8,152 posts
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Post by alece10 on Jun 6, 2019 20:14:56 GMT
Waiting for Hugh now. Top tip if you have an American Express credit card and are going to the O2 - if you pop to guest services under the stairs and ask for an Amex lounge pass (you need a ticket and an Amex card to show them) you get to use the much shorter VIP security line and chill in the lounge before the show. They had a band playing in there, and you can get a free drink voucher from the entry desk by flashing your credit card again. I was escorted through the Amex lounge to my seat on Sunday. It looked really nice and had a great atmosphere. They also had a reserved seating area just behind me and were wearing lanyards. Some kind of Amex VIP pass I guess. Oh and the toilets were much nicer than the normal ones. The bar was open after as well so you could have a drink and wait for the crowds to die down.
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Post by hannechalk on Jun 6, 2019 21:12:01 GMT
Taron Egerton is on stage tonight with Hugh, I saw on Instagram.
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Post by xanady on Jun 6, 2019 23:13:42 GMT
Friend of mine took his daughter to see this expecting The Greatest Showman and both were somewhat underwhelmed with all the talk and so many ‘unknown’ songs.Not sure how this was originally marketed but my friend said he felt mis-led??
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Post by Deleted on Jun 6, 2019 23:43:12 GMT
Friend of mine took his daughter to see this expecting The Greatest Showman and both were somewhat underwhelmed with all the talk and so many ‘unknown’ songs.Not sure how this was originally marketed but my friend said he felt mis-led?? You could only feel misled if you didn't bother to read anything about the show before you booked. I suspect your friends were not alone.
I was there tonight and thought it was very good. We had great seats close to the stage and got some great pictures and video, but it was all very staged and scripted.
Obviously there were a few songs from The Greatest Showman, including Keala Settle doing This Is Me, and it was those songs that got the biggest reaction. There were quite a few young kids dotted around us and i suspect they could only have been there for songs from the film.
For me there were a few odd choices. Soliliquy from Carousel, Valjeans Soliliquy and the aboriginal section all lost the crowd and i was surprised and grateful that he didnt do Bring Him Home.
Taron Egerton was there and did Your Song, but i wasnt as impressed as i was back when he was in the Stephen Sondheim performer of The Year competition a few years back.
My personal highlight was the Peter Allen section which opened Act 2, mainly because i saw the show and know the score well, but also because Arthurs Theme and Dont Cry Out Loud are great sngs.
There was also You Will Be Found from Dear Evan Hanson, but i was the only person near us singing it. No surprise there. And Hugh said that the show opens here next month.... er... no it doesn't.
Overall a good slick show, but something not so scripted would have worked better for me, as he definitely has the talent and charisma to be more spontaneous.
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4,155 posts
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Post by kathryn on Jun 6, 2019 23:55:38 GMT
I really loved seeing Taron do Your Song - the audience lapped it up - and the aboriginal section I thought actually worked very well in the huge, echoey space that is the O2. But I have seen that before so I guess the extra familiarity with the unusual musical style helped.
No matter how good the show is, that place is *still* a barn that lacks atmosphere!
As he said himself, there was some musical theatre 101 in there - people may have gone for The Greatest Showman but why not expose them to a wider range of musicals?
The show isn’t called The Greatest Showman, it’s called The Man, The Music, The Show. It’s about Hugh and his career. I don’t know how anyone could miss that in the advertising.
I loved the Peter Allen section. The bits that fell flat for me were near the beginning - the song to his wife and the number from Dear Evan Hansen.
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4,155 posts
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Post by kathryn on Jun 7, 2019 10:26:06 GMT
Someone put Taron’s whole song on YouTube
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7,175 posts
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Post by Jon on Jun 8, 2019 0:59:20 GMT
Saw the final night at the O2 and have to say Hugh knocked it out of the park, great mix of songs he’s known for like The Boy from Oz and Greatest Showman to things like the movie musical medley. Keala Settle was absolutely brilliant as well.
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Post by xanady on Jun 8, 2019 13:47:38 GMT
My friend saw the tour with his daughter and said it was like watching paint dry lol..you can’t please all the people all the time.
