342 posts
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Post by Figaro on Mar 21, 2024 10:46:10 GMT
Maybe after Wizard if Oz to catch the half term / Christmas crowds
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5,795 posts
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Post by mrbarnaby on Mar 21, 2024 20:04:23 GMT
Maybe after Wizard if Oz to catch the half term / Christmas crowds It’s going in from Early 2025
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Post by andthelight on Apr 23, 2024 15:37:23 GMT
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1,828 posts
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Post by Dave B on Apr 23, 2024 15:44:52 GMT
Oops
"This article was removed on 23 April 2024 as it breached an embargo. It will be reinstated on the correct date."
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Post by andthelight on Apr 23, 2024 15:47:50 GMT
Oops
"This article was removed on 23 April 2024 as it breached an embargo. It will be reinstated on the correct date."
Hilarious, glad I caught it quickly!
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5,139 posts
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Post by Being Alive on Apr 23, 2024 16:25:49 GMT
Feb I think
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Post by blamerobots on Apr 23, 2024 17:10:34 GMT
Did anyone archive it before it got removed? I caught it but skimmed the details but now it's gone.
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5,139 posts
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Post by Being Alive on Apr 23, 2024 23:03:01 GMT
March 8th-November 2nd. 34 weeks.
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Post by max on Apr 23, 2024 23:07:25 GMT
I wonder how this will work for sightlines at the Gillian Lynne. At the Barbican it felt a very end-on piece with quite a deep perspective to get the stage pictures. GL is intended for adaptability I know, but still there are other West End Theatres that feel more cinema-like end-on and indeed were used as such (Dominion; Prince Edward - though obviously the PE has a potential long runner).
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Post by blamerobots on Apr 23, 2024 23:24:17 GMT
I'm quite looking forward to this. I don't think sightlines will be an issue, the GL is a shapeshifter of a theatre so I'm sure it'll all be set up to be fine. There's been productions that have utilised a false wall to create a more end-on stage, obviously sacrificing some seats. It's one hell of a longer run than I expected! Almost nine months (I suppose to sufficiently fill out the demand left over from the two runs and then some.) If it's staying that long I hope the ticket prices are more reasonable It's got great potential to be a knockout family show if it is accessible to as many as possible. I do wonder about the future of SATSE... Totoro will definitely be the GL's next big thing for the foreseeable future. I was hoping shows like the Witches could have a short stint there, or shows in transfer limbo like BJ and such. I suppose there's still a window for something from when Oz ends to when it opens in March. Exciting stuff!
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5,795 posts
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Post by mrbarnaby on Apr 24, 2024 6:12:49 GMT
I wonder how this will work for sightlines at the Gillian Lynne. At the Barbican it felt a very end-on piece with quite a deep perspective to get the stage pictures. GL is intended for adaptability I know, but still there are other West End Theatres that feel more cinema-like end-on and indeed were used as such (Dominion; Prince Edward - though obviously the PE has a potential long runner). What is this cinema end on you speak of? It’s called a Proscenium 🤣
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1,828 posts
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Post by Dave B on Apr 24, 2024 7:48:22 GMT
Running until 02 November. I imagine sales would have to hugely drop off for this not to extend through the holidays into early 2026...
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5,795 posts
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Post by mrbarnaby on Apr 24, 2024 7:59:11 GMT
This makes me really miss Baz’s Friday DM columns.. (I mean I broke the story on here but still…!)
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Post by max on Apr 24, 2024 8:01:39 GMT
I wonder how this will work for sightlines at the Gillian Lynne. At the Barbican it felt a very end-on piece with quite a deep perspective to get the stage pictures. GL is intended for adaptability I know, but still there are other West End Theatres that feel more cinema-like end-on and indeed were used as such (Dominion; Prince Edward - though obviously the PE has a potential long runner). What is this cinema end on you speak of? It’s called a Proscenium 🤣 I was referring to 'end-on' in my post (rather than Proscenium) for a reason. For some shows it's not seeing around the Proscenium Arch that's the issue for auditorium side views, but aspects of the show's own set design. I specifically referred to pieces of set that have walls or side panels, and also the deep-perspective layered impact of some of the images created in 'Totoro'. There are some theatres in London where there is little arc in the auditorium configuration, and at points in their life it made them perfect for being used as Cinemas e.g The Prince Edward Theatre showing extreme wide screen Cinerama format movies from the early 1950s right up to 1974; and The Dominion which was a cinema for most of its life up until the 80s. Both of them are post-Victorian era designed theatres. Front rows that are long (in a big house like The Dominion) would still be impacted at the ends, but houses like these afford a larger proportion of the audience a picturebook end-on view than those Victorian and Georgian theatres with an extreme horseshoe configuration. The Gillian Lynne is more recent still of course, and though built to be flexible in configuration has specific sideview seats and is quite wide.
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3,426 posts
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Post by ceebee on Apr 24, 2024 8:07:39 GMT
Good news for the fans of this show, I guess.
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Post by Being Alive on Apr 24, 2024 10:20:17 GMT
Good news for the fans of this show, I guess. Of which there are many, and congrats to the RSC for having a hit to replace the loss of Les Mis royalties!
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3,426 posts
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Post by ceebee on Apr 24, 2024 10:41:31 GMT
Good news for the fans of this show, I guess. Of which there are many, and congrats to the RSC for having a hit to replace the loss of Les Mis royalties! Indeed. Good news for the RSC too.
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7,052 posts
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Post by Jon on Apr 24, 2024 10:59:37 GMT
Surely Matilda being an RSC production would have replaced the Les Mis royalties?
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Post by Being Alive on Apr 24, 2024 11:49:27 GMT
Surely Matilda being an RSC production would have replaced the Les Mis royalties? Well it was an additional to the Les Mis royalties as the original production ran until 2019, now they just have Matilda, and Totoro tops them back up.
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7,052 posts
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Post by Jon on Apr 24, 2024 11:52:22 GMT
Surely Matilda being an RSC production would have replaced the Les Mis royalties? Well it was an additional to the Les Mis royalties as the original production ran until 2019, now they just have Matilda, and Totoro tops them back up. Am I right in thinking that the royalties from Les Mis weren't much and had got smaller over the years before Cameron Mackintosh decided to replace it with the 'new' production?
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5,139 posts
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Post by Being Alive on Apr 24, 2024 11:53:00 GMT
Yes I think that's true, but it was still a substantial amount in the budget I imagine.
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Post by blamerobots on Apr 24, 2024 11:57:59 GMT
In this current landscape, any money is good money. Les Mis helped the RSC survive for them to see today. This is probably like mana.
And for the GL, it's probably great too. Its last few shows if my memory serves correctly have all been relatively standard shorter runs(?) This is more long-term.
Are we going to update the name of the thread?
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Post by westendboy on Apr 24, 2024 12:27:29 GMT
Well this is exciting news! I think the Gillian Lynne is an ideal venue for this to run, as it is one of the "newer" West End theatres and seems versatile enough for a show like this. I can see this production working in that theatre, more so than at, lets say, Drury Lane. Eight months is a fairly long run, which I'm sure it will sell out.
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Post by ladidah on Apr 24, 2024 14:04:21 GMT
I think it's a great venue for Totoro.
The seats at the Barbican are still my favourite though, so comfy!
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3,426 posts
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Post by ceebee on Apr 24, 2024 15:42:24 GMT
I think it's a great venue for Totoro. The seats at the Barbican are still my favourite though, so comfy! The GL seats are pretty comfy too!
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