524 posts
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Post by wiggymess on May 4, 2017 8:02:20 GMT
The reviews are in. Lots of 5 stars !
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562 posts
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Post by jadnoop on May 4, 2017 11:55:22 GMT
Does anyone know how the Circle slips seats work for this? I didn't get a ticket in the initial rush, so didn't think I'd be able to see it, but a £12 ticket randomly popped online in February so I decided to give it a go.
It's listed as "Circle Slips: slip 3" and noted as a partially restriced seat side on to the stage which I'm fine with given the price. However, both the Theatre Monkey and Seat Plan websites list the Circle slips as being seats 4 to 19.
Am I right in thinking that the slips have been re-assigned to being 1-16, or are there 3 seats beyond those listed on the TM and SP sites? I've tried to recheck the RC website, but it (or my connection) seems to be struggling at the moment. If the seat numbers have been re-assigned, this might explain the reason that Circle slips seat 11 is shown as being on the right hand side on both the TM and SP sites, but the photo of the view from the seat (on Seatplan) is taken from the left hand side.
Edit: I've managed to get through to the RC site (for a different Downstairs show), and the seat plan does list the slips as being 1-16 instead of 4-19. Assuming that this is a straight forward renumbering of the seats, rather than a change in the layout, this presmably means that the views are simply shifted by 3; 'seat 1' now is the same as seat 4 as listed on TM/SP, seat 7 now is the one listed as seat 10 on TM/SP and so on.
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3,040 posts
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Post by crowblack on May 4, 2017 11:58:09 GMT
I was into it for the first half hour or so - though as I commented earlier I thought the opening pyrotechnics were misjudged as it had me worrying that we might have to evacuate the theatre, and broke the fourth wall - but as the family and then the cute animals etc. started to pile in I found myself thinking about the structure, about the references to other playwrights (particularly when the Symbolic dead white bird appeared, and Chekhov's gun), wondering if the goose might sh-t or bite, whether the rabbit was scared or the baby would cry, and realised I was doing that because I wasn't finding myself immersed in the drama. When something interesting looked like it was starting to happen it was interrupted, or characters went offstage, or, in the case of the ill wife, only seemed to become flesh in the last minutes. The set is the image of my relatives' farmhouse kitchen where three generations of a mixed part-Irish family live but for me that comparison underlined the staginess of the uninterrupted speeches and the often too-literal action - at one point a character actually walks on with a book to explain the play's title. Given the generous running time I'd have liked more space, pauses, darkness, for the audience to create its own imagery and for threads to sink in. I wanted tension, but I felt the writer and director were so in love with the family they had created on stage that they kept losing sight of it.
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1,120 posts
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Post by samuelwhiskers on May 5, 2017 0:24:31 GMT
Saw this last night, and found it spectacular.
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5,688 posts
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Post by lynette on May 5, 2017 11:49:02 GMT
Anyone know about the transfer so I can book earlylike...? Ta
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2,452 posts
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Post by theatremadness on May 5, 2017 11:51:01 GMT
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Post by alexandra on May 5, 2017 12:00:37 GMT
I didn't love it quite as much as the critics but it's an entertaining evening, no question. It also does to some extent capture the fear and tension of the time. It's strongly reminiscent of Jerusalem in many ways (children, animals, nature, people living (or living formerly) on the edge) but lacks the bravura central role, good as Considine is in a much less showy role. But an excellent evening.
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Post by Deleted on May 5, 2017 12:08:05 GMT
Anyone know about the transfer so I can book earlylike...? Ta Are you an anonymous woman?
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5,688 posts
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Post by lynette on May 5, 2017 20:34:09 GMT
Thanks. Managed to negotiate the whole forgot password saga by being someone else so yes I am the anonymous woman. Two tix for near end of run which is always a risk as cast might expire, I might expire or the world might expire. One of those days.
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516 posts
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Post by theatreliker on May 6, 2017 9:03:23 GMT
Saw this last week and loved it as much as his other plays. There's a pulsing heart at the centre of it and an ending as great as Jerusalem. Cast at the top of their game, as well.
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2,389 posts
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Post by peggs on May 6, 2017 19:08:10 GMT
Wow! spent most the play in state of some fear of the red stuff which on top of the oddles of tension that build up meant i did spent quite a lot of it slowly disappearing inside my jumper and then ovated at end in relief and some wonder. But yes how do you say much without ruining it for others so i'll stick to saying i thought there were shades of Jerusalem in this, stories and belonging to country and then a whole lot extra. Beautifully acted by a great ensemble cast, great set, there aren't enough bagpusses on stage, tension, laughter, weeping. I think Jez Butterworth has rather done it again, one of those plays when it ends and you don't feel that speaking immediately is the appropriate response.
Right can now go back and read the thread i'd been avoiding in case i found out spoilers.