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8,152 posts
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Post by alece10 on Jun 8, 2019 15:39:34 GMT
My friend saw the tour with his daughter and said it was like watching paint dry lol..you can’t please all the people all the time. Blimey what kind of life to they lead if that's what the thought of the show. They must spend all their time assailing, jumping out of planes or maybe they are super heroes 😀
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Post by xanady on Jun 8, 2019 16:24:57 GMT
His name is Clark and he comes from Kent.
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Post by missthelma on Jun 8, 2019 19:11:32 GMT
I am still basking in the afterglow of last night. (No, not that kind although obviously had Hugh asked I would have felt obliged)
I thought it was a tremendous show, yes scripted to the Nth degree and highly polished although I think there was a bit more spontaneity last night being the final date in London. His voice showed a little strain at times but frankly if I even attempted half of what he was doing I would be attached to a ventilator today so good on him, and he danced, entertained, interacted and mostly sang up a storm. We had no special guest last night unless the two women in the Les Mis section were special. I loved the Peter Allen bit too, brought back happy memories of seeing The Boy From Oz, and thought the Aboriginal section was very moving. If anything I would have preferred less Greatest Showman songs, and maybe something from Oklahoma or The Music Man even. If people were bored then I would despair of their ability to enjoy anything, I can certainly see it may not be people's cup of tea but bored?
My only disappointment was what may possibly be the most insipid gospel choir in the history of the universe. If you're gonna bring out a gospel choir they need to be raising the roof honey and bringing the joy. This lot were like a gathering of embarrassed relatives singing a hymn at a wedding of a cousin they don't like. Utterly pitiful.
I have massive issues with axs tickets however and am composing a complaint letter. We had VIP tickets and the promoters should be ashamed of their performance having stung people for a lot of money. There was a LOT of anger last night from people, even fury, and had Hugh Jackman not been damn good I think there might have been a riot from some of us. Anyway none of it is down to him as he doesn't fix prices (I don't think) so will stick with the happy memories
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Post by missthelma on Jun 9, 2019 10:20:57 GMT
Don't mind at all, but I'll pop it in a message until I've sent my letter.
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Post by hannechalk on Jun 16, 2019 10:42:44 GMT
Friend of mine took his daughter to see this expecting The Greatest Showman and both were somewhat underwhelmed with all the talk and so many ‘unknown’ songs.Not sure how this was originally marketed but my friend said he felt mis-led?? It was never marketed as being a stage-version of The Greatest Showman, or all songs from the movie. Maybe they read 'The man. The music. The show.' wrong, and assumed 'the show' referred to the movie somehow. I've always known it would be a collection of songs from shows and movies he did, and songs which mean a lot to him.
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Post by missthelma on Jun 25, 2019 12:27:51 GMT
AXS rejected my complaint and referred me to two other promotion companies who were 'responsible' for the VIP packages. One of them has not seen fit to respond, the other AEG replied with 'Tough' and 'F*** off' essentially. Apparently I was made aware of exactly what I would be getting and that's what I got. If I don't like it, not their problem.
I really don't know if I have the energy to pursue it any further, companies nowadays seem determined to never acknowledge fault or subsequent disappointment from consumers and it's like banging your head against a brick wall.
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4,361 posts
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Post by shady23 on Jun 25, 2019 21:03:54 GMT
Axs did some of the vip tickets for the recent Take That tour. There were lots of complaints. People paid two hundred pounds but found that they were very far left or very far right to the point they couldn't actually see much at all. Others paid a lot of money for block a row a seats believing they were going to be at the front but then turned up and found another block had been added in front that was not on the seating plan and those in front paid less.
Essentially, there was no consistency in the responses to fan complaints. Some were offered complimentary tickets to stadium shows later in the tours. Others had no response at all.
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471 posts
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Post by mistressjojo on Jul 26, 2019 23:48:48 GMT
Finally seeing Huge this Friday. Feels like years since everyone here had their turn. Looking forward to the show. Not so much to the getting home afterwards. 😟
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Post by jaqs on Jul 27, 2019 21:06:29 GMT
Saw the show again in Las Vegas a week or so ago. Was pretty much the same as London, no special guests so Jenna lee James sang This is me and it didn’t get the big ovation like at the o2. The Les Mis section went down really well though and the Aboriginal section got a huge reaction, a man a few seats down from me got super animated during it and he’d not seemed to be enjoying himself before, it was clear his wife was the big fan. Hugh’s voice sounded better than in London, diction was a lot clearer in some numbers. It was a really good night, and I was glad I got to go again.
