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Post by capybara on Jun 14, 2024 19:32:17 GMT
For those interested, these were the results of the Broadway ‘survey’…
Sorry for the double email today…! We wanted to thank you all for taking part in our “too British” for Broadway survey. We’re encouraged by the results that have just come through. More news as we have it. In the meantime, here’s the low down.
94.3% of all respondents’ first language was English, and 66.6% saw the show at The Fortune Theatre for the first time. 1.6% of all respondents first saw the show in 2019 at the New Diorama Theatre. And on average, respondents have seen the show 2.3 times each. One respondent reports having seen the show 97 times.
We have employed best practice for US Polling and have extracted a sample of 1000 Americans living in the US who have seen the show in the West End, excluding patrons who have seen the show multiple times.
Out of that sample:
90.2% who have seen Operation Mincemeat say it’s not “too British” for Broadway. Huzzah! 23.3% listened to the soundtrack before attending the show.
75.6% opted into a potential Broadway pre-sale.
Regarding intelligibility of lyrics during the live performance, 81% said these were “Crystal Clear”
Regarding intelligibility of dialogue, 85% said these were “Crystal Clear.” Surprisingly, 78% advised they do not struggle with UK accents in general.
All in - we’re encouraged by these results, particularly that you “yanks” understand our show more than your average “bloke"… suggesting that if we make it across the pond, a Broadway audience would enjoy the show!
Fingers crossed…🤞🤞🤞
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Post by stageyrebecca on Jun 14, 2024 20:17:18 GMT
If, as you say, all the seats were £25, you are DEFINITELY talking about the lottery, not the Monday ballot. Also, I love how this discussion is only reinforcing how complex the whole thing is! I have to hold my hand up and apologise. I was wrong. I thought the fact that it took place on Monday meant it was the ballot not the lottery. (Although I am not sure the difference in meaning between a lottery and a ballot...) hopefully that’s what my blog post that someone shared above attempts to explain! TLDR: “ballot” definitely feels slightly misleading in that you’ve won something
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Post by amyja89 on Jun 14, 2024 21:11:26 GMT
94.3% of all respondents’ first language was English, and 66.6% saw the show at The Fortune Theatre for the first time. 1.6% of all respondents first saw the show in 2019 at the New Diorama Theatre. And on average, respondents have seen the show 2.3 times each. One respondent reports having seen the show 97 times. 97 times! Good grief!!
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343 posts
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Post by properjob on Jun 16, 2024 16:51:12 GMT
I enjoyed seeing it on Saturday courtesy of my lottery win. My first time in the upper circle. The view was fine for the price I paid due to the lottery but would have been utterly acceptable for the normal price! I hope they tour it soon so I can see it in a better theatre
It is still an amazing piece, the new cast are good but aren't quite up the originals but I suspect that is always going to be the case where most of the original cast are also the writers.
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1,828 posts
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Post by Dave B on Jun 19, 2024 18:52:35 GMT
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421 posts
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Post by Distant Dreamer... on Jun 19, 2024 19:10:11 GMT
Could someone paste the article here? Sod The Stage’s free articles 🤣
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Post by Oobi on Jun 19, 2024 19:38:17 GMT
What is the logic behind having an £89.50 flat ticket price?
We’ve been backing the show since we saw it at the New Diorama and the journey from there to here is one that very few shows manage to make. When we were trying to get the show into the West End we were only offered one theatre and that theatre was the Fortune. And we love the Fortune. But the problem with the Fortune is it only has 427 seats in total and 12 standing tickets. And although there are five people on stage, there are 33 people in the company making those five people operate. So basically, we didn’t have a choice as to which theatre to go to.
So, you have expensive tickets because in an ideal world you would have gone into a larger theatre?
Yes. If we could have gone to a small theatre, but bigger than the Fortune, that would have been our first choice, and it would also have been easier economically.
The average price is £74.50, which isn’t high for the West End, but why are the less good seats the same price as the good seats? You could have the same average but price them in bands like other shows.
The logic is that we are not fans of shows where it’s like ‘tickets from £15’ or ‘tickets from £10’ but when it actually comes down to it there’s about four tickets [at that price], even in a 1,000 seater.
Regardless, if you had the nice stalls seats at £120 and the upper circle at £50 it would feel more accessible, wouldn’t it?
We are not fans of not being able to make a decent number of really good seats available to people who can’t afford it. And our way of doing it – which is different – is to do that on Mondays and Tuesdays. And the downside of that is, we have to somehow make that up elsewhere in the week. It’s not ideal, but that is our way around it.
