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Post by harlow on Apr 29, 2017 15:07:30 GMT
As I'm getting ready to say farewell tonight to a show that's been a huge part of my life for the past 7/8 months I started thinking about how we get so attached to this finite medium - for even when we love a play and might see a revival of it, it will probably have very little in common with the productions we may have seen before.
For most of us we see a production once or twice unless we work on it, it is an artform we cannot keep any real hold of. By its very nature, every performance of every production is different and we can never really have it more than once. So my question is - what experience did you find hard to let go of? Which do you still think about?
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Post by Michael on Apr 29, 2017 15:29:56 GMT
Most recently, Memphis. I adored the show and still can not understand why it only ran for a year.
The other show is Rock of Ages. Both London casts were outstanding and no two shows were the same. Heck, I can still recite several dialogues...
I do miss both shows and wish they had never closed.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Apr 29, 2017 15:33:26 GMT
For the months of feverish anticipation, excitement on the night, and for totally exceeding expectations it has to be Sunset Boulevard at the ENO.
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Post by hulmeman on Apr 29, 2017 15:39:28 GMT
Yep, Sunset Boulevard for me too, but the Adelphi version which had Petula Clark in it at the end. My then partner and I would just swap tix for birthday and Christmas presents and make trips down inbetween. Loved that show. The sweep, grandeur, exuberance great music and great performances. Oh! I'm almost back there!!
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Post by Deleted on Apr 29, 2017 16:13:04 GMT
In the Heights for me, that was such a fabulous show, but I've heard through the grape vine we will see it back sooner rather than later. And when the Rent tour ends, that will be tough, but again, I wouldn't be surprised if it nabs a limited run in town.
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Post by Jon on Apr 29, 2017 16:16:55 GMT
I don't really find shows closing as a bad thing even if I did like it, theatre cannot be stagnant and having too many shows running for years and years isn't healthy for the West End
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Post by Deleted on Apr 29, 2017 16:26:21 GMT
I don't really find shows closing as a bad thing even if I did like it, theatre cannot be stagnant and having too many shows running for years and years isn't healthy for the West End Could you send that message to Thriller and Stomp please and thank you.
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4,804 posts
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Post by Mark on Apr 29, 2017 16:43:53 GMT
Closing night of Legally Blonde was emotional!
Memphis I saw a week before it closed and it was in such great shape and I kinda knew I'd never see it on this scale again.
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Post by Phantom of London on Apr 29, 2017 16:59:10 GMT
It is always very sad when you say goodbye to an old friend, bit of a bereavement.
A couple of weeks ago I saw Billy Elliot in Birmingham and have seen this a good few times, however I know I will never see it again and it won't ever be revived.
It was fun while it lasted.
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Post by Steffi on Apr 29, 2017 16:59:10 GMT
The Drowned Man. It only ran for a year and I got into it late. But it was my introduction to immersive theatre and the show felt like "home" in a way (a strange home in a slightly twisted reality). The last show was one of the most emotional 3 hours I have spent in a theatrical space. I was in tears the moment I stepped into the show and it literally felt like saying goodbye to a place I had gotten used to "live" in for a couple of hours each week (yes, I saw that show many times).
I have said goodbye to many shows and several have been emotional experiences but I guess The Drowned Man stands out because watching it felt like being a ting part of the show. It meant I became attached to the show more than I ever have to a show I simply watch from my seat in a theatre.
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Post by viserys on Apr 29, 2017 17:02:13 GMT
I tend to not feel sorry when shows I like close (unless they close prematurely, then I feel sorry that they didn't find the audience they IMHO deserved). There are always fresh shows to discover and love and personally I cannot understand how people might see the same show 30 times, but don't go and see new shows - who knows what gems you may discover that way?
When it comes to endless runs like Les Mis and Phantom right now - again, my thought is that it would often be better to shut them down and bring back a fresh revival in 10-15 years. Right now I feel no temptation whatsoever to revisit these shows, having seen them so often that I can basically close my eyes and know what's happening in every scene. But if they'd be gone and return in a fresh version 15 years from now, I'd be keen to re-discover the show.
I felt like that with Rent for example - I loved it in the 90s and saw it 6-7 times in different places, including catching it live in New York late in its long run there (a dream come true). Then it was gone... okay... new shows came along which I loved... and when I saw the recent tour at the St. James it was simply wonderful, like saying hello to old friends.
I am also pretty jealous of Broadway right now, a bumper season full of different, exciting, creative and moving new shows - while London has so many longrunners and few new shows, especially TRULY new shows like The Girls, not imports like American in Paris or revivals like 42nd Street.
