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Post by longinthetooth on Nov 7, 2017 21:59:24 GMT
Why? Why? Why? Did I never think of keeping a spreadsheet? I am so impressed with all your efforts. I keep programmes, with the ticket inside, but they are all chucked in boxes in the cupboard in the spare bedroom, occasionally seeing daylight when I want to look something up or add to the collection (the latest ones are in a heap downstairs until said heap becomes unmanageable).
I use an on-line Yahoo calendar, an old-fashioned diary, the planner on my phone, and an even more old-fashioned paper calendar hung up in the kitchen! Unfortunately, I often forget to synchronise them all, but as long as two of them match up it's ok.
As for the number of times I go to the theatre - we counted them up and last year totalled 74 (including concerts, musicals and plays), but I refuse to go near calculating the cost!
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Post by jadnoop on Nov 7, 2017 22:24:32 GMT
Including concerts we probably do about 2-3 events per month. Keep track on a calendar.
Would love to do more but it's generally time as much as money that prevents us going out more. Very jealous of the people who manage to organise going to plays/concerts 100+ times per year.
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Post by amadeus on Nov 7, 2017 22:36:20 GMT
I keep a trusty word document that includes times, dates and costs of things I'm seeing and shows to book. I don't want to sound dramatic but I'd be a MESSSS without it...
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Post by Coated on Nov 8, 2017 2:34:33 GMT
Last year was 220, mainly ballet and opera. If I kept exact track of money, I'd probably never go out again. I have everything in a google calendar with a coding system for theatres / companies which works pretty well both for figuring out where I'm meant to be, and what I've seen previously.
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3,580 posts
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Post by showgirl on Nov 8, 2017 5:44:55 GMT
112 plays/shows this year to date, but having checked, I find my average cost so far is £17.27, which is about £3 higher than last year, so I need to see a few more productions really cheaply in the next 6 weeks!
Obviously I'd expect costs to rise but that's a big percentage increase and I'm not sure why it has happened. At least my cinema tix average well under half the above amount.
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240 posts
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Post by Anniek on Nov 8, 2017 8:04:22 GMT
Spreadsheet: Date, Show, Theatre, Seat, Price, additional information (discount/dayseat/special cast/ opening night etc). Unfortunately I never included casts. Would be so cool to see which actors you might have seen 5 years ago in an off-west end thing, now being leads. Disappointing year so far, will probably reach around 60 shows where usually that is somewhere around 80-90. But, on the other hand I saw less shows then last year, but I did see things I really wanted to, instead of buying cheap deals for shows that I wasn't even really bothered to see. The money thing is painful tho. Always feel that I am broke, then I look at my spreadsheet and apparently I do have money to spend..
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1,348 posts
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Post by tmesis on Nov 8, 2017 8:18:44 GMT
I don't keep track of costs (frankly I don't care) - went to about 80 things last year, will be around 90 this. I revisit operas and ballets a lot but hardly ever plays or musicals unless it's a different production.
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Post by schuttep on Nov 8, 2017 10:37:01 GMT
I already have 30 shows booked for 2018 (or will have when the Open Air goes onsale in 20 minutes!
I keep an electronic calendar on my phone but also a hard copy diary that is the ultimate arbiter for future bookings.
I spend a huge amount of money on tickets but so long as I really want to see the show (avoiding duplicates if possible) I'm not that bothered I'm not keeping track of costs. It's my major hobby, after all.
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Post by duncan on Nov 8, 2017 12:10:52 GMT
I started recording everything I saw in 2000 -
Access Database that has a list of all,
shows seen date seen theatre seen at seat sat in did I get an upgrade and if so where to and what was original seat cost of ticket type of show plot synopsis quick review list of all actors in the show and the characters they played list of production staff in the show
And then I have reports set up on that,
number of times I've been to each theatre, list of shows I've seen at each theatre, total cost this year average cost this year average rating this year number of times I've seen an actor - as well as a query where I can pick specific actors and have names, roles, dates etc on screen. number of times I've seen a show that involved a certain production person - so I can search on ALW or Terry King or Susan Blenkinsop if required.
I've currently got around 2800 different actors and 4500 different production personnel on file - of that there are around 200 actors I've seen more than once (never seen anyone in more than 5 different productions, and I never see a show more than once) and about 3000 different production personnel (I've seen 18 different productions where Terry King was fight director).
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Post by dippy on Nov 8, 2017 12:32:12 GMT
duncan amazing! That's exactly what I would love to have but I've never been the biggest fan of access, I think having to make pointless databases at school made me dislike it even though I'm aware of what a great tools they are. Maybe knowing that you have a successful database will give me the inspiration to actually start one up. Any tips?
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Post by duncan on Nov 8, 2017 13:46:21 GMT
Keep it simple - I've got three linked tables and that's it.
1. Show information 2. Actor information 3. Production staff information.
I've then got a form for data entry of show information and then that is duplicated so I have one subform for actor input and one subform for staff input.
A couple of reports sorted by location and counts and hey presto. I'm not an expert and managed with the occasional cock up but it didn't take that long.
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736 posts
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Post by dippy on Nov 8, 2017 14:58:28 GMT
Thank you so much! I have all the info and some of it can easily be imported from my current spreadsheet. I might just give making a database a go again!
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Post by musicalfloozie on Nov 8, 2017 17:12:31 GMT
I'm terrible at keeping track, I do have most of my programmes but ended up throwing away most of my tickets. In the end I went for a lazy way of keeping track and just posting the programme to my pinterest board. I'm very impressed as to how organised you lot are.
