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Post by Jon on Jun 29, 2019 1:11:26 GMT
Inspired by a technical hitch that happened during A Midsummer's Night Dream at the Bridge tonight, what are your moments when things go wrong during a performance.
The one that comes to mind is Jim Norton coming off ill during a performance of Hamlet at the Barbican which delayed the show by 30 minutes, Lyndsey Turner came on to assure us he was okay and that his understudy Nigel Carrington would go on but would have a script in hand as he wasn't fully rehearsed which didn't really affect his performance.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 29, 2019 10:43:23 GMT
The theatre Boxes that move on and off to form the Opera House stage in The Phantom of the Opera are masked off with huge black serge drapes when they're off stage. Sometimes the boxes have been known to catch on the drapes on their way on causing much visual disturbance and stopping the boxes from moving on, or halting them completely half on/half off. The drapes that reveal the proscenium during the Overture also get snagged and stuck fairly regularly, so much so that's almost part of the show now.
We'll try not to mention too much about Groundhog Day's run on Broadway that encountered so many show stops they probably had more shows with issues than hitch-free performances. Was it the first preview where the revolve(s) stopped working to the point, they eventually decided to continue with just a concert version, un-staged. Would love to read the SMs show reports for that run - it's probably in chronicles.
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1,933 posts
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Post by LaLuPone on Jun 29, 2019 11:25:06 GMT
This has been mentioned on the Waitress thread a few times but probably the worse mishap I’ve seen on stage was during my first trip there. In the first diner scene where Jenna is supposed to give Earl a piece of pie, whoever was suppsoed to set it on the piano for KMP to pick up forgot to do so. The poor girl basically fell apart, she was mumbling away and franticaly looking from side to side and then just sort of aimlessly wondering around the stage. In the end she decided to tell us “I can’t do this without the pie”, still no idea if she was saying that as Jenna or as Kat! In the end Laura Baldwin came to the rescue saying “You want pie. I’ll get you pie” and went into the wings to get some. We then had Earl saying “this is the worst damn diner I ever been to” and others making gags about the mishap, including Old Joe coming on suddenly saying “look I got pie I got pie”. The whole scene kind of fell to bits but it was amusing to see!
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528 posts
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Post by vabbian on Jun 29, 2019 11:33:20 GMT
I saw Man Vs Superman with Ralph Fiennes at NT. There was a little cabinet/table with glasses/decanters on it that came up to the stage from below.
The lift(?) bringing it up to the stage kinda violently snapped into position. And all the glasses and stuff just shattered/flew across the stage a bit. Lots of broken glass everywhere.
Actors were like D: and there was a curtain call for 5 mins. 😅
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528 posts
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Post by vabbian on Jun 29, 2019 11:35:34 GMT
Also, in Love Never Dies, there is a bar scene where the phantom (Ramin) is disguised as the bar man. Raoul is at the bar. The phantom rips off something and reveals himself to Raoul as a surprise.
One woman in the audience was so SHOOK at the reveal that she screamed and everyone including Ramin started laughing.
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Post by Dawnstar on Jun 29, 2019 11:45:20 GMT
I've seen a Goes Wrong show properly Going Wrong, when Dave Hearn dislocated his shoulder in the middle of Act 1 of The Play That Goes Wrong back in March 2019. They had to stop the show but most of the audience thought that it was part of the show. Being the original cast, they did style it out pretty brilliantly. Rob Falconer was Max u/s as well as playing Trevor so he had to swap roles but he still played it as Trevor, so for the only time ever we got Cecil Haversham done with a Norther accent rather than RP. Len Cook took over as Trevor but playing him as his stagehand characer Phil. Henry Shields did a speech in character to explain this. Much as seeing someone getting injured isn't a good thing, the way they worked round it made it one of the best Mischief performances I've ever seen.
Also a couple of good ones from The Comedy About A Bank Robbery. Once with the original cast the wall scene had to be cancelled at the very last minute as the bungee cord that Warren uses broke. Greg Tannahil, Henry Shields, Dave Hearn Charlie Russell had already started the vent scene when they're all lined up across the front stage so they improvised among themselves for a bit before evidently getting signalled from the wings to get off & the show proceded minus a scene. Goodness knows what those seeing it for the first time made of the rest of the plot. The second TCAABR one was when Laurence Pears, playing Cooper, injured his arm when doing Cooper's death drop & had to be sent to hospital to be stitched up. Therefore Mike Bodie had to do Cooper's final brief appearance but didn't do it as Cooper, instead changing the line to "This is Simon, and Deborah, and Cooper's over there". Improvisors are the best people for getting round show problems!