What is the logic behind having an £89.50 flat ticket price?
We’ve been backing the show since we saw it at the New Diorama and the journey from there to here is one that very few shows manage to make. When we were trying to get the show into the West End we were only offered one theatre and that theatre was the Fortune. And we love the Fortune. But the problem with the Fortune is it only has 427 seats in total and 12 standing tickets. And although there are five people on stage, there are 33 people in the company making those five people operate. So basically, we didn’t have a choice as to which theatre to go to.
So, you have expensive tickets because in an ideal world you would have gone into a larger theatre?
Yes. If we could have gone to a small theatre, but bigger than the Fortune, that would have been our first choice, and it would also have been easier economically.
The average price is £74.50, which isn’t high for the West End, but why are the less good seats the same price as the good seats? You could have the same average but price them in bands like other shows.
The logic is that we are not fans of shows where it’s like ‘tickets from £15’ or ‘tickets from £10’ but when it actually comes down to it there’s about four tickets [at that price], even in a 1,000 seater.
Regardless, if you had the nice stalls seats at £120 and the upper circle at £50 it would feel more accessible, wouldn’t it?
We are not fans of not being able to make a decent number of really good seats available to people who can’t afford it. And our way of doing it – which is different – is to do that on Mondays and Tuesdays. And the downside of that is, we have to somehow make that up elsewhere in the week. It’s not ideal, but that is our way around it.
Looking at sales tonight [Friday, June 14], the show is sold out on the first two levels and there’s lots of availability on the upper circle – wouldn’t you make more money if those seats were cheaper?
Well, firstly, we’ve been playing at 95% [capacity] since the beginning. We don’t change the prices according to where we are in the cycle of the year. It’s pretty hard to sell the last few seats, not least because some of them are standing. And also we actually like people to be able to buy seats on the day, so that’s a separate thing. Our top price is £89.50 and most musicals have top prices of north of £100. We would love to have another 150 seats and do what you’re talking about. But we don’t. And we prefer the fact people can actually pay £39.50 on Mondays and get a seat in the stalls. So we’ve deliberately taken a position in a theatre that, to be frank, hasn’t got quite enough seats for us.
I think what’s causing bad feeling about it is that while it is laudable that there are no £125 seats, somebody on a low budget could only see it on a Saturday if they won the £25 lottery, drawn every two weeks, which means less well off people can’t plan to see it…
You sound a bit annoyed about it, but basically what I’m finding is that people like the things that we’re doing that are positive, right? Like holding a lottery at £25. Like keeping Mondays at £39.50. I have people calling me going: ‘Why don’t you put your Mondays up?’ I have deliberately wanted to keep that to keep it accessible.
I’m more interested than annoyed. But in 15 years, I have never seen a West End price structure like this one.
You’re right. There are ups and downs.
Say you get a £15 seat to Les Misérables, you’re probably sat behind a pillar or something, but there is a reliable entry point if you’re on a budget and want to book in advance for a Saturday night.
Well, if you want to see it on a Saturday night I agree with you, but I go back to the fact that we’ve only got 427 seats in total and we do our lottery. So even though we could often sell Saturday nights completely at the full price, right to the back of the upper circle, we deliberately include lottery seats on a Saturday. And they’re not just in the upper circle. If we were managing it for optics, we would have the back two rows of the upper circle, like you say, available for £20 or whatever it is, and no one would complain, right?
Probably not! You’re booking at the Fortune for quite a long time, but if you did move to a larger house, do you think you’d look at a more conventional pricing structure?
At one point we hoped that we would go to the Trafalgar. But even if we’d gone there, what we wouldn’t have done is done that thing where you go and sit in the stalls and one seat is priced at X, and the other one next to it is priced at Y. I think that’s bollocks.
I wanted to ask about the expansion of the ballot. Recently, Monday tickets were balloted, but now you have to enter a ballot to buy advance seats for five out of the week’s eight shows when there’s a new sales period: again, that is highly unusual, what’s the thinking?
Well, we wanted to make sure that everyone had a chance on Monday seats, which were white hot and still are white hot. But we have a group rate every day, which most shows certainly don’t do. If you bring 30 people on a Monday, you pay £19.50 a ticket. If you bring 30 people on a Saturday, you pay £69.50. Our problem is that there are people online who bundle those seats, and then they sell them for what appears to be a discount, but it’s actually a markup. So we did it to avoid that.