I wondered if it would be hard for me if Starlight Express in Bochum closed which was my first musical way back in 1989 and has been an (ever-decreasing) part of my life since. However, when I finally saw it again after a longer break this spring, I realized that the show and I have grown apart. It has changed a lot since my "fan days" and so have I. So I will always fondly remember the pleasure it gave me back in the 90s, but if it closes now, that would be okay by me.
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Post by Dawnstar on Apr 29, 2017 17:41:46 GMT
The first show I loved that closed (early) on me was Zorro. I found the last performance pretty emotional (I started crying at the pre-show announcement & cried solidly through the first 7 numbers!) & still miss it at times. Other musicals I still miss include Crazy For You (Regent's Park production), Lend Me A Tenor & Top Hat. Opera is both better & worse: better in that short runs give you less time to get attached to a production & revivals a year or two down the line are likely; worse in that short runs mean it's harder to see something again if you loved it & even if there is a revival it may be with a different cast. For example, I adored ETO's Xerxes production when it was new in 2011 but could only see it once as there was no other tour stop I could get to. I had to wait 5 years for a revival this past autumn, fortunately with many of the same cast, and managed to see 2 performances this time but only being able to see a production you love 3 times in 5 years isn't great & goodness knows it it'll ever get revived again. The one thing I hate about live theatre is its transience. I find it very hard to cope with. I cannot understand why more musical productions don't get filmed & released once they close. At least opera is a bit better for this, but it's only really the ROH that gets a decent number of productions filmed in this country, not the smaller companies. I wondered if it would be hard for me if Starlight Express in Bochum closed which was my first musical way back in 1989 and has been an (ever-decreasing) part of my life since. However, when I finally saw it again after a longer break this spring, I realized that the show and I have grown apart. It has changed a lot since my "fan days" and so have I. So I will always fondly remember the pleasure it gave me back in the 90s, but if it closes now, that would be okay by me. I felt rather the same when I saw Wicked last autumn for the first time (barring 1 tour performance) since 2009. It was like meeting an old friend who you haven't seen a while: nice to re-live the shared memories but you find you don't have as much in common as you used to.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 29, 2017 18:16:10 GMT
I share so many of the sentiments expressed here. Memphis was easily my favourite show until that point, and I'm disappointed it didn't at least tour. Like Viserys, I too wish we had multiple new shows that open per season. I felt spoilt for choice in April when I went to NYC, although it was expensive! At least while we do have the dull long runners like Thriller and Stomp at least my bank balance doesn't suffer!
I was personally sad to say goodbye to Miss Saigon, I watched that revival with that cast three times and adored it. I know Cam Mac does a good tour, but I know it won't be the same. Great thread and opening post by the way! Very well worded.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 30, 2017 11:09:42 GMT
Looking ahead, and I can't tell a lie, the day Wicked closes, which won't happen for a long while yet, will be a truly sad day for alot of people and fans of the show I expect, including myself.
And, again I don't think it will happen for at lwadt another year, but seeing Kinky Boots go will be really sad.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 30, 2017 11:52:43 GMT
Interesting one. As someone that's only been interested in theatre for around five years, it hasn't happened to me too many times yet. There have been shows I've liked that have closed, but not many that I've truly loved.
I saw Fun Home on Broadway in 2015 and then decided to see it again in 2016 as I had a feeling it would close shortly afterwards and sure enough a couple of months later it had. That one was probably the most saddening to see go, but I had a feeling we'd see it pop up in London soon enough and now we are going to have it next year. It's hard to be too sad when you get to see a first class production like that twice with the original cast, despite it taking place on a different continent to the one you live on.
I suspect it has more of an effect the longer the show has been open. I can imagine if/when the Broadway production of Hamilton closes, I will be very nostalgic and sad, just because I've been following its progress from the beginning. I got to see it for the first time before the cast recording even came out and then saw it again the first show after the Tonys when it was really at its peak. I hope it will be a show that I will be seeing time and time again for years to come so it's hard to think about that one not being around anymore.
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Post by Someone in a tree on Apr 30, 2017 20:03:36 GMT
Thankfully Thriller is stil running and is showing no signs of closing
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Post by Stasia on May 2, 2017 12:51:08 GMT
Saying goodbye gets easier when I am getting older. I remember crying my eyes out, when we had our Russian versions of WWRY (2005), Mamma Mia(2008) and Beauty and the Beast(2010) closing. Then there was a show I worked for, and it was a dream job, and I felt the huge part of my heart missing since 2011 till end of 2013, when I got Once in it. Saying goodbye to Once was the most difficult of all the London shows, with In The Heights coming close second. Funny thing is, through all my London-visiting years I always had my "special" show to revisit. since Heights closed, I only have a couple of "nice ones I could go if I have nothing to do", but not "I need to see this one more than once in a week otherwise I won't cope another 3 months" ones.