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1,351 posts
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Post by CG on the loose on Nov 8, 2017 23:03:05 GMT
Can I just ask, how many times a year do the people who keep track of their ticket costs go to the theatre, and how many times a year do the people who don't keep track of their ticket costs go to the theatre? I for instance refuse to keep track, and average around 160 trips a year. My hypothesis is the more you go, the less likely you are to keep track, not because you're fussed about justifying individual ticket costs, but because you know the total sum is going to be bordering on the obscene, but let's find out! That certainly rings true for me... same ballpark of annual visits, no desire to track costs!
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1,351 posts
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Post by CG on the loose on Nov 8, 2017 23:21:18 GMT
duncan I think you win the theatre geek prize... and I mean that as the most sincere of compliments
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Post by Deleted on Jun 13, 2018 6:06:42 GMT
Bumping this thread as with a number of intriguing shows coming up (generally limited to musicals) I've just got round to spreadsheeting the upcoming shows I want to see to aid planning. Gone to the 'extreme' of creating a Gantt chart to make it easy to pinpoint periods where multiple shows run making it easy to work out when to book, feeling a little smug now.
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344 posts
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Post by sophizoey on Jun 13, 2018 7:21:05 GMT
Oh my god! That's literally so organised. I never quite got the hang of Gantt charts in A-level Maths so heck do I know what any of that means.
I'm a simple person. I keep a tally chart in the back of my planner and tickets are slid into a photo album of stagey memories which are usually photos of theatres/views or stage door photos against the relevant show. Shows without photos are kept in a pocket in the same album in date order (which is how my photos are organised)
I have a whole other system for Wicked. Including a list on my phone with dates, touring venues and understudies.
I can't bring myself to record price though because as a poor student that is a lor of money that should have been spent on food and books.
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Post by dramallama on Jun 13, 2018 9:15:32 GMT
I used to keep all my tickets on a pin board in my flat but recently made myself a theatre album. Basically, I'll put the ticket in there along with a mini review, i.e. if I went with somebody and what I thought of it, etc. And I also have a file on my computer with rankings, so there's the best shows of all time, the worst shows of all time, and a ranking for everything I've seen in 2018 (I quite like having everything in that one ranking so might do another one once 2019 comes around).
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Post by ensembleswings on Jun 13, 2018 15:33:51 GMT
I have a spreadsheet in which I keep track of the show, venue, date, seat block (stalls/dress etc), seat number and whether it was a new show and/or venue. I don't actively keep track of the cost of each theatre visit but I do keep all of my tickets so if I wanted to find out I could, the tickets are all stored in photo pockets in a ring binder in chronological order, except for my Kinky Boots and Wicked tickets which have been separated into their own sections. I also have separate spreadsheets for Kinky and Wicked which list what actor I've seen in which role (all roles for Kinky, just the 7 leads for Wicked) as I've seen both shows multiple times I also have a simple list on my phone that just lists the show and what number it is - both theatre visit in general, theatre visit of the year and number of times I've seen the show. As for future bookings I have many a list on my phone and then I also write them down in my diary and the main 'family' diary that sits in our kitchen. One list on my phone also states whether the ticket has been delivered or whether it's box office collection or I'm waiting for it to arrive in the post.
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Post by bodobear on Jun 13, 2018 16:55:37 GMT
I have all my tickets from previous years in a photo album together with photos of cast boards or/and seat view or/and stage door and then the tickets for the current year are on a pin board. I have my little tradition of hiding under a pile of tickets and photos between Christmas and New Year while sorting them in and then starting the new year with a clean pin board (unless tickets for that year have already been delivered of course...).
Dates are obviously in a dairy/calendar both in my phone and in a proper printed and bound diary and I also have a simple list on my phone with the name of all the shows and the number of how many times I’ve seen this particular show (and where if it was more than one venue/city).
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19,803 posts
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Jun 13, 2018 17:18:42 GMT
^^^^
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Post by robertb213 on Jun 13, 2018 17:53:37 GMT
I love how insanely geeky we all are about this, it's brilliant! 😁
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Post by Deleted on Jun 13, 2018 18:07:01 GMT
I love how insanely geeky we all are about this, it's brilliant! 😁 Hang on a minute... we're not ALL insanely geeky about it. That's not saying we wouldn't like to be. But once you've reached a certain age, a spreadheet is something you get your nephew, niece or maybe even your grandchildren to sort out for you... and it's more likely to about the days the different bins are collected, or what day your library book's to be returned, not the days you book theatre tickets!
Wait until you get to the age where you're double-booking, leaving your tickets behind, turning up at the wrong theatre, or forgetting to go altogether. Tickets still in a drawer...
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Post by robertb213 on Jun 13, 2018 18:08:54 GMT
I love how insanely geeky we all are about this, it's brilliant! 😁 Hang on a minute... we're not ALL insanely geeky about it. That's not saying we wouldn't like to be. But once you've reached a certain age, a spreadheet is something you get your nephews, neices or maybe even your grandchildren to sort out for you... and it's more likely to about the days the different bins are collected, or what day your library book's to be returned, not the days you book theatre tickets!
Wait until you get to the age where you're double-booking, leaving your tickets behind, turning up at the wrong theatre, or forgetting to go altogether. Tickets still in a drawer...
Haha! Sounds like it's a miracle you end up seeing as much as you do! 😉
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Post by david on Jun 13, 2018 18:11:27 GMT
I love how insanely geeky we all are about this, it's brilliant! 😁
Wait until you get to the age where you're double-booking, leaving your tickets behind, or forgetting to go altogether. Tickets still in a drawer...
Yes, this sums me me up to a T. Despite using wall and computer calanders as well as tickets on a pin board, I have managed to tick all these boxes!
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