Okay, that’s not an angle I’d thought of.
I knew we were having the chat, and I found a [secondary] ticket online on sale for this weekend for £5,600 in the stalls. I mean, the same site also had them for £200.
Is there anything else you’d like to add?
We actually are trying to run the show as accessible as we can make it. We’re not using £200 tickets and we’re doing the best we can. It’s really hard to keep everybody happy.
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Post by bigredapple on Jun 19, 2024 20:19:35 GMT
What is the logic behind having an £89.50 flat ticket price?
We’ve been backing the show since we saw it at the New Diorama and the journey from there to here is one that very few shows manage to make. When we were trying to get the show into the West End we were only offered one theatre and that theatre was the Fortune. And we love the Fortune. But the problem with the Fortune is it only has 427 seats in total and 12 standing tickets. And although there are five people on stage, there are 33 people in the company making those five people operate. So basically, we didn’t have a choice as to which theatre to go to. So, you have expensive tickets because in an ideal world you would have gone into a larger theatre?
Yes. If we could have gone to a small theatre, but bigger than the Fortune, that would have been our first choice, and it would also have been easier economically. The average price is £74.50, which isn’t high for the West End, but why are the less good seats the same price as the good seats? You could have the same average but price them in bands like other shows.
The logic is that we are not fans of shows where it’s like ‘tickets from £15’ or ‘tickets from £10’ but when it actually comes down to it there’s about four tickets [at that price], even in a 1,000 seater. Regardless, if you had the nice stalls seats at £120 and the upper circle at £50 it would feel more accessible, wouldn’t it?
We are not fans of not being able to make a decent number of really good seats available to people who can’t afford it. And our way of doing it – which is different – is to do that on Mondays and Tuesdays. And the downside of that is, we have to somehow make that up elsewhere in the week. It’s not ideal, but that is our way around it. What is the logic behind having an £89.50 flat ticket price?
We’ve been backing the show since we saw it at the New Diorama and the journey from there to here is one that very few shows manage to make. When we were trying to get the show into the West End we were only offered one theatre and that theatre was the Fortune. And we love the Fortune. But the problem with the Fortune is it only has 427 seats in total and 12 standing tickets. And although there are five people on stage, there are 33 people in the company making those five people operate. So basically, we didn’t have a choice as to which theatre to go to. So, you have expensive tickets because in an ideal world you would have gone into a larger theatre?
Yes. If we could have gone to a small theatre, but bigger than the Fortune, that would have been our first choice, and it would also have been easier economically. The average price is £74.50, which isn’t high for the West End, but why are the less good seats the same price as the good seats? You could have the same average but price them in bands like other shows.
The logic is that we are not fans of shows where it’s like ‘tickets from £15’ or ‘tickets from £10’ but when it actually comes down to it there’s about four tickets [at that price], even in a 1,000 seater. Regardless, if you had the nice stalls seats at £120 and the upper circle at £50 it would feel more accessible, wouldn’t it?
We are not fans of not being able to make a decent number of really good seats available to people who can’t afford it. And our way of doing it – which is different – is to do that on Mondays and Tuesdays. And the downside of that is, we have to somehow make that up elsewhere in the week. It’s not ideal, but that is our way around it. Looking at sales tonight [Friday, June 14], the show is sold out on the first two levels and there’s lots of availability on the upper circle – wouldn’t you make more money if those seats were cheaper?
Well, firstly, we’ve been playing at 95% [capacity] since the beginning. We don’t change the prices according to where we are in the cycle of the year. It’s pretty hard to sell the last few seats, not least because some of them are standing. And also we actually like people to be able to buy seats on the day, so that’s a separate thing. Our top price is £89.50 and most musicals have top prices of north of £100. We would love to have another 150 seats and do what you’re talking about. But we don’t. And we prefer the fact people can actually pay £39.50 on Mondays and get a seat in the stalls. So we’ve deliberately taken a position in a theatre that, to be frank, hasn’t got quite enough seats for us. I think what’s causing bad feeling about it is that while it is laudable that there are no £125 seats, somebody on a low budget could only see it on a Saturday if they won the £25 lottery, drawn every two weeks, which means less well off people can’t plan to see it…
You sound a bit annoyed about it, but basically what I’m finding is that people like the things that we’re doing that are positive, right? Like holding a lottery at £25. Like keeping Mondays at £39.50. I have people calling me going: ‘Why don’t you put your Mondays up?’ I have deliberately wanted to keep that to keep it accessible. I’m more interested than annoyed. But in 15 years, I have never seen a West End price structure like this one.
