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Post by zahidf on Mar 8, 2018 19:31:31 GMT
Not that I would blame anyone for returning their tickets - in these austere days, cash is hard earned - but I do feel really really sorry for the National and the cast and crew of this production in particular. There seems to be a creative crisis of confidence in terms of programming the Olivier at the moment. Hopefully with a bit of support from its patrons, the NT will get itself out of the doldrums and into a golden period again before long. Peaks and troughs. It has just won loads of oliviers and seems to sell most its stuff out They just have a few flops
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3,321 posts
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Post by david on Mar 8, 2018 19:31:34 GMT
Having read the press reviews this morning along with the comments from board members who have been to see the production, I did the online return of my ticket without any hassle and have got the credit voucher sorted. I feel bad for sending back the ticket, but with such negative reviews from a number of sources I would rather spend the money as well as my time on some other production as I will be only down for the weekend and would rather not waste a theatre slot having previously been caught out by watching the NT’s Common which I found to be dull as ditch water.
It can’t have been pleasant reading for the cast and crew this morning reading the reviews (but that’s part and parcel of being in the the theatre)but what is most concerning in my opinion is that the majority of the press are saying the same things regarding the production and this would maybe put people off from future productions directed by Rufus. It will be interesting to see what they do with the tour based on these reviews.
I really wanted this to be great and was really looking forward to it. Shame it’s gone the other way.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 8, 2018 20:14:36 GMT
Not that I would blame anyone for returning their tickets - in these austere days, cash is hard earned - but I do feel really really sorry for the National and the cast and crew of this production in particular. There seems to be a creative crisis of confidence in terms of programming the Olivier at the moment. Hopefully with a bit of support from its patrons, the NT will get itself out of the doldrums and into a golden period again before long. Peaks and troughs. It has just won loads of oliviers and seems to sell most its stuff out They just have a few flops Been nominated Not won them yet And most of the nominations Are all For one show Most Of them will likely be taken by Hamilton anyway They stage over 25 shows a year at the NT Such wildly deviating programming Inconsistent Isn’t a good thing
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Post by Deleted on Mar 8, 2018 20:14:59 GMT
No they don’t, it is only when a paying audience sees a show that you know what you have. Many times a show that is good in workshops or rehearsal doesn’t look so in front of an audience. In any case ‘going well’ isn’t synonymous with success and vice versa, ‘going well’ can mean unexamined. The show that is the toughest to find in rehearsals can be successful because things aren’t as smooth sailing. if what you state was true there would be a fraction of the flops that we get happening.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 8, 2018 20:19:50 GMT
It has just won loads of oliviers and seems to sell most its stuff out They just have a few flops Been nominated Not won them yet And most of the nominations Are all For one show Most Of them will likely be taken by Hamilton anyway Hamilton is going to win in the play categories as well? Wow. I knew it was good but being both a play and a musical is a whole new level of impressive.
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Post by Jan on Mar 8, 2018 20:55:59 GMT
Whilst i would never return tix. You book in advance you should go. I do think these reviews do out pressure on the NT board not to renew Norris' contract for another five years in 2020. I agree, I would never return a ticket based on reviews. Also I disapprove of leaving at the interval although I have done so twice. Not sure on Norris - would he even want to continue ? He strikes me as just being in the wrong job, he would have been fine running the Almeida and Goold would have been fine at NT.
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2,496 posts
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Post by zahidf on Mar 8, 2018 21:27:29 GMT
For the national, ive found when the average rating is around 2 stars, its a bad play. Stuff like Salome, the suicide, common...
i cant be bothered wasting an evening again.
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1,119 posts
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Post by martin1965 on Mar 8, 2018 21:47:03 GMT
Whilst i would never return tix. You book in advance you should go. I do think these reviews do out pressure on the NT board not to renew Norris' contract for another five years in 2020. I agree, I would never return a ticket based on reviews. Also I disapprove of leaving at the interval although I have done so twice. Not sure on Norris - would he even want to continue ? He strikes me as just being in the wrong job, he would have been fine running the Almeida and Goold would have been fine at NT. If the rest of 2018 and 2019 is as bad then he will prob go anyway. The Ant and Cleo ought to be good and he would hope for a hit with the Hare play but Exit the King appears to have been moved back. No wonder he wants to bring back Follies!
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2,496 posts
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Post by zahidf on Mar 8, 2018 22:36:46 GMT
I agree, I would never return a ticket based on reviews. Also I disapprove of leaving at the interval although I have done so twice. Not sure on Norris - would he even want to continue ? He strikes me as just being in the wrong job, he would have been fine running the Almeida and Goold would have been fine at NT. If the rest of 2018 and 2019 is as bad then he will prob go anyway. The Ant and Cleo ought to be good and he would hope for a hit with the Hare play but Exit the King appears to have been moved back. No wonder he wants to bring back Follies! [br Exit the king probably put back because of rhys ifans having to stop acting for personal reasons
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1,504 posts
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Post by foxa on Mar 8, 2018 22:53:46 GMT
At the moment, I don't think we will return the tix - they are only £15 first row of the circle and it's not a long evening.