In other news theatremonkey i missed you again?!
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747 posts
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Post by Latecomer on May 7, 2017 9:45:46 GMT
Enjoyed this yesterday. You really are in the hands of an accomplished end confident playwright with Butterworth. He uses language and storytelling in a lovely way. And you just sit there as he unfolds the relationships before you. Only one small reservation....he makes one of the very small children use a swear word to get laughs (I did laugh but at the same time was mentally thinking "she's a bit young to be told to do that as a child actor")....but otherwise thought it was great. On a practical note, stage quite high so you are looking up a bit from first row but not a problem, and there are characters sometimes sitting on extreme left and right of stage so slips seats/those at edges of cicle may miss a little....personally would choose seat on RHS looking at stage so you don't miss my favourite Aunty! And yes, theatremonkey....so near and yet so far!
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747 posts
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Post by Latecomer on May 7, 2017 9:48:45 GMT
Oh and forgot to say DO NOT READ PRESS REVIEWS! They give far too much away....why, oh why do they feel the need to tell you the plot?
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Post by d'James on May 7, 2017 9:50:21 GMT
That's what Alexandra Burke said!
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898 posts
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Post by bordeaux on May 7, 2017 21:29:28 GMT
This is a great play and a wonderful evening in the theatre. Apart from the things other people have said it is thrilling to see a cast of 20 speaking parts all individually cast - when was the last time you saw a new play involving that number of characters? And the presence of children on stage did make me think that their absence from pretty much every play you see is rather artificial given that they are a central fact of so many people's lives. Do dramatic things not happen to people with children? Or do dramatic things only happen to people with children when they're not around?
The play did create a world that was unfamiliar to me (despite having seen a lot of Irish plays) and made me think of the era (which I remember well; I was 19 in 1981) in a new way. I took and take the view that the terrorists fighting a democratically elected government no more deserve political status than the Ku Klux Klan, but this play goes a long way to showing the other side of that debate - and the long history of repression and violence and hatred, and the terrible consequences for everyone.
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1,217 posts
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Post by nash16 on May 8, 2017 8:04:45 GMT
Anyone else a bit suspicious that the Royal Court has sold most/all of it's £12 Monday tickets in advance to members/patrons, and switches on its "Application Error" page to cover this fact?
Their hit shows never have the promised "half of available seats" left for joe-public anyway, and with this one it's two weeks in a row now that the "application error" page has appeared at 08:55am onwards...
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524 posts
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Post by wiggymess on May 8, 2017 8:13:23 GMT
Perhaps it's due to demand. Hopefully you'll get a ticket once it's sorted.
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524 posts
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Post by wiggymess on May 8, 2017 8:23:49 GMT
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Post by alexandra on May 8, 2017 10:15:06 GMT
Here's a tip: if a theatre website crashes and they tweet it, tweet them your issue immediately and follow them. They will often follow you back and send you a direct message offering to save tickets for you. You're welcome.
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5,688 posts
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Post by lynette on May 8, 2017 16:29:17 GMT
Ah, I got the error message too. I was trying to book more expensive tix at the Geilgud. I managed in the end to get last two in stalls Row N at the end for date towards end of run. It was not easy to use the site. Interestingly, I've just booked online for Antic Disposition which is a much smaller outfit. The website was a doddle, could choose seats and all for the church venue. They have checked it out I think to make sure punters can navigate it whereas the Royal Court hasn't. If only companies and theatres would test out their own websites with real people...like moi...and not think that everyone is a techie savvy teenager. Moan over.
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Post by Deleted on May 8, 2017 18:19:37 GMT
I wonder If this
Will be subbed at Oliviers
Like Jerusalem was
One of the best reactions I ever saw
When The Mountaintop
Took that one
😂😂😂
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Post by Deleted on May 8, 2017 18:20:00 GMT
It got quite a dressing down on front row
Comparing it to The Archers
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2,389 posts
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Post by peggs on May 8, 2017 18:24:00 GMT
In other news theatremonkey i missed you again?! And yes, theatremonkey....so near and yet so far! And I had my badge on and everything! It's no good those badges simply aren't big enough
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40 posts
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Post by dave72 on May 8, 2017 18:32:12 GMT
Perhaps everyone already knows this, but when I booked for the Gielgud transfer (weeks ago), there were *many* more seats available through the www.delfontmackintosh.co.uk/index.php site than through the Royal Court website. The RC site had only a handful of what was actually available at that point.
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4,020 posts
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Post by Dawnstar on May 8, 2017 19:13:54 GMT
And I had my badge on and everything! It's no good those badges simply aren't big enough I suggested to @theatremonkey the other day that he should sell his own range of cuddly toy theatre monkeys & board members could take them to the theatre & use them to identify each other. Much more obvious than a small badge!
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