You’re right. There are ups and downs. Say you get a £15 seat to Les Misérables, you’re probably sat behind a pillar or something, but there is a reliable entry point if you’re on a budget and want to book in advance for a Saturday night.
Well, if you want to see it on a Saturday night I agree with you, but I go back to the fact that we’ve only got 427 seats in total and we do our lottery. So even though we could often sell Saturday nights completely at the full price, right to the back of the upper circle, we deliberately include lottery seats on a Saturday. And they’re not just in the upper circle. If we were managing it for optics, we would have the back two rows of the upper circle, like you say, available for £20 or whatever it is, and no one would complain, right? Probably not! You’re booking at the Fortune for quite a long time, but if you did move to a larger house, do you think you’d look at a more conventional pricing structure?
At one point we hoped that we would go to the Trafalgar. But even if we’d gone there, what we wouldn’t have done is done that thing where you go and sit in the stalls and one seat is priced at X, and the other one next to it is priced at Y. I think that’s bollocks. I wanted to ask about the expansion of the ballot. Recently, Monday tickets were balloted, but now you have to enter a ballot to buy advance seats for five out of the week’s eight shows when there’s a new sales period: again, that is highly unusual, what’s the thinking?
Well, we wanted to make sure that everyone had a chance on Monday seats, which were white hot and still are white hot. But we have a group rate every day, which most shows certainly don’t do. If you bring 30 people on a Monday, you pay £19.50 a ticket. If you bring 30 people on a Saturday, you pay £69.50. Our problem is that there are people online who bundle those seats, and then they sell them for what appears to be a discount, but it’s actually a markup. So we did it to avoid that. Okay, that’s not an angle I’d thought of.
I knew we were having the chat, and I found a [secondary] ticket online on sale for this weekend for £5,600 in the stalls. I mean, the same site also had them for £200. Is there anything else you’d like to add?
We actually are trying to run the show as accessible as we can make it. We’re not using £200 tickets and we’re doing the best we can. It’s really hard to keep everybody happy. Who let this idiot be interviewed? He’s making his show look worse. Someone get him some PR training.
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Post by Matt on Jun 19, 2024 21:35:49 GMT
That interview has annoyed me. It’s completely tone deaf and arrogant.
Surely they’d have a much better chance of moving theatres now? I know it’s probably availability stopping it, but surely someone would want to snap up the multi Olivier winning, “best reviewed show in west end history”?
I would have liked the interviewer to push more on the top circle seats and how restrictive they are, because their only justification is it’s fair to keep all prices the same. When I go to the theatre I NEVER ask the person next to me how much they paid. Mostly because I would definitely be the one who paid a lot less, but also because I’m not a dick and don’t want someone to feel bad. So why are they worried about person x and person y?
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Post by helenfrombath on Jun 19, 2024 21:42:35 GMT
Knowing how publicity works, and knowing that this would've had to have been approved by several people before publication makes me question whether or not it's even legitimate? Maybe it is a made up interview, put out by the marketing department to try to badly explain their ticket pricing?
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181 posts
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Post by caa on Jun 19, 2024 21:55:18 GMT
What is the logic behind having an £89.50 flat ticket price?
We’ve been backing the show since we saw it at the New Diorama and the journey from there to here is one that very few shows manage to make. When we were trying to get the show into the West End we were only offered one theatre and that theatre was the Fortune. And we love the Fortune. But the problem with the Fortune is it only has 427 seats in total and 12 standing tickets. And although there are five people on stage, there are 33 people in the company making those five people operate. So basically, we didn’t have a choice as to which theatre to go to. So, you have expensive tickets because in an ideal world you would have gone into a larger theatre?
Yes. If we could have gone to a small theatre, but bigger than the Fortune, that would have been our first choice, and it would also have been easier economically. The average price is £74.50, which isn’t high for the West End, but why are the less good seats the same price as the good seats? You could have the same average but price them in bands like other shows.
The logic is that we are not fans of shows where it’s like ‘tickets from £15’ or ‘tickets from £10’ but when it actually comes down to it there’s about four tickets [at that price], even in a 1,000 seater. Regardless, if you had the nice stalls seats at £120 and the upper circle at £50 it would feel more accessible, wouldn’t it?
We are not fans of not being able to make a decent number of really good seats available to people who can’t afford it. And our way of doing it – which is different – is to do that on Mondays and Tuesdays. And the downside of that is, we have to somehow make that up elsewhere in the week. It’s not ideal, but that is our way around it. What is the logic behind having an £89.50 flat ticket price?