The worst non-Mischief one I've seen was in Lend Me A Tenor (the musical rather than the play). There was a scene where Michael Matus tossed Damien Humbley a bottle of wine. At one performance they got their timing/positioning off so Damien dropped it, the bottle smashed (I was sitting front row & could feel the force of the smash) & Damien fell on top of it. It quickly became apparent that it wasn't safety glass but real glass, as through the rest of the scene his shirt sleeves got increasingly bloodstained. I was expecting the show to be stopped & an understudy take over but he kept going, got temporarily patched up the next time he was off stage & managed to finish the show before being taken to hospital to be patched up properly. Amazing dedication.
By comparison with the above incidents, the various show stops I've seen over the years for technical reasons have all been pretty dull!
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1,582 posts
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Post by anita on Jun 29, 2019 13:29:56 GMT
Seen quite a few go wrong. "Whistle Down the Wind" split stage jammed as it was coming down for "Cold". Curtain came down & someone said trying to fix. Lots of loud hammering for 20 mins. " Chitty" cancelled as car wouldn't fly after telling us to go away & come back in half an hour. "Full Monty" the musical piece of scenery jammed. "Miss Saigon" bed jammed. I've told the worse before - Luck Mervil falling from a beam high above the stage in "Notre Dame de Paris" when his safety harness broke or failed. Curtain down , then continued with understudy playing the role.
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1,582 posts
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Post by anita on Jun 29, 2019 13:31:26 GMT
Also - witches didn't fly in "Witches of Eastwick".
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Post by Steffi on Jun 29, 2019 14:43:46 GMT
Also, in Love Never Dies, there is a bar scene where the phantom (Ramin) is disguised as the bar man. Raoul is at the bar. The phantom rips off something and reveals himself to Raoul as a surprise. One woman in the audience was so SHOOK at the reveal that she screamed and everyone including Ramin started laughing. I was at that performance (no, I wasn’t the woman who screamed)!
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Post by marob on Jun 29, 2019 17:12:41 GMT
Sweet Charity at the Royal Exchange used mirrors descending from the ceiling for the nightclub setting, but one of the mirrors got stuck. One of the women had to mime putting on makeup and getting ready in a mirror that wasn't there. Halfway through the scene the show was stopped to try to free the mirror, but they couldn't so carried on without using the flies. All this was during the song Big Spender. It's the only mistake I've seen that has ever annoyed me.
Another time the set went a bit wrong was Merrily We Roll Along at Theatr Clwyd. There was a circular bench wheeled on, which musn't have had the brakes on properly because it started slowly rolling toward the front row, and got quite far before Simon Thomas (Franklin) noticed, and went chasing after it, shouting "whoa!" as he grabbed it.
In The Pajama Game at the Shaftesbury Theatre, there was a scene where Joanna Ridings was chopping something with a knife, then left Michael Xavier alone on stage. The knife fell off the counter and got stuck in the stage right in front of Michael Xavier's foot with a really loud twanging sound. He looked out at the audience and wiped his brow with a "phew". I was never quite sure if that was a mistake or part of the show though. Did it happen any other time?
I had a similar feeling of not knowing if something was intentional or not at Fiddler on the Roof at the Everyman in Liverpool. It was done in the round so the cast were using the same aisles as the audience. As Dean Nolan was entering down the steps just to my left he fell flat on the floor. (I saw it a second time and he did it then too, so obviously part of the show.) I think it was supposed to show the character as clumsy. It was a horrible moment though because people think he's really hurt. I was close though so I could sort of make out that he had elbow pads on. But what made me question that the first time was the drops of blood appearing on the sleeve of his shirt.