But, from the sound of this, I think this is a real shame. Kinnear, in particular, I think could have been really, really good in this. But, as someone suggested above, he's best when rooted in something naturalistic/psychologically believable. I LOVED his performance as Angelo in 'Measure for Measure' at the Almeida - he made incredible sense of it: horrible, funny, pathetic, believable. Ditto his performances in The Revenger's Tragedy and Othello. I think he could have done something really interesting with this.
As someone who has been involved in a lot of student productions - as soon as bin bags form part of either a set or a costume, I know we're in trouble.
It's been an awfully long time, it seems to me, since Duff has been in a good production. She's been good in mediocre or poor shows, but I don't associate her with a good evening out.
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5,707 posts
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Post by lynette on Mar 8, 2018 23:01:05 GMT
You lot returning tickets- huh. I took the bullet. On way home now. Will post later. My jelly baby bag broke and I lost a few. Was probably more affected by that drama than anything on the stage.
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Post by wiggymess on Mar 8, 2018 23:15:46 GMT
Does anyone know Why there were so many plastic dolls parts Limbs All over the set Voodoo? One witch had a necklace of them But many were just here and these I also thought too many dead characters Came back onstage Far too frequently Rampaging about It didn’t work at all The costumes are the most bizarre Brown tape I am still in shock I think Acting wise Perhaps it was the gentlewoman And also Malcom Who were the best For me The only two actors who kept to the rhythm of the lines And weren’t plagued with regional accents I've no interest in seeing this, and never did have. Hearing more about it bit by bit is fascinating and very amusing tbh. Witches with body parts around their necks, dead characters rampaging about and brown tape costume
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Post by Deleted on Mar 8, 2018 23:33:28 GMT
You lot returning tickets- huh. I took the bullet. On way home now. Will post later. My jelly baby bag broke and I lost a few. Was probably more affected by that drama than anything on the stage. Be careful you don’t sit on them
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5,707 posts
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Post by lynette on Mar 8, 2018 23:45:54 GMT
So the positives: they spoke the lines nicely, that is the lines not drastically cut; Rory and Ann Marie will make a nice pairing someday in another play, probably yet to be written; it cracked on at the beginning; the revolve didn’t break down. I had a good seat. I saved most of the jelly babies.
A few negatives: what with the different accents? Was this the remnants of a Celtic fringe in a post apocalyptic wrecked state, now beset with gangs? Why do the dead people keep popping up thus weakening when they are supposed to, I mean Banquo. Duncan is never meant to be a ghost. Where was Donalbain? He is there for a reason and would make a nice point about the U.K. if he were there. I didn’t mind Fleance being a girl. I know we are supposed to be very aware of equality in casting but funnily, this is a play where Lady M is isolated as a woman and where she denies her womanliness.
Why no guns? The English army appears, comically in its desert pale uniform at the end and narry a gun in sight. In fact we know, don’t we that when the end comes, they will hang on to the guns. The machete type knives were meant to look like ISIS beheading knives were they? The fight at the end was pathetic. I mean, come on, it was school play standard and a bit less. Did they not do enough practice on it? The fight at the end is supposed to be the BIG thing. The audience on the left probably couldn’t see most of it anyway as it was at the side of the ramp. The ramp, the poles, the frilly bits, the torn bin bags, the brown wrapping tape were distractions because the whole shebang didn’t make sense. Where were we? And why? Had Macbeth thought of the murder before or not? They said the words but somehow they didn’t have power. The Witches did not horrify me half as much , if at all, as the children as witches in the Slinger RSC. They believed in witches, we don’t. So you have to make them something we are scared of. Evil children are something we are scared of. And sticking em up poles doesn’t help.
The shelf was full of school parties and it was lovely to see and hear them chitter chatter in the foyers afterwards but I do hope the schools ask the exam boards to take into account the changes to the text and the usual stage directions. They will get a lot of Lady M cutting her throat and dying in M's arms and the guy at the beginning reporting on the battle being Macduff and as said before, a female Fleance ( who could hitch up with Malcolm at the end and make the prophecy true.. cos you would have to do someat like that since the line is supposed to be Kings from Banquo, just a suggestion, Rufus) and a wonderful female Ross who made sense of her part quite well.
Im looking forward to the RSC show later in the year. 😳
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Post by oxfordsimon on Mar 8, 2018 23:53:33 GMT
Lady M cutting her throat and dying in M's arms? What? Excuse me? What? ?? One of the great things about the play is the way Lady M has a pathetic off-stage death as a counterpart to the drama of her life. Oh dear.