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471 posts
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Post by mistressjojo on Aug 3, 2019 0:41:50 GMT
Well this was a lot of fun. First night in Sydney and he was playing up on that home ground advantage. Essentially it's the same show he played here a few years ago, just now with added Greatest Showman bits (and Keala Settle). Some of it felt a bit rushed, and I think I'd have preferred something from Oklahoma and Sunset Boulevard over the extended tap sequence, but still all good. Even when he was laughing so much he accidentally spat on the stage, then laugh snorted then swore!
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Post by missthelma on Aug 7, 2019 12:07:57 GMT
I still have a bitter taste in my mouth from the experience with the AXS/AEG/Whoever which is a real shame as the show was spectacular.
The eventual response after much pestering remained 'tough'. Apparently I knew what I was getting and therefore cannot complain. To a degree I can see the point as I received what I paid for and it was as described. The fact that the 'package' value was at a stretch £10, and the 'package' charge was £125 above the face value of the ticket seems to be irrelevant.
Sadly it has soured me on promoters and it will take something spectacular for me to even consider such an outlay in the future.
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4,155 posts
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Post by kathryn on Aug 7, 2019 13:31:10 GMT
It's 'dynamic pricing' by another name, in my opinion - the normal seats sell out first and the packages last.
It's a way of increasing the price of less-good seats that will normally be sold later without having to obviously change the price point, making it a different 'product' by adding some low-value merch.
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4,361 posts
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Post by shady23 on Aug 7, 2019 16:50:05 GMT
I can imagine, missthelma. Something I noticed with "Elton John" at the same venue, they are doing a massive range of packages around £300 upwards. What really worried me was that most of the packages were in seats way inferior to the one I bought at less than half that price. I mean, there are going to be some shocked people who paid £350 to sit in level 4, thinking it is close to the stage. It sort of is... looking down from 100ft above it... and I'm keeping my trap shut that those on row D in front of me, and row R way behind where I'm sitting are paying an extra £400 or so just for a plastic bag and "art print" to go with their ticket. Yes and there were also packages where you could have a photo onstage with Eltons piano for five hundred pounds. For that price you'd think Elton would be there too but, no.
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Post by floorshow on Aug 9, 2019 11:06:21 GMT
We looked at tickets for Reg, ticket prices are hitting the point where we'd rather not go than pay over the odds. The only VIP ones we'd consider would be some kind of golden circle but even they should really be first come/first served on the day. On more than one occasion, we've chosen to see the same act overseas and including the flight costs it has been cheaper than the London premium. Björk tickets went on sale this week, £100+ for standing at the O2 - another one we let go. There's loads of other great stuff available
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4,155 posts
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Post by kathryn on Aug 9, 2019 13:37:18 GMT
Being fair, Reg does have a husband and two kids to support, so give a billionaire a break, surely? Reg is only a multi-millionaire, not a billionaire. He has Issues with shopping! (To be fair, he does donate a chunk of money to charity each year. Way more than most rock/pop stars do. And he has never buggered off to a tax haven. Doubtless he could be a billionaire by now if he wanted, and did what some of his mates do.)
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5,156 posts
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Post by TallPaul on Aug 9, 2019 16:29:12 GMT
He's comfortable, of that there's no doubt, but Elton would be considerably richer if he hadn't signed such bad contracts in the early days.
Although it was never his money in a personal capacity, the Elton John Aids Foundation has raised something like $400 milion to date.
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Post by floorshow on Aug 9, 2019 19:55:45 GMT
He's comfortable, of that there's no doubt, but Elton would be considerably richer if he hadn't signed such bad contracts in the early days. Although it was never his money in a personal capacity, the Elton John Aids Foundation has raised something like $400 milion to date. Bernie must get a decent whack of the publishing for the classics.
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