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Post by infofreako on May 2, 2017 13:05:56 GMT
Memphis is the only one that springs to mind. By its title alone I'd dismissed it in my head as another jukebox musical and avoided it. Then Stasia needed some help with dayseating whilst travelling. I offered to assist and then saw the show 10 times in the next 3 or 4 months before it closed. I definitely wasn't ready for that day and regret dismissing it so readily beforehand. Never again will I presume and not research.
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Post by Deleted on May 2, 2017 13:35:21 GMT
For me it was We Will Rock You - I'm not ashamed to admit it was my guilty pleasure and the last performance, aside from basically being a rock concert, was quite emotional. Also seeing Memphis and Once for the final time - neither were closing nights, but both times I was sad to think I'd never see that fabulous production again.
I suspect if/when Les Mis eventually closes I will be extremely emotional - I haven't seen it for about 5 years now, but it was the show that got me into musical theatre so it has a special significance for me. And I have no doubt it will be the same for Wicked as well.
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Post by infofreako on May 2, 2017 13:52:32 GMT
I was considering mentioning Wicked as well but I don't feel the emotional attachment to it that I once did. Perhaps when it eventually closes I will feel saddened but I'm not certain of that. I'm sad though that a show I've enjoyed so much doesn't give me the same pleasure it used to.
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Post by westendcub on May 2, 2017 14:09:19 GMT
For me to was so hard to say goodbye to 'Blood Brothers' in the west-end back in 2012.
It was a show I feel in love with as a young lad and the countless times I went back (of course it has a healthy Your Life and I have seen it in Manchester, Brisbane, Torquay, Windsor, Croydon etc so I still get to see it) and as it was no longer to be a staple and long-runner.
'Made in Dagenham' was tough too, I feel in love with it from a preview performance and glad I relished many an opportunity to go back to see it and was at its closing night.
That too is a show I have now seen on the fringe and Am Dram scene so there are opportunities to see the shows you love if you are patient and willing to go the extra mile to see them!
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Post by Deleted on May 2, 2017 14:25:46 GMT
Waaay back in 2005 saying goodbye to 'The Boy From Oz' was hard. It was the first musical I'd seen and became an obsession, but also it was my 'thing' at a tough time- I was living abroad in Canada for much of the run which was a tough adjustment, and my Father died not long after I moved. So Boy From Oz became a bit of an escape. And also my first 'live' musical love, so the last performance I saw (not quite at the end of the run) was emotional.
A short-lived but emotional one was Bent in I think 2007? that experience was one of the most visceral theatre experiences I'd had, and I returned to it several times, and even over a short run it was sad to say goodbye.
Having an even shorter lived love affair with The Drowned Man my second and last visit still felt like a special goodbye. Despite the fact I was also really ill at the time and not very equipped for 3 hours of running around a building.
I've not really had another one, particularly. Shows I've seen multiple times are either long runners or continual tour-offenders so it never feels like it's going to be the last time even if it might be. I did mention in the Rent thread that if this time was the last time I saw it I was ok with that being 'goodbye' (though I doubt it is)
I do anticipate the last performance of Angels in America feeling very emotional, for not only what I know now is an astounding production, but also a bit of a chapter in life closing for me (much like Rent). It ain't gonna be pretty on the South Bank in August.
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Post by 49thand8th on May 2, 2017 15:06:34 GMT
I think mine was Jersey Boys because it'd been around for so long and was like a comfort blanket to me whenever I was feeling sad! OR happy! I first saw it on tour 10 years ago in San Francisco, and thanks to a lot of cheap rush/TKTS/lotto opportunities, I didn't spend a ton of money to see it a lot on both coasts. (Also London and Melbourne, but I worked those into vacations.) It's still touring the US, but it's strange and a little sad to me that I can't just go pop by the August Wilson and see it when I get the urge. Even though I know this is just how live theatre works.
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Post by Deleted on May 2, 2017 15:11:26 GMT
I saw Jersey Boys almost by accident in that run in San Francisco too! one of those fortuitous moments of not intending to see anything but really loving it when I did!
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Post by schuttep on May 3, 2017 9:34:08 GMT
There are many shows I've seen 20+ times but I'm never really sad when they close for two reasons. First, it releases theatre stock for something new and - maybe! - even better. Second, it means I may see my old friend again, but in new clothes. Bliss!
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