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Post by oxfordsimon on Mar 8, 2018 23:54:41 GMT
MACBETH Wherefore was that cry? SEYTON The queen, my lord, is dead. MACBETH She should have died hereafter; There would have been a time for such a word. To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow, Creeps in this petty pace from day to day To the last syllable of recorded time, And all our yesterdays have lighted fools The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle! Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player That struts and frets his hour upon the stage And then is heard no more: it is a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing.
This doesn't make any sense if she cuts her throat and dies in his arms.
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5,707 posts
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Post by lynette on Mar 8, 2018 23:59:10 GMT
Well to be accurate, she is already dead when he cradled her. And she might have stabbed herself in the stomach. It was not clear.
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5,707 posts
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Post by lynette on Mar 9, 2018 0:00:44 GMT
M says out out brief candle at he point he reaches her and is holding her as if she is the candle. Kind of thing. Ask Rufus.
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Post by bob2010 on Mar 9, 2018 0:35:39 GMT
Cancelled my tickets as going to try to get to RSC production instead.
From the increased availability on the website, it doesn't look like I'm the only one.
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Post by Phantom of London on Mar 9, 2018 1:17:30 GMT
The National reviews are no worse than Macbeth at the Globe last year.
However the bad reviews aren’t a terrible thing as it demonstrates what the National is and put in a nutshell it’s a risk adverse theatre, that can take such creative risks, sometimes these pay off handsomely, but more often than not it can be middle of the road or bad as in today. But this is one of only a few theatres that could take such a gamble, if not the only theatre.
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5,066 posts
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Post by Phantom of London on Mar 9, 2018 1:22:59 GMT
Whilst i would never return tix. You book in advance you should go. I do think these reviews do out pressure on the NT board not to renew Norris' contract for another five years in 2020. I agree and do not get why the National allows people to return tickets, no other theatre does that. You see the production announced, you like the sound of it or the artistes in it, so you book, it’s a crapshoot, the reviews come out, well that is the risk you take.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 9, 2018 1:34:17 GMT
The National reviews are no worse than Macbeth at the Globe last year. However the bad reviews aren’t a terrible thing as it demonstrates what the National is and put in a nutshell it’s a risk adverse theatre, that can take such creative risks, sometimes these pay off handsomely, but more often than not it can be middle of the road or bad as in today. But this is one of only a few theatres that could take such a gamble, if not the only theatre. It would be interesting to see a comparison of how different Shakespeare plays get reviewed. I get the impression that A Midsummer Night’s Dream would be towards the top end and Macbeth somewhere near the bottom. MND is pretty indestructible whereas Macbeth has so many things that can go wrong.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 9, 2018 6:45:44 GMT
Whilst i would never return tix. You book in advance you should go. I do think these reviews do out pressure on the NT board not to renew Norris' contract for another five years in 2020. I agree and do not get why the National allows people to return tickets, no other theatre does that. You see the production announced, you like the sound of it or the artistes in it, so you book, it’s a crapshoot, the reviews come out, well that is the risk you take. Other theatres will let you do this - Barbican, RSC, Bridge, Royal Opera House (will exchange for other shows currently on sale). Why on earth shouldn't people return tickets? I'm much more likely to book for stuff knowing this is an option.
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Post by Jan on Mar 9, 2018 6:59:20 GMT
I agree and do not get why the National allows people to return tickets, no other theatre does that. You see the production announced, you like the sound of it or the artistes in it, so you book, it’s a crapshoot, the reviews come out, well that is the risk you take. Other theatres will let you do this - Barbican, RSC, Bridge, Royal Opera House (will exchange for other shows currently on sale). Why on earth shouldn't people return tickets? I'm much more likely to book for stuff knowing this is an option. Yes plenty of other theatre allow returns. One oddity at the NT is if you buy a theatre gift voucher from them it is time-limited - it expires in a year - but the credit vouchers they issue have no time limit. I wonder how many there are outstanding. When BA air miles had no time limit the nominal value of those outstanding ballooned to some massive value that was dragging down their balance sheet.
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Post by Jan on Mar 9, 2018 7:06:04 GMT
The National reviews are no worse than Macbeth at the Globe last year. However the bad reviews aren’t a terrible thing as it demonstrates what the National is and put in a nutshell it’s a risk adverse theatre, that can take such creative risks, sometimes these pay off handsomely, but more often than not it can be middle of the road or bad as in today. But this is one of only a few theatres that could take such a gamble, if not the only theatre. Haven't seen this yet, but to me it sounds like a fringe production - you see Shakespeare interpretations like this all the time in small fringe and touring productions - so he's not really taking any unique creative risk. He IS gambling on a fringe production being able to fill the Olivier though. In fact I think Norris' entire programme is more suitable for a fringe venue - he lacks the big bold populist (vulgar) touch to programme the NT - all his predecessors had this, albeit a bit camouflaged in the Ricard Eyre era - Norris' programming is so worthy, and puritan in a way.
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