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Post by couldileaveyou on Jan 27, 2020 10:08:40 GMT
First preview tonight. Rush tickets on TodayTix, any idea of where are the seats located?
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Post by asfound on Jan 27, 2020 10:49:27 GMT
There's a front row £10 PwC ticket for tonight if somebody wants to get in there quick.
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Post by drmaplewood on Jan 27, 2020 11:11:00 GMT
I'm going tonight, will report back.
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Post by MrBraithwaite on Jan 27, 2020 13:33:26 GMT
Really interested in what people think about this...would have a slot for this on my next trip, but this sounds so terrible...don't know if I really want to sit through this.
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Post by sherriebythesea on Jan 27, 2020 15:02:39 GMT
I hope this is interesting. I have tickets for the evening of my 65th birthday. It's my first time at OV (I'm such a tourist).
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Post by Being Alive on Jan 27, 2020 16:19:05 GMT
I'm there on Wednesday
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Post by duncan on Jan 27, 2020 16:54:13 GMT
Really interested in what people think about this...would have a slot for this on my next trip, but this sounds so terrible...don't know if I really want to sit through this. I've not seen this production BUT Endgame is probably in the bottom 5 of plays that I've seen - its not a script that I enjoy (miserable doesn't even begin to describe it) so if you do go, good luck. Based on seeing the Citz version, this will divide attendees.
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Post by couldileaveyou on Jan 27, 2020 17:44:56 GMT
Oh come on guys, Endgame has one of the funniest exchange in theatre history {Spoiler - click to view} HAMM: Why don't you kill me?
CLOV: I don't know the combination of the cupboard.
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Post by theatrelover123 on Jan 27, 2020 18:13:44 GMT
Oh come on guys, Endgame has one of the funniest exchange in theatre history {Spoiler - click to view} HAMM: Why don't you kill me?
CLOV: I don't know the combination of the cupboard. <rofl> Hilarious
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Post by Marwood on Jan 27, 2020 18:28:16 GMT
I’m going to see this on February 15th - got a cheap (ish) stalls ticket but it’s still a long way back from the front, but apart from the aforementioned PWC tickets, I haven’t seen any bargains (mine was £20 off the RRP, I’ll have to make do with that bargains wise, I wanted to go out on my lonesome on the Valentines weekend and this looked an easy fit for ‘unromantic day out’ - I went to see Cyprus Avenue on St V’s last year which might give you an inkling of what an old romantic I am 😂)
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Post by lynette on Jan 27, 2020 20:31:31 GMT
I’m going to see this on February 15th - got a cheap (ish) stalls ticket but it’s still a long way back from the front, but apart from the aforementioned PWC tickets, I haven’t seen any bargains (mine was £20 off the RRP, I’ll have to make do with that bargains wise, I wanted to go out on my lonesome on the Valentines weekend and this looked an easy fit for ‘unromantic day out’ - I went to see Cyprus Avenue on St V’s last year which might give you an inkling of what an old romantic I am 😂) Yep, you have chosen well.....
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Post by drmaplewood on Jan 28, 2020 10:07:56 GMT
First preview last night - thought this was OK but suffered from an audience laughing hysterically at absolutely anything. Cumming was good but bordering on the tolerable side of hammy. Radcliffe was... fine but quite stiff.
Rough for Theatre II is 25 mins and was quite fun with Cumming in his element. Then there's a (very noisy!) interval before Endgame. A bit of breaking the fourth wall. Finished at 9:50 last night but started late so that will be earlier as time goes on I imagine.
Warning for those sat in the circles on the right hand side as I was, your view will be obscured for a couple of moments but not enough to spoil your enjoyment and you can gather what is happening anyway. Not sure if its the same case on the other side.
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Post by asfound on Jan 28, 2020 11:06:19 GMT
thought this was OK but suffered from an audience laughing hysterically at absolutely anything. I had one of those sitting directly behind me. The type that forcefully and unnaturally laughs at anything that they believe they are supposed to find funny to show everyone they got it, whether it's meant to be a joke or not. So I had a lot of this horrible, laboured "BWA MA HA HUH huh!" right in my ear every time, say, Radcliffe did a funny walk or Cumming said something camp. Still, I quite liked it despite it verging on the tedious at times. Nice and bleak and droll. Lots of bewildered people afterwards, and the people next to me were whispering about walking out. Harry Potter accoutrement count: 3.