In a weird way I kind of enjoy it when an actor breaks character. I remember seeing Billy Liar at the Royal Exchange one afternoon and there was a guy in the audience who was laughing at everything with a really loud "haaaaaaaar haaaaaaaar haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!" And just for a second or two Harry McEntire got distracted and broke out in this huge grin. He recovered straight away, but it's always made me really like him. (Man with the booming laugh was also heard at Rough Crossing a few months back. It wasn't hard to hear him as he was pretty much the only person laughing for most of it.)
During The Ruling Class, when James McAvoy was dressed as a monk and facing the audience, someone's phone went off. He said "are you the second coming? Because this happened last night too."
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Post by joem on Jun 29, 2019 19:01:12 GMT
I remember the great Richard Harris in Camelot, falling on a slippery stage and letting out a most unArthurian curse.
Also the former Speaker Bernard Weatherill (himself later one of the main characters in James Graham's "This House") sitting on a box near the stage watching either Phantom or Les Mis (I forget which) receiving a mighty whack from the stage curtain when it opened.
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Post by Dawnstar on Jun 29, 2019 20:15:32 GMT
In The Pajama Game at the Shaftesbury Theatre, there was a scene where Joanna Ridings was chopping something with a knife, then left Michael Xavier alone on stage. The knife fell off the counter and got stuck in the stage right in front of Michael Xavier's foot with a really loud twanging sound. He looked out at the audience and wiped his brow with a "phew". I was never quite sure if that was a mistake or part of the show though. Did it happen any other time?
I saw the production twice & don't recall that happening either time.
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Post by crabtree on Jun 29, 2019 21:42:53 GMT
re the royal exchange Sweet charity mirror scene, I saw it early on and the mirrors were very effective, but took a friend later in the run and there was no flying at all - none since the incident referred to. something had gone seriously wrong with the flying.
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Post by mistressjojo on Jun 30, 2019 0:59:12 GMT
I remember Lucy Briers taking a rather spectacular slide in Top Girls at Trafalgar Studios. It was after the food fight when they get up to leave, except Pope Joan's legs went skywards! She did land with a thud but I don't think any serious damage done.
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Post by jess173 on Jun 30, 2019 9:44:20 GMT
The worst one for me was the Wicked Show that was cancelled before it even started because the computer malfunctioned and they couldn’t move the set at all.
Once I saw a show of Dance of the Vampires in Germany when lightening struck the theatre and damaged the electrics of the soundboard. That wasn’t funny either.
On the other hand at another show of Dance of the Vampires one of the actors lost his wig in a big dance break. It was kicked awkwardly around the stage by the others while he continued in his wig cap. They all avoided looking at each other so hard but you could see them almost crying from suppressed laughter... The audience was in stitches.
I also saw Ghost on Broadway when the set malfunctioned and they had to stop the show for quite a while. They sent out Richard Fleeshman with a guitar to sing songs with the audience while they fixed it.
And I had a show stop at Company last year when a set piece didn’t come on stage or didn’t move off, not sure, it was my first time seeing the show. Some stage worker came on stage and ushered Rosalie off. They fixed it after 10 minutes or so.
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Post by richey on Jun 30, 2019 20:28:52 GMT
Billy Elliot where the screen that showed the newsreel failed to fall properly at the start and was draped over half the stage and the little kid who was watching it. Show had to be restarted. Priscilla at the Palace early in the run when the bus refused to work. We were kept outside for ages then when they let us in explained they were going to work around it and we got a full refund too. Similarly Joseph at the Adelphi. Act 2 late starting and frantic activity around auditorium then announcement that the set wasn't working so act 2 would be performed concert style. Again a full refund!
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Post by daisy24601 on Jun 30, 2019 22:54:10 GMT
Show stop at Curious Incident etc. when someone in the audience was taken ill. When they continued, the actor playing the dad hadn't come back and the two others in the scene realised when they turned for his reaction and realised he wasn't there! They said "we haven't got dad!" Then he came running on and they restarted.
A few other minor ones, my favourite being when Matt Cardle as Huey in Memphis had a shoe come off during the song Someday, which flew into the radio booth, which we were supposed to believe had a window. Everyone on stage was struggling not to laugh.
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Post by vabbian on Jul 1, 2019 16:22:58 GMT
Oh another one
At Company, Jennifer Saayeng covered for Rosalie Craig and sang every note of Being Alive off-key
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Post by HereForTheatre on Jul 1, 2019 17:16:22 GMT
Not a fan of her saayenging then.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 3, 2019 10:31:44 GMT
Considering the large amount of plays/musicals I've seen over the last 20 plus years, very few spring to mind. I'll discount Pantos as often "deliberate" mistakes are put in.
