spent a couple of nights there and saw Noises Off at the Savoy and 42nd Street at Drury Lane. The latter captivated me, partly because of the divinely lovely Barbara King and partly because of the flying cloths and trucked sets smoothly moving in and out around the action. I've always had a curiosity about what goes on behind the scenes in anything and in this case the curiosity was literal, and that theatre trip gave me an interest in the technical side of theatre that has endured to this day. (I hate it when documentaries about shows go on and on and on about the performers. I don't care about the performers. Show me the back of the set.)
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Post by d'James on Feb 25, 2016 21:19:12 GMT
My first time was either Cats or Starlight Express in London. I know the date I saw Starlight but not Cats.
Starlight was 1991 just before I turned 5. I remember loving it but when Dinah sings the last part of U.N.C.O.U.P.L.E.D. I turned to my Mum and asked 'what's a bastard?'
When I saw Cats I remember turning around watching the Cats run around the audience and turning back to find a cat right in front of me. She leaned in and I leaned back and further back until I couldn't go any further and then the cat licked my nose.
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Post by crabtree on Feb 25, 2016 21:22:17 GMT
oh dear, you are all so young. My first professional/London theatre was Laurence Harvey and Elizabeth Larner in Camelot at Drury lane in the early 60's.....I can still see all that gold, and all the chorus apparently skating in a winter scene. A life changing moment for an 8 year old. My first Shakespeare was the wars of the Roses in 1964 at Stratford - when I was 9, and again a life changing moment. The first opera was La Boheme when I was 12, And the first straight play in London was Maggie Smith et al, in Private lives. What joy that was, and it felt such an event, not just another night.
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1,249 posts
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Post by joem on Feb 25, 2016 21:57:34 GMT
First amateur production I saw was a panto, "Sinbad The Sailor", in Gibraltar. First professional stuff, Jesus Christ Superstar in London. Can't remember the first straight play I saw but my first professional one was either "Bedroom Farce" or "Night and Day". I think!
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Post by Laineee on Feb 25, 2016 21:58:39 GMT
The first thing I remember seeing was an am-dram production of Oliver, which I adored - I was particularly invested in that because my aunt was in the chorus, and my dad was the company pianist. I'd also been at a lot of rehearsals (in lieu of a babysitter) and had been adopted as the 'official rehearsal page-turner', since I was a little too young to have been eligible to audition for one of Fagin's gang. The first professional production I saw was the Cats tour somewhere in the mid/late 80s.... even at the tender age of about 10 I despised it, and it's a wonder I gave theatre another chance....
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Post by Deleted on Feb 25, 2016 22:30:42 GMT
My first West End production was - like I imagine it was for much of my generation - Joseph with Jason Donovan, but I'd been going to local and amateur productions before then. I may be comparatively young, but I've still been a theatre-goer for longer than I can remember.
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4,029 posts
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Post by Dawnstar on Feb 25, 2016 22:34:42 GMT
The first amateur theatre I remember seeing was at primary school when I was about 5 and the top class did scenes from A Midsummer's Night's Dream. It was probably dire but from my youthful perspective the 11 year olds acting seemed so grown up!
The first West End show I saw was Return To The Forbidden Planet in the early 90s when I was about 7. I still love the show & wish it would get another professional production as the last one I saw was well over 10 years ago, though I did see a good amateur production a couple of years ago.
Also age 7 I saw my first opera, La Boheme. Unfortunately it put me off opera for nearly 10 years! Even now, after 12 years of regular operagoing, I am not that keen on Boheme. I grant there is some beautiful music but I find the characters jolly annoying.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 25, 2016 23:25:17 GMT
I think it was The Sooty Show at some seaside venue, also vague memories of Danny La Rue in a summer season somewhere. So it would be early seventies on seaside holidays I think.
First production seen in London was The Rivals with Michael Hordern, Geraldine McEwan and Tim Curry at the National, about 1983/4.
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653 posts
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Post by ptwest on Feb 26, 2016 6:28:23 GMT
It would have been the Wombles at Swindon's Wyvern Theatre sometime in the mid seventies. I remember being scared of the curtain because I thought it would make me jump when it opened! I think I got over that pretty quickly!
