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Post by tmesis on Dec 9, 2018 20:32:17 GMT
...no not that!
I mean shows.
So yesterday my timetable was as follows:
11.30am Royal Opera House - Hansel and Gretel 2.30 pm Gielgud Theatre - Company (2nd visit) 7.45 pm Bridge Theatre - A very, very, very dark Matter
I've only ever managed this once before, although most of the time I do two performances on a Saturday. I've managed the three 'James' plays at NT and the Stoppard Trilogy there as well but I don't think these count as they take no real planning/logistics. This was possible because Hansel and Gretel was a final rehearsal performance for Friends of ROH. I would do it again and didn't feel it was overkill as they were all very different shows - interesting to compare a very innocent take on the Brothers Grimm at the start of the day with a far from innocent and sweary take on Hans Andersen at the end.
The other time I did it was a few years ago:
12.00am Royal Opera House - Giselle (actual public performance - ROH have quite a few noon performances.) 3.00 Menier Chocolate Factory - Merrily We Roll Along 7.30 Donmar - Trelawney of the Wells
This time it was a mistake as I found Trelawney of the Wells stultifyingly dull and was asleep for much of it.
Anyone else managed this?
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Post by Rozzi Rainbow on Dec 9, 2018 20:41:40 GMT
I have done 3 performances of the same show in one day on a few occasions (and 3 performances of a different show on another occasion). Sounds much easier than your adventure as at least I didn't have to travel between theatres - other than finding food in between shows.
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Post by NeilVHughes on Dec 9, 2018 20:52:40 GMT
Managed 3 shows in an evening once
Woyzeck 19::00 Old Vic Cover My Tracks. 22::00 Old Vic Twelfth Night. 23:59 Globe
Fortunately the logistics was simple and convenient, Cover My Tracks filled the gap between the usual 2 show midnight matinee evening.perfectly.
Globe midnight matinee always special, walking to Blackfriars station along a quiet Southbank and getting home just as dawn is breaking.
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Post by robertb213 on Dec 9, 2018 21:18:35 GMT
I've only managed it twice - once when there was an 11am performance of Seussical at the Arts Theatre a few years ago, and another this year when Eva Noblezaba did a 9.15pm concert at Zedel after CHF finished at Cadogan Hall at 8.30!
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Post by duncan on Dec 9, 2018 22:35:57 GMT
Most i've done in a day is 7.
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Post by Rukaya on Dec 9, 2018 22:45:42 GMT
I did 5 show days at the Fringe but I feel like that's fairly standard Fringe behaviour for those that do the fringe haha! I don't think I've ever done a 3 show day in London, would be quite interesting! Incredible to think of going to a show in London at midnight!
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Post by sophie92 on Dec 9, 2018 23:06:12 GMT
I’ve done 3 shows in one day in London once - like robertb213, thanks to the 11am performance of Seussical at the Arts, which was followed by the matinee of Merrily We Roll Along at the Menier and then finished off with The Bodyguard at the Adelphi. Still not made it up to Edinburgh for the Fringe yet, but when I do that will no doubt take the lead from 3 shows!
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Post by bellboard27 on Dec 9, 2018 23:12:13 GMT
During Camden Fringe it should be straight forward to do 6 or possibly 7 in a day, but I think I’ve restricted myself to 4 a few times mostly because of not fancying what else was on offer.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 10, 2018 10:33:24 GMT
Three-show days are EASY. I've never been to Edinburgh and I plan way too far in advance to be able to take advantage of things like Camden Fringe, but if you're looking to increase the number of three-show days you do, these are my top two tips: 1. Trilogies. I've spent a SIGNIFICANT portion of my life watching all three of Shakespeare's Henry VI plays in a single day, and there are variations on this specific theme available too (the RSC's 1 Henry IV + 2 Henry IV + Henry V, Trevor Nunn's Henry VI + Edward IV + Richard III). Then there's the James trilogy, the Young Chekhov trilogy, the Norman Conquests, the Donmar's all-female Shakespeares... just look out for a trilogy, then block off a whole day for it. SUPER easy! 2. Children's theatre. In filtering out my three-show days, one theatre kept popping up time and time again: the Unicorn Theatre. I get that children's theatre isn't for everyone (maybe you're joyless, or I have male friends who won't go to the Unicorn because of how weird it feels to be a solo man in that environment) but it's really handy for slipping in an early matinee, especially during school holidays. If you've always wanted to tick the Lyric off your list of "theatres I've visited" but aren't willing to see Thriller, they're also doing Room On The Broom this winter or The Gruffalo next summmer which will inevitably have morning performances that can slot in before a normal two show day. And if you don't want to go to the theatre in the morning *as well* as the afternoon *and* the evening, then it's not impossible to find a 1pm matinee at the Unicorn that'll let you get to the Menier for a 3:30pm matinee. I've only ever once used a Globe midnight matinee to fill out a three-show day, and as that was after a morning and afternoon performance of the Henry IVs in Bath, I'm genuinely surprised I've survived this long. I've also had good fun using Punchdrunk shows to increase the number I've seen in a day; at weekends they'll usually have an early evening and a late evening performance, so you can either attend both of those after a matinee, or you can squeeze the late performance in after another evening show if that one isn't too long. And sometimes Daniel Kitson will have a show at one of the big theatres, and that often includes a morning performance on the schedule. I do have a number of four-show days too; one of those started with a Daniel Kitson and ended with a Punchdrunk with a perfectly normal matinee and evening show in between, one featured two early shows at the Unicorn before moving on to a normal matinee and evening show, and one involved a 10am performance of The Gruffalo's Child followed by a 12pm performance of Wilde Creatures and again a normal matinee and evening show. So it's really just a matter of finding shows that slot neatly around the edges of what you're already likely to see, and it's *slightly* easier if you consciously book late matinees (like at the Menier or the Hampstead) and/or evening shows with short running times.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 10, 2018 10:37:00 GMT
I frequently did three times a day over Christmas...as an usher.