We’ve been backing the show since we saw it at the New Diorama and the journey from there to here is one that very few shows manage to make. When we were trying to get the show into the West End we were only offered one theatre and that theatre was the Fortune. And we love the Fortune. But the problem with the Fortune is it only has 427 seats in total and 12 standing tickets. And although there are five people on stage, there are 33 people in the company making those five people operate. So basically, we didn’t have a choice as to which theatre to go to. So, you have expensive tickets because in an ideal world you would have gone into a larger theatre?
Yes. If we could have gone to a small theatre, but bigger than the Fortune, that would have been our first choice, and it would also have been easier economically. The average price is £74.50, which isn’t high for the West End, but why are the less good seats the same price as the good seats? You could have the same average but price them in bands like other shows.
The logic is that we are not fans of shows where it’s like ‘tickets from £15’ or ‘tickets from £10’ but when it actually comes down to it there’s about four tickets [at that price], even in a 1,000 seater. Regardless, if you had the nice stalls seats at £120 and the upper circle at £50 it would feel more accessible, wouldn’t it?
We are not fans of not being able to make a decent number of really good seats available to people who can’t afford it. And our way of doing it – which is different – is to do that on Mondays and Tuesdays. And the downside of that is, we have to somehow make that up elsewhere in the week. It’s not ideal, but that is our way around it. Looking at sales tonight [Friday, June 14], the show is sold out on the first two levels and there’s lots of availability on the upper circle – wouldn’t you make more money if those seats were cheaper?
Well, firstly, we’ve been playing at 95% [capacity] since the beginning. We don’t change the prices according to where we are in the cycle of the year. It’s pretty hard to sell the last few seats, not least because some of them are standing. And also we actually like people to be able to buy seats on the day, so that’s a separate thing. Our top price is £89.50 and most musicals have top prices of north of £100. We would love to have another 150 seats and do what you’re talking about. But we don’t. And we prefer the fact people can actually pay £39.50 on Mondays and get a seat in the stalls. So we’ve deliberately taken a position in a theatre that, to be frank, hasn’t got quite enough seats for us. I think what’s causing bad feeling about it is that while it is laudable that there are no £125 seats, somebody on a low budget could only see it on a Saturday if they won the £25 lottery, drawn every two weeks, which means less well off people can’t plan to see it…
You sound a bit annoyed about it, but basically what I’m finding is that people like the things that we’re doing that are positive, right? Like holding a lottery at £25. Like keeping Mondays at £39.50. I have people calling me going: ‘Why don’t you put your Mondays up?’ I have deliberately wanted to keep that to keep it accessible. I’m more interested than annoyed. But in 15 years, I have never seen a West End price structure like this one.
You’re right. There are ups and downs. Say you get a £15 seat to Les Misérables, you’re probably sat behind a pillar or something, but there is a reliable entry point if you’re on a budget and want to book in advance for a Saturday night.
Well, if you want to see it on a Saturday night I agree with you, but I go back to the fact that we’ve only got 427 seats in total and we do our lottery. So even though we could often sell Saturday nights completely at the full price, right to the back of the upper circle, we deliberately include lottery seats on a Saturday. And they’re not just in the upper circle. If we were managing it for optics, we would have the back two rows of the upper circle, like you say, available for £20 or whatever it is, and no one would complain, right? Probably not! You’re booking at the Fortune for quite a long time, but if you did move to a larger house, do you think you’d look at a more conventional pricing structure?
At one point we hoped that we would go to the Trafalgar. But even if we’d gone there, what we wouldn’t have done is done that thing where you go and sit in the stalls and one seat is priced at X, and the other one next to it is priced at Y. I think that’s bollocks. I wanted to ask about the expansion of the ballot. Recently, Monday tickets were balloted, but now you have to enter a ballot to buy advance seats for five out of the week’s eight shows when there’s a new sales period: again, that is highly unusual, what’s the thinking?
Well, we wanted to make sure that everyone had a chance on Monday seats, which were white hot and still are white hot. But we have a group rate every day, which most shows certainly don’t do. If you bring 30 people on a Monday, you pay £19.50 a ticket. If you bring 30 people on a Saturday, you pay £69.50. Our problem is that there are people online who bundle those seats, and then they sell them for what appears to be a discount, but it’s actually a markup. So we did it to avoid that. Okay, that’s not an angle I’d thought of.