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840 posts
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Post by Steffi on Feb 26, 2016 7:36:24 GMT
Mine was Cats in Hamburg in 1990. My parents took me on a city trip and this was my special treat. I was only 10 and don't remember a lot about the show itself. But I do recall being completely in awe as soon as the "cats" appeared in the auditorium. And I have a very clear memory of one cat sitting on the back of my chair at one point. Save to say it was a magical experience at the time and definitely started my love for theatre even though I only became a regular theatre goer about 8 years later.
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2,702 posts
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Post by viserys on Feb 26, 2016 7:50:17 GMT
Obviously shows like Cats and Starlight Express, though often derided these days, were a great introduction to musical theatre for many. It was the same for me - the local theatre put on a christmas show every year (nothing like English pantos, sadly) and I vaguely remember seeing one or two of those.
My proper "first time" was Starlight Express in Bochum 1989. I had been bugging my parents to take me to Hamburg to see Cats and they were like "driving all that way for a musical? You have to be kidding!" and then "There's a coach trip to that new thing in Bochum, you can go and see that instead" and they put me on that coach alone. Yea, they didn't win any Parents of the Year awards back then, but these days my Mom is quite happy to tag along to shows all over Europe.
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209 posts
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Post by Flim Flam on Feb 26, 2016 8:45:09 GMT
Very first memory was going to a 'drama centre' which was run by our council for local schools. The sort of place where people force you to dance around pretending to be trees. Have no recall of what we did, but do have a distinct memory of being in this windowless place with painted black walls, and that there was something magical and removed from the everyday world about it.
Funnily enough I was chatting to my sister about this recently and she said incredulously 'You liked it? I hated that place!' So brainwashing and trauma, all in one family. And sponsored by the council too. Excellent.
My first proper theatrical production was a schools production of Julius Caesar. Very OTT with confetti and party poppers as I recall, but I can feel the chills of excitement it gave me, even as I write this.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 26, 2016 9:13:12 GMT
Ahhh, that first time...! Actually, I can't remember the very first time, but it would have been one of several trips to see a panto. On a bus, with a load of other young kids, complete strangers. We were packed off once a year, just after Christmas to somewhere which seemed vast. Oooh, the excitement of walking into the foyer! Big stairs, carpets, hot-dog stands (now was this actually a very big cinema I have asked myself?), and programmes being waved around. Then going in to take your seats, looking at the richness of the red velvet stage curtain. And then the lights dimmed, and I seem to remember we all screamed with delight as one scene ran into another with scenery that came from the ceiling, and some from the side, some was just a flat curtain which moved from behind sometimes, and some was a proper scene in somewhere like a cave. I loved the pretty dresses, and was strangely attracted to the male dancers who always wore tights, and before you knew it, it was over, and we were back on the bus. I never seemed to be able to capture the sheer joy of my visit when telling my parents about it, so it was something very special and private to me. Then I acted in school plays, which I loved... And then when I was fourteen, a teacher took us as a school group one Saturday night to see Jesus Christ Superstar at the Palace Theatre, and my life was transformed. All those wonderful memories from my early childhood came flooding back. A tube train (no coach this time), neon lights advertising the name of the show (and what a theatre to see as your first West End theatre!), the climb up to the Upper Circle (tickets £1.15), the programmes (we'd have to wait until after the show for the hot-dogs which were always sold from stands just outside the Palace, along with Music For Pleasure recordings of the show by touts calling, "All the songs from the show!"), no stage curtain (now that was something!) and then the lights dimmed, and that guitar riff played as the strings vibrated as the Overture kicked in... And I was completely mesmerised. And from that moment on, I knew where my life was going, and I still get that thrill of seeing a lighting rig, the height of the proscenium, the orchestra pit, and I love to walk to the front of the stalls and look back and up at the whole theatre, feeling the complete joy of being there! (Ooh it's been good to recall all this, and read all the other stories. What a wonderful thread!)