Only once have I seen a show need to be stopped and an Understudy bought on that was during a performance of Hay Fever when Stephanie Beacham had a migraine which suddenly got worse. Stephanie had come to her line and had put her hand up and said something like "Sorry, I've got a migraine which has just got worse, I cannot really carry on and think it's better if the understudy took over". She was clearly distressed and one of the male leads stepped in and said to the audience "Sorry again, we'll need to reset". The lady covering Stephanie was playing a servant so she had to change costumes and the understudy covering the ensemble prepared. The Company Manager came out and explained what was happening, who was changing roles and that the show would pick up at a suitable place just prior to where Stephanie had had to pull out.
Ironically in another Coward play Present Laughter one of the actresses lost a shoe coming down the staircase.
In a Brian Rix type farce doing a summer Rep season, one actor had to swing a piece of string to try and lasso it over a beam, he was supposed to miss once then get it. But missed several times, prompting jokes from his cast members and him saying to the audience "Who wants to have a go".
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Post by Deleted on Jul 3, 2019 10:36:51 GMT
Only one that springs to mind is Funny Girl being stopped mid-overture due to an audience member being taken ill.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 3, 2019 19:38:31 GMT
At the recent tour of Ghost the sound system couldn’t handle how loud the mics were turned up, so started crackling towards the end of act 1. Show stopped and took about 15 mins for them to get the backup sound ready.
The Matilda tour was all kinds of weird. Stage manager appears in the middle of Miracle and tells the cast to get off stage. Curtain down. We wait 20 mins and it starts up again. Then after School Song it stops for the second time, and we wait like 45 minutes until they go from the classroom scene onward.
I have no idea what was wrong with Matilda but I’d imagine it’s due to sets
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Post by Deleted on Jul 4, 2019 12:37:15 GMT
Only one that springs to mind is Funny Girl being stopped mid-overture due to an audience member being taken ill. The same thing happened when I saw Wicked on Broadway. Rachel Tucker, who was playing Elphaba, must have seen something happen as she stopped, broke character and asked if there was a doctor in the house.
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Post by missthelma on Jul 4, 2019 19:43:28 GMT
I have has the horrible experience of that happening twice. The first was many years ago at Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf when midway through the first act, somebody called out from the circle 'is there a doctor in the house', it's such an overused cliche that for a moment I think people thought it was a joke or those who hadn't seen the play previously, part of the action. It was handled majestically by the actors and the theatre staff.
More recently somebody collapsed during Network at the NT which was handled so shoddily by all concerned it was embarassing. They laid the individual on the floor between two rows of seats after announcing that the house lights were coming on. All the actors scarpered off stage like they thought it was a fire drill (at WAOVW, they stayed on stage). I was actually riven with anxiety for the affected person who was on that, let's be honest, filthy floor and trapped between those two rows of seats with the added bonus of people now leering at them from above. NT staff appeared and hovered around doing precisely nothing but of course were additionally hampered by how the person had been positioned. What I think were first aid kits were unopened Eventually someone appeared on stage and said an ambulance had been called and we would take a break of at least 30 minutes and then recommence. We were about 20/25 minutes from end. Sadly I had to leave as the delay could have been much longer and I couldn't stay. Horrible experience, I still shudder when I think of that poor soul on the floor.
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Post by crabtree on Jul 4, 2019 20:45:21 GMT
A good while ago I witnessed an excruciating performance of Liz Taylor in Little Foxes. She had injured herself riding, I believe, and needed a wheelchair and had a stick. An ASM was wheeling her about the stage, and come the crucial moment when her husband who was meant to be in a wheelchair and fall out of it whilst she stands doing nothing - this afternoon he was on a stick and she casually knocked the stick from under him, and he stumbled to the floor. The audience were laughing sadly, but the show had not got off to a good start, as someone in the front row of the highest level started screaming as Liz came on, not in admiration but from vertigo as she leaned forward for a better view. Liz calmly requested that the commotion be sorted out, and they would start again, well from her entrance. An example of a performance simply not working.
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