I knew we were having the chat, and I found a [secondary] ticket online on sale for this weekend for £5,600 in the stalls. I mean, the same site also had them for £200. Is there anything else you’d like to add?
We actually are trying to run the show as accessible as we can make it. We’re not using £200 tickets and we’re doing the best we can. It’s really hard to keep everybody happy. Who let this idiot be interviewed? He’s making his show look worse. Someone get him some PR training. Its Jon Thoday managing director of Avalon
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Post by craigbowker on Jun 20, 2024 6:42:13 GMT
Knowing how publicity works, and knowing that this would've had to have been approved by several people before publication makes me question whether or not it's even legitimate? Maybe it is a made up interview, put out by the marketing department to try to badly explain their ticket pricing? It depends. It's actually considered bad form to show your sources the final piece before publication, and getting approval from sources before publication would be considered by most reputable outlets as a violation of journalistic integrity. What DOES happen is that they will sometimes call/email the source and read back some of their transcribed answers and say "is this accurate?" as in, did the subject/you actually say these words?
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Post by fiyerorocher on Jun 20, 2024 8:53:59 GMT
They really don't have any concept of the actual problem here. Also 'well we wanted a bigger theatre' is such nonsense - that show would drown in a bigger theatre. It suffered a little even going from off-west end/fringe venues into the Fortune. This is just Avalon getting on the defensive. They're pretty new to producing theatre and they want to establish themselves as legitimate by doing something different, except the thing they chose to do was stupid and now they're frantically trying to justify the unjustifiable and find ways to fix their mistake without just admitting they were wrong and adopting a normal and sensible pricing strategy. And those 'fixes' are also making things worse.
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1,380 posts
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Post by BVM on Jun 20, 2024 9:14:44 GMT
This may not go down well - but it is all getting rather Phan like here.
No fandom owns a show. No show that can sustain being a long runner in the West End depends on a fandom. (Yes I know they’ve played a bigger part than in most shows but at some point things inevitably move to mass market to sustain them).
Ultimately, to be a West End long runner, capitalist and market forces inevitably takeover.
I’d flip it round and say we should be happy that the cheap era happened. As it doesn’t for most shows.
(Obviously I understand the emotion involved if you are one of the fans that’s been there since the start. But kids grow up into messy adults!)
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184 posts
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Post by MoreLife on Jun 20, 2024 9:17:41 GMT
The whole discourse about the pricing policy at the Fortune theatre caught my attention (I blame Theatre Twitter!) and I want to thank Oobi for posting the interview from The Stage.
First of all, anyone who speaks on behalf of a production or any kind of institution and starts a reply with the words "You sound a bit annoyed about it, but [...]" raises a bit of a red flag... and could do with some PR training.
Secondly, it's clear they've done some maths and they probably have an Excel spreadsheet somewhere that shows that this policy allows them to make a bit more money than they would otherwise. However... the arguments they put forward to defend their choices are weak and sound a bit like those of politicians deflecting when they're asked an uncomfortable question.
In January 2023 I was in NYC and went to see the production of 'Merrily we roll along' that has subsequently become a Broadway hit and won Tony Awards, etc. It was on at the New York Theatre Workshop (NYTW), a venue that holds 198 seats, which at the time of booking were all priced equally at 149$. Whilst not 'cheap' in absolute terms, 149$ is (sadly!) almost cheap in the NYC theatre context, and I suspect that for the Hudson Theater run the same 149$ would have maybe got me a seat towards the very back of the stalls if I had booked very early... I have checked and they wouldn't get me in at all now that they're nearly sold out for the remaining performances.
The NYTW production ran for two months only, and had Jonathan Groff, Lindsay Mendez and Daniel Radcliffe leading a fairly large cast. For them to charge 149$ a seat - anywhere in a rather intimate space (I seem to recall it only goes as far back as row K) with great sightlines all around because there is only one level (think of it as a Donmar-like space but with no circle) - felt ok to me.
On the other hand, charging £89.50 (about 114$) for a seat at the far back of the Upper Circle to see a performance in an open-ended run of a show with no names in the cast to me feels... well, just greedy. No matter how hard they try to spin it as a way to compensate for the Monday performances.
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367 posts
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Post by Jonnyboy on Jun 20, 2024 10:22:28 GMT
Surely the bigger scandal is that, despite the huge range of merchandise, there is no magnet available?!!!