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240 posts
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Post by Anniek on Feb 26, 2016 9:28:59 GMT
My first musical was Annie in Carre Amsterdam, when I was five. My mum got me the movie since I was three, as our names are almost the same (mums logic) and I always loved singing and dancing. Hours and hours my mum spend reading out the subtitles when I couldn't read them yet, and eventually we went to the theatre. We we're sat on the balcony and I was singing and dancing to every song, remembering next to us was a woman with a broken foot who was highly irritated by it. I can't remember a single thing about the show itself, I only remember myself sitting there, enjoying it a lot! After that I was given an Annie cap by my parents which I wore for at least 5 years (then it was too small) every day haha! That's where my love for musicals properly started.
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Post by DebbieDoesDouglas(Hodge) on Feb 26, 2016 9:32:20 GMT
Aspects of Love '91. Went with ma and step pa. they told me James Bond was going to be in it. I remember me ma was very pregnant so must have been the summer. I adored it from the very back of the Welsh stalls
My OTHER first time - I was 19, I was the 'girl', I fell asleep - says EVERYTHING
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433 posts
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Post by DuchessConstance on Feb 26, 2016 9:35:17 GMT
The first thing I remember was Ayckbourn's Invisible Friends at the NT when I was very small. Supposed to be a children's play. Very disturbing. A child's imaginary friend comes to life and takes over her home. Scared the crap out of me.
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2,702 posts
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Post by viserys on Feb 26, 2016 9:51:09 GMT
(we'd have to wait until after the show for the hot-dogs which were always sold from stands just outside the Palace, What happened to those hot dogs stands anyway? Now that you mention them, I remember their existance when I first started theatre-going in London in the early 90s, but they disappeared not long after. As for my first time seeing a show in London: Boarding a coach at 10pm on Friday evening in the western corner of Germany (Aachen), driving through a night, a ferry crossing from Calais to Dover around 2-3am in the night, arriving in London at the crack of dawn on Saturday, wandering around in a daze for some hours, catching the 3pm matinee of Starlight Express (of course! Well, I did love the show back then), hurrying to Hyde Park where the coach was departing at 6 or 7pm, another drive + ferry ride through the night, arriving back home in Aachen around 4-5am in the morning, spending all Sunday in bed. Mature, lazy me marvels at young me's dedication back in those days. Planned to do this again for Miss Saigon shortly after it opened in 1990, mis-booked for Friday evening instead. Father cussed and complained alot, packed the neighbour and me into a car and drove all the way to London for a weekend. Most memorably, just after leaving the ferry port in Dover, some blokes obviously got excited by our German car plates and mooned us through the rear window of their car. Classy welcome to Britain
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Post by Kim on Feb 26, 2016 10:25:19 GMT
Possibly Panto at the King's Theatre, Southsea don't really remember the show but do remember waiting after to meet a care bear...
First proper show was either Grease at the Dominian or Joseph at Southampton Mayflower... my mum would take me to shoes at Southampton a lot until I got bored of going for 5 years then got obsessed when I was 15.. The bank account despises that haha
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923 posts
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Post by Snciole on Feb 26, 2016 10:43:50 GMT
I wasn't really taken to the theatre as a child *small violin* but living in London and Entry Pass really opened it up to me. My first play was A Woman Killed with Kindness, which was dull but I like the spectacle of theatre, even if the play isn't very good.
I go and see about 40-45 shows a year now (as cheap as possible).
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Post by trapdoor on Feb 26, 2016 11:09:19 GMT
The RSC/Opera North Show Boat at the Palladium. The plot itself flew over my head but the sight of the Cotton Blossom magically appearing before my young eyes was the start of the MT obsession.
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642 posts
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Post by Stasia on Feb 26, 2016 11:28:52 GMT
I had visited lots of shows as a child, even been taken to the Kremlin Panace Nutcracker once! Later we had lots of school theatre trips to all sorts of shows, both drama, musicals and opera. My first ever visit to the Bolshoi theatre happened when I was around 14, and the first musical I saw was Jesus Christ here in Moscow (sorry to say but it's an unlicensed version running here for 20+ years) Then I had my first ever musical I saw multiple times (JCSS and Notre Dame), my first ever musical I've been doing some volunteering for (WWRY MOscow), my first ever musical where I got a proper paid job (Ordinary Miracle, Russian one)... And my first show in London happened to be WWRY back in 2007.
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