It's a dark dark time. It involved a lot of bodily fluids from small humans. If anyone wants to pay for my therapy in theatre tokens to erase 2011's Peter Pan Lost Boys song from my head I would be forever grateful.
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Post by jamb0r on Dec 10, 2018 10:48:21 GMT
I did it for the first time earlier this year, it was something like
13:00 Guy: A New Musical (wished I hadn’t bothered!) 16:00 Six 19:30 Fun Home
Still managed to fit in dinner between the last 2 too!
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Post by Stasia on Dec 10, 2018 10:59:34 GMT
I've done 3 show days a couple of times (not counting Camden Fringe shows as they are usually short). And that included quite a lot of running around the town!
June 2015 14:00 Bugsy Malone at the Lyric Hammersmith 18:00 Alice Underground at the Vaults 22:00 Shock Treatment at the King's Head (that ended after midnight, I travelled to the place I stayed at Hammersmith and next morning had to wake up to dayseat. That was tough!)
March 2016 was slightly easier, at least 2 out of 3 shows were at the same place 14:30 Ma Rayney's Black Bottom at the NT 20:00 Cosi and 22:00 Something Something Lazarus at the King's Head (looks like the King's Head THeatre is my go-to place for the late night shows)
Last year I had a normal double show day and a late night cabaret at the Hippodrome Casino, Kinky Boots cast started at midnight and finished at about 2 am, I got home at about 3 to wake up for dayseatting (for Kinky Boots, no surprise!) at 6-something...
Once in Moscow I saw The Coast of Utopia, the first part started at about 11 am and the third one ended at about 10 pm.
Most of my theatre trips are quite demanding, like, this January I had 5 double show days in a row. So I try not to arrange 3 show days anymore
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Post by Dr Tom on Dec 10, 2018 13:08:42 GMT
I certainly remember the first time I managed this and have just gone through my emails to work out what the combination was.
Saturday 17 May 2014
14:30 - 1984 at the Playhouse Theatre 17:00 - Ushers at the Charing Cross Theatre 19:30 - The Pajama Game at the Shaftsbury Theatre
I like it when there are suitable length shows scheduled so this all works out.
Ushers was one of those shows which they scheduled at odd times. The only other time I saw it was the following year for a 22:30 Friday performance at the Arts Theatre (which was only a two show day for me).
Think I also managed three shows on a Sunday once, but that included the late night version of West End Bares. Still need to find a combination to fit in four different shows in a day.
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Post by Rozzi Rainbow on Dec 10, 2018 13:41:07 GMT
I've also twice seen two shows in the same day in different towns.
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Post by hal9000 on Dec 10, 2018 15:01:46 GMT
Only at a film festival. Four Ingmar Bergman films on the trot. I was in mild hysteria 5 hours in.
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Post by alicechallice on Dec 10, 2018 15:26:17 GMT
Most i've done in a day is 7. A friend of mine did that. It fell off the next day!
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Post by joem on Dec 10, 2018 23:42:39 GMT
I did the three Henry VI at Stratford. Also Tantalus, which consists of 9 plays, at the Barbican over two days.
Have done three in a day at the Edinburgh Festival but I struggle to remember what I saw. It might have been a musical version of Tess, a Pinter or two (Landscape?) and a double-bill of Brontes - Heights by Vince Foxhall and an adaptation Shirley by someone else.
Oh and the Noel Coward one-act play extravaganza at the Jermyn Street Theatre of course.
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Post by Dawnstar on Dec 11, 2018 9:16:22 GMT
The 39 Steps at the Criterion was a useful one for fitting in 3 shows in a day because it had a 4pm matinee. On 2 or 3 occasions I went to an early ROH matinee, then 39 Steps, then an evening show. Last winter I notched up several 3 show days when Mischief Movie Night was doing 3 shows a day at the Arts, but they were short shows. I've also twice seen two shows in the same day in different towns. I've done that several times: Bath/Bristol, London/Cambridge, Norwich/Cambridge, Ipswich/London, Milton Keynes/London. As long as the intercity train journey isn't more that about an hour then it's fine. If it's longer then it gets a bit rushed.
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Post by Steffi on Dec 11, 2018 19:03:15 GMT
I do three show days in New York regularly: Broadway matinee followed by a double Sleep No More. Broadway matinee: 2pm Sleep No More: 5pm Sleep No More: 9pm (finish at midnight)
Yes, it is a long theatrical day and since I’m on my feet for 2x 3 hours of Sleep No More it’s physically demanding too. Probably explains why I usually feel like I need a holiday after coming back from my holidays in New York.
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