|
Post by crabtree on Sept 20, 2018 9:20:49 GMT
I'm so glad Bonnie made it in time. Presumably they would have held the show till she was in the building. She really is a professional, and that was a great, personal interview she gave. Hurrah for La Langford.
|
|
4,361 posts
|
Post by shady23 on Sept 20, 2018 14:54:24 GMT
Steph is making her Maggie debut today.
|
|
3,349 posts
|
Post by Dr Tom on Sept 20, 2018 22:07:32 GMT
Just back from tonight’s show, where I went to catch Steph’s debut as Maggie.
She was good and had her own take on the role. Nice to see the songs sung differently. Not perfect yet, a fluffed first line and the like, but I think that was nerves (also saw one of her first Dorothy performances and thought something similar, but she became very good over time).
Only other cover was Lisa Dent as Annie. But a proper ensemble for once, 12 boys and 22 girls.
Jae was back from his vacation as conductor.
Only two levels were open. I was in centre second row stalls, only marred by a lot of talking nearby. But I was thankful that I didn’t end up sitting near the coach party of Germans I followed in (or, if I did, they were impeccably behaves).
The poor girl next to me got told to sit down by the people behind when she stood up to give an ovation to Ashley Day. I did make sure to stand up at the very end and looked to be a full ovation from what I could see.
I believe Steph is on until Saturday if you want to catch her.
|
|
5,886 posts
|
Post by mrbarnaby on Sept 20, 2018 23:21:23 GMT
She should have told the people behind her to F off! How dare they say that to her!!
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 21, 2018 12:27:57 GMT
I think that's so rude. I have stood from the Ensemble bowing. If anyone told me to sit down, I'd just keep on standing and clapping and cheering even louder. And I'd make a point of making it bigger... hands in the air cheering. How rude, how dare they. At any show, not just this one. If someone enjoyed it and wants to be appreciative toward the cast, clap and stand away!
|
|
379 posts
|
Post by ctas on Sept 21, 2018 14:13:52 GMT
Today is the day! Finally seeing this!
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 21, 2018 15:31:47 GMT
I think that's so rude. I have stood from the Ensemble bowing. If anyone told me to sit down, I'd just keep on standing and clapping and cheering even louder. And I'd make a point of making it bigger... hands in the air cheering. How rude, how dare they. At any show, not just this one. If someone enjoyed it and wants to be appreciative toward the cast, clap and stand away! I do that too! 😂
|
|
4,361 posts
|
Post by shady23 on Sept 22, 2018 22:25:33 GMT
Great photo
|
|
660 posts
|
Post by Oleanna on Sept 22, 2018 23:11:44 GMT
|
|
529 posts
Member is Online
|
Post by ruby on Sept 23, 2018 0:47:36 GMT
Am going on 10 November, hope to see her as Maggie. She was fantastic as Dorothy a few weeks back.
|
|
|
Post by singularsensation10 on Sept 23, 2018 11:05:49 GMT
She’s a true professional that can go in, turn it on and get the job done. Can’t wait to see what she does next.
|
|
297 posts
|
Post by fossil on Sept 23, 2018 11:59:25 GMT
Yesterdays matinee was my 6th visit and the first time since the end of January. Having sat front stalls and front balcony I thought I would view the show this time from the front of the Grand Circle. Seats A15 and 16 are discounted as restricted view but except for missing the top third of the mirror there seemed to be nothing much restricted about these seats.
It was good to see the show is still as fresh as ever but, oh dear, what has happened to the sound? From where I was sitting in the Grand Circle the sound from the performers microphones was very tinny. The equalisation was completely wrong. The singers were also being balanced at the same level as the orchestra so words were often drowned out. Sound balance should nearly always favour the singers over musicians and this is a common error among sound engineers.
I would be interested to know if this problem is now affecting current performances generally or if it just depends on who is driving the sound desk on that day. Has anybody else experienced poor sound recently?
|
|
227 posts
|
Post by paulbrownsey on Sept 23, 2018 14:45:55 GMT
The poor girl next to me got told to sit down by the people behind when she stood up to give an ovation to Ashley Day. Good for them. How selfish she was, denying them the sight of the cast taking their bows so she could do her "Look at me applauding" thing. Standing ovations are pure selfishness.
|
|
227 posts
|
Post by paulbrownsey on Sept 23, 2018 14:48:27 GMT
I think that's so rude. I have stood from the Ensemble bowing. If anyone told me to sit down, I'd just keep on standing and clapping and cheering even louder. And I'd make a point of making it bigger... hands in the air cheering. How rude, how dare they. At any show, not just this one. If someone enjoyed it and wants to be appreciative toward the cast, clap and stand away! I do that too! 😂 The rudeness lies entirely in those who stand to applaud and thus make those behind stand too if they want to see the cast taking their bows. What an appallingly inconsiderate lot you are. Perhaps it derives from all that self-esteem they teach in schools these days.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2018 14:57:27 GMT
The rudeness lies entirely in those who stand to applaud and thus make those behind stand too if they want to see the cast taking their bows. What an appallingly inconsiderate lot you are. Perhaps it derives from all that self-esteem they teach in schools these days. If I want to give a standing ovation, oh yes I will. I have the right to do so if in my opinion an actor or a production deserve it. And no one has the right to stop me if I do it at the right time (ie. at curtain call). And of course if they try to stop me I won't stop. P.S. I'm well educated, thank you very much for your concern tho.
|
|
2,452 posts
|
Post by theatremadness on Sept 23, 2018 15:08:24 GMT
The rudeness lies entirely in those who stand to applaud and thus make those behind stand too if they want to see the cast taking their bows. What an appallingly inconsiderate lot you are. Perhaps it derives from all that self-esteem they teach in schools these days. I would love to know in the however-many posts you've made on this board, how many of them are basically this exact post which you seem to rehash over and over and over again!
|
|
227 posts
|
Post by paulbrownsey on Sept 23, 2018 15:10:06 GMT
"I have the right to do so if in my opinion an actor or a production deserve it."