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Post by fiyerorocher on Jun 20, 2024 10:55:24 GMT
This may not go down well - but it is all getting rather Phan like here. No fandom owns a show. No show that can sustain being a long runner in the West End depends on a fandom. (Yes I know they’ve played a bigger part than in most shows but at some point things inevitably move to mass market to sustain them). Ultimately, to be a West End long runner, capitalist and market forces inevitably takeover. I’d flip it round and say we should be happy that the cheap era happened. As it doesn’t for most shows. (Obviously I understand the emotion involved if you are one of the fans that’s been there since the start. But kids grow up into messy adults!) I don't think it's really about the fandom?? It's about any potential audience, and the show itself. Decently priced tickets are now all but impossible to get, limiting access for anyone who can't pay £90 or need to make plans in advance to travel so can't rely on the lottery. And it's giving the show a terrible reputation, which is such a shame for the cast and the writers. I struggle to imagine this being what they would want. For a show that prides itself on starting from the bottom and working their way up to the West End based on the sheer excellent of the material and performances, it's awful to see it become so inaccessible to all but those with plenty of disposable income to spare. I don't believe this is the best way, economically, to run a show, or they wouldn't be the first to try it. It's all just a bit of a mess at this point, with every new development more baffling than the last. If you're being interviewed about how bad your ticketing system is, there is clearly a problem. And it's hardly the only time we've seen Avalon refuse to back down after a poor decision. That US survey was a terrible idea and cannot have endeared them to any potential US investors, and yet they still did a follow up email promoting it as a success...
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Post by ladidah on Jun 20, 2024 11:02:46 GMT
Surely the bigger scandal is that, despite the huge range of merchandise, there is no magnet available?!!! I want a pin badge!
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Post by BVM on Jun 20, 2024 11:10:33 GMT
This may not go down well - but it is all getting rather Phan like here. No fandom owns a show. No show that can sustain being a long runner in the West End depends on a fandom. (Yes I know they’ve played a bigger part than in most shows but at some point things inevitably move to mass market to sustain them). Ultimately, to be a West End long runner, capitalist and market forces inevitably takeover. I’d flip it round and say we should be happy that the cheap era happened. As it doesn’t for most shows. (Obviously I understand the emotion involved if you are one of the fans that’s been there since the start. But kids grow up into messy adults!) I don't think it's really about the fandom?? It's about any potential audience, and the show itself. Decently priced tickets are now all but impossible to get, limiting access for anyone who can't pay £90 or need to make plans in advance to travel so can't rely on the lottery. And it's giving the show a terrible reputation, which is such a shame for the cast and the writers. I struggle to imagine this being what they would want. For a show that prides itself on starting from the bottom and working their way up to the West End based on the sheer excellent of the material and performances, it's awful to see it become so inaccessible to all but those with plenty of disposable income to spare. I don't believe this is the best way, economically, to run a show, or they wouldn't be the first to try it. It's all just a bit of a mess at this point, with every new development more baffling than the last. If you're being interviewed about how bad your ticketing system is, there is clearly a problem. And it's hardly the only time we've seen Avalon refuse to back down after a poor decision. That US survey was a terrible idea and cannot have endeared them to any potential US investors, and yet they still did a follow up email promoting it as a success... That’s kinda my point though. All this furore is in the echo chamber of the fandom and the theatre world. Joe Public (and the market they are now targeting) doesn’t have a clue. I do think it’s all part of the painful transition to mass market.
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Post by Jon on Jun 20, 2024 12:00:00 GMT
This may not go down well - but it is all getting rather Phan like here. No fandom owns a show. No show that can sustain being a long runner in the West End depends on a fandom. (Yes I know they’ve played a bigger part than in most shows but at some point things inevitably move to mass market to sustain them). Ultimately, to be a West End long runner, capitalist and market forces inevitably takeover. I’d flip it round and say we should be happy that the cheap era happened. As it doesn’t for most shows. (Obviously I understand the emotion involved if you are one of the fans that’s been there since the start. But kids grow up into messy adults!) Not to mention, it's a business, I don't agree with their pricing strategy because there must be a way to make it affordable and also make money but at the same time, if people are paying for it at those prices, then it's clearly working.
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Post by fiyerorocher on Jun 20, 2024 12:05:10 GMT
I don't think it's really about the fandom?? It's about any potential audience, and the show itself. Decently priced tickets are now all but impossible to get, limiting access for anyone who can't pay £90 or need to make plans in advance to travel so can't rely on the lottery. And it's giving the show a terrible reputation, which is such a shame for the cast and the writers. I struggle to imagine this being what they would want. For a show that prides itself on starting from the bottom and working their way up to the West End based on the sheer excellent of the material and performances, it's awful to see it become so inaccessible to all but those with plenty of disposable income to spare. I don't believe this is the best way, economically, to run a show, or they wouldn't be the first to try it. It's all just a bit of a mess at this point, with every new development more baffling than the last. If you're being interviewed about how bad your ticketing system is, there is clearly a problem. And it's hardly the only time we've seen Avalon refuse to back down after a poor decision. That US survey was a terrible idea and cannot have endeared them to any potential US investors, and yet they still did a follow up email promoting it as a success... That’s kinda my point though. All this furore is in the echo chamber of the fandom and the theatre world. Joe Public (and the market they are now targeting) doesn’t have a clue. I do think it’s all part of the painful transition to mass market. They must have a clue though, when they try to book a ticket and find nothing for less than £90 Wednesday onwards (as is the case for the latest batch of tickets released). That's going to price a lot of people out. And sure they can go and see pretty much any other show on the west end, because they're all far more sensibly priced, but it's going to mean the people who can afford to see Mincemeat are the very people who the show suggests perhaps it should not all be about. Honestly the fans haven't suffered that much. They all share lottery codes amongst each other and can go pretty much as much as they like for £25 a ticket. It's the general public who are being priced out and confused by the ridiculous new ballots. Which is a real shame.
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Post by BVM on Jun 20, 2024 12:17:11 GMT
That’s kinda my point though. All this furore is in the echo chamber of the fandom and the theatre world. Joe Public (and the market they are now targeting) doesn’t have a clue. I do think it’s all part of the painful transition to mass market. They must have a clue though, when they try to book a ticket and find nothing for less than £90 Wednesday onwards (as is the case for the latest batch of tickets released). That's going to price a lot of people out. And sure they can go and see pretty much any other show on the west end, because they're all far more sensibly priced, but it's going to mean the people who can afford to see Mincemeat are the very people who the show suggests perhaps it should not all be about. Honestly the fans haven't suffered that much. They all share lottery codes amongst each other and can go pretty much as much as they like for £25 a ticket. It's the general public who are being priced out and confused by the ridiculous new ballots. Which is a real shame. Lol re the fans and the codes. Didn’t know that but can totally imagine it. Yeah I do totally take your points here. It’s become like all shows though. They charge what they can get. If sales fall off, prices will come down. No more a fan of this model than the next man but it’s just how theatres work 🤷🏻♂️
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Post by ceebee on Jun 20, 2024 12:28:06 GMT
Operation Golden Goose.
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Post by fiyerorocher on Jun 20, 2024 12:32:38 GMT
They must have a clue though, when they try to book a ticket and find nothing for less than £90 Wednesday onwards (as is the case for the latest batch of tickets released). That's going to price a lot of people out. And sure they can go and see pretty much any other show on the west end, because they're all far more sensibly priced, but it's going to mean the people who can afford to see Mincemeat are the very people who the show suggests perhaps it should not all be about. Honestly the fans haven't suffered that much. They all share lottery codes amongst each other and can go pretty much as much as they like for £25 a ticket. It's the general public who are being priced out and confused by the ridiculous new ballots. Which is a real shame. Lol re the fans and the codes. Didn’t know that but can totally imagine it. Yeah I do totally take your points here. It’s become like all shows though. They charge what they can get. If sales fall off, prices will come down. No more a fan of this model than the next man but it’s just how theatres work 🤷🏻♂️ I don't think it has become like all shows. Most shows in the West End, you can see for roughly £25. The view might not be great, but there are tickets available at this price point and while they do go up over time, it's nothing compared to this. This has truly priced people out in a way that I've known very few other shows to ever do to this extent. They were justifying the £90 Saturday tickets at the start by saying it allowed them to keep the cheaper dates earlier in the week. Now those 'cheaper dates' are all being put up too. They're just in it to make as much money as possible which, sure, might be how commercial theatre works, but I've never seen a production company be this blatantly obvious about only being in it for the money. At least pretend you care about the accessibility of theatre...
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Post by BVM on Jun 20, 2024 12:39:32 GMT
Yeah I see what you mean. But if other places could charge more than 25 quid they would. Everything is maximally priced until seat shifting stops. Sadly there’s not many examples of truly altruistic accessibility pricing in commercial theatre.
(They may also be thinking about how may work on Broadway where no doubt every ticket would have to be 400 dollars lol).
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