Ooh, you and your 'rights'! What about the rights of those who have paid a lot of money for the seat behind you and whose view is impeded because you want to clap on your feet? Sit down and don't be so selfish!
|
|
227 posts
|
Post by paulbrownsey on Sept 23, 2018 15:12:46 GMT
I would love to know in the however-many posts you've made on this board, how many of them are basically this exact post which you seem to rehash over and over and over again! Sometimes what's right needs to be said over and over again. You don't cease to be selfish just because I've told you you're selfish more than once. How can you justify blocking the view of those behind you?
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2018 15:30:14 GMT
It's the curtain call. There's no more story. Standing ovations are a time-honoured tradition for when you have enjoyed a performance an exceptional amount. Are they selfish? Sure. Does harping on about how giving standing ovations makes you a bad person therefore put you on the only correct side of the debate? Not at all. I get that some curtain calls feature extra wee bits of performance (when I went to 42nd Street and it was clear they were going to start dancing again, the standing ovators actually sat back down) and that blows when you can't see it. But it'll take a lot more than pointing a finger and shouting "selfish! selfish! selfish!" to nip SUCH a long-standing and accepted - if not necessarily acceptable to you - tradition in the bud. I think the actors would probably be sad if we stopped too.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2018 16:17:07 GMT
"I have the right to do so if in my opinion an actor or a production deserve it." Ooh, you and your 'rights'! What about the rights of those who have paid a lot of money for the seat behind you and whose view is impeded because you want to clap on your feet? Sit down and don't be so selfish! You can stand up if you want to see, no-one's stopping you. I've had to do that many times, it's a mere minute of inconvenience (if even) and then you'd have to get up to leave anyway, so I don't see the issue. And if you have mobility issues then presumably you've had the good sense to book an aisle seat anyway, and in that case you can peer around and still see without a problem. The show has finished at that point, so if I want to show appreciation to the hard-working cast for the entertainment I've paid my good money for then I will, and nothing's going to stop me. It's only for the bow anyway - for the dancing everyone sits down again in any event! You do you and I'll do me, but frankly I think the rude and inconsiderate person on here is you - when the show is finished it is the performers who matter, and they deserve as much of an ovation as people want to give them.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2018 17:19:39 GMT
"I have the right to do so if in my opinion an actor or a production deserve it." Ooh, you and your 'rights'! What about the rights of those who have paid a lot of money for the seat behind you and whose view is impeded because you want to clap on your feet? Sit down and don't be so selfish! Then get a front row ticket, that way you can guarantee you are not disturbed at curtain call. Bye.
|
|
227 posts
|
Post by paulbrownsey on Sept 23, 2018 19:02:51 GMT
What a lot of selfish people on here who need to stand to applaud!
"Standing ovations are a time-honoured tradition" (a) Doesn't mean they're not selfish, 'cos time-honoured traditions can be immoral, wicked, sexist, oppressive ... and selfish ("I'm taking your virginity, young lady", says the lord of the manor; "It's a time-honoured tradition"); (b) they've grown in recent years because of those wretched TV talent shows, which encourage audiences to rise to their feet.
"And if you have mobility issues then presumably you've had the good sense to book an aisle seat anyway"
How nimbly and thoughtlessly people seek to justify their selfishness.
"Then get a front row ticket, that way you can guarantee you are not disturbed at curtain call. Bye. "
i.e. "Get out of my way, I wanna stand and I'm not going to be considerate of people behind; that's not who I am!!!"
"You can stand up if you want to see, no-one's stopping you."
Decency stops me, because I think it wrong to force the people behind me to stand to see the bows/finale. I do have this consideration for others that you lot lack.
"if I want to show appreciation to the hard-working cast for the entertainment I've paid my good money for then I will, and nothing's going to stop me."
What about the hard-earned money paid by the people behind you, who are left to applaud your backside? But then, considerateness won't stop people like you.
"Look at me applauding, look at me applauding" is what standing ovations say.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2018 19:07:14 GMT
"Look at me applauding, look at me applauding" is what standing ovations say. No, as has been pointed out to you now so many times a 5 year old would understand, what the ordinary standing ovation shows is appreciation for the hard work the performers onstage have put in for the last 2 or 3 hours for your entertainment. Appreciation of talent and hard work, nothing more and nothing less. But given you appear to be incapable of actually reading the replies to your post and the points made in opposition to you, which are all answering your arguments, and instead just accuse us all of the lack of consideration that you are showing to us, I can only conclude after your fourth or fifth post of the same thing that you must now be deliberately trolling, so I'm out.
|
|
3,349 posts
|
Post by Dr Tom on Sept 23, 2018 19:26:29 GMT
For 42nd Street, the standing ovation at that point of the show is quite usual (particularly for people who don't know there's still another song to go, after which is when I stand up).
I do think some shows are given standing ovations that don't deserve them, but everyone's tastes are different.
On Broadway, almost every show gets an automatic ovation. That doesn't happen in the UK, but a lot of shows now try and force one. Think of all the shows with a "dance along" number at the end, where the cast are motioning for people to stand up (or in some shows even going into the audience and pulling people to their feet). So, it's no wonder we have audiences trained to stand up at any and all shows.
I wish now I'd stood up too when the girl next to me was shouted at. I just didn't react quickly enough. But I did stand at the end.
|
|
25 posts
|
Post by show69 on Sept 23, 2018 23:12:32 GMT
Do we know if this is going on tour still ? Any word on Scottish dates?
|
|