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Post by intoanewlife on Jan 28, 2020 15:26:00 GMT
thought this was OK but suffered from an audience laughing hysterically at absolutely anything. The type that forcefully and unnaturally laughs at anything that they believe they are supposed to find funny to show everyone they got it, whether it's meant to be a joke or not. So like the entire audience when Bette Midler did Hello Dolly on Broadway...
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Post by Someone in a tree on Jan 28, 2020 20:11:42 GMT
For those who are interested
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Post by Someone in a tree on Jan 29, 2020 10:54:55 GMT
First preview tonight. Rush tickets on TodayTix, any idea of where are the seats located? I got the middle of row M in the stalls. Great view but I'm glad I didn't pay more than 25 squid. Its an early preview but I can't thinking Ive seen Beckett performed better... Richard Jones doesn't use his usual tricks and it all seems lacking. Cumming rushed many of his lines in Rough Theatre and if you are a fan of Jane Horrocks, blink and you'll miss her. In the end I did enjoy Endgame as it is a great play.
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Post by Being Alive on Jan 29, 2020 23:36:31 GMT
Audience pretty tame this evening and to me only laughed when appropriate.
I liked it. Thought both Cumming and Radcliffe were good, and they'll get better as they get into their stride and more.comfortable with judging where the laughs come etc. Endgame is, as people have said, a very good play. Was less fussed by the first part (rough for theatre II) but that was Cumming in his element.
Jane Horrocks has the easiest track in the West end right now - ten mins in a bin and 2 hours in the green room.
Wouldn't go back, but the audience liked it and we're appreciative at the end (no one stood from what I could see though).
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Post by edi on Jan 30, 2020 7:08:30 GMT
This wasn't for me and I should've known but it's hard to resist £10 tickets.
I thought the first part was unnecessary. I would rather not "waste" 25 mins plus 20 mins break on it. Endgame was well played all around it's just not my kind of a play. Not the sort of doom I want on a miserable January day.
The chap next to me fell asleep. My partner didn't like it at all and asked me never to book Becket again.
I was already feeling a little blue and now I woke with a stinking bad mood and I yet to tell my partner next week's theatre In the NT will be 4 hours long.😭😭😭
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Post by MrBraithwaite on Jan 30, 2020 8:15:36 GMT
Well, I'm looking forward to it, still, four hours... Decided against Endgame in the end, Beckett is not for me either. Booked UIncle Vanya instead, which is one of my theatrical nightmares and the first play I ever walked out of (ages and ages ago). So may not fare much better
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Post by zahidf on Jan 30, 2020 8:53:01 GMT
Who's playing thanos in this one?
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Post by mrnutz on Jan 30, 2020 10:40:24 GMT
Saw this last night. Despite a premium central row J seat for £10, I found it to be a rather torturous evening.
Cumming was excellent, Radcliffe not so much. The plays weren't for me and I couldn't wait to leave...
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Post by Steve on Jan 30, 2020 13:04:53 GMT
I LOVED Endgame last night, and was glad to see Rough for Theatre 2 as a curio. Karl Johnson is the height and humanity of "Endgame," being the human entree to appreciating the gallows humour of the show, with the deliberately and deliciously camp Cumming also dead funny (well, wishing he were dead, lol) as the Hamm the ham, hamming it selfishly and atrociously in his little world in the endgame of his life! Some spoilers follow. . . "Rough for Theatre 2" is about a couple of bureaucratic angels, like the Starkeeper in Carousel, assessing the life of a man about to commit suicide. The best thing about this short 25 minute play, which starts the evening, is Cumming's character's pathetic neediness for Radcliffe's more professional and dominant character. That's funny, but the existential stuff is covered better in other plays by the same author, in my opinion. An interesting curio. 3 stars. "Endgame" is a tour de force for Karl Johnson! He's lifted everything you've ever seen him in, for example, from providing the spectacle of the NT's "Frankenstein" with it's beating heart as the blind man, to playing the heartbreaking lovable old git of a father-in-law, in the sitcom, "Mum." And here he is this play's soul, whether he's tending to his wife in the bin next to him, or aching for a biscuit. In an existential play, he exists in the most relatable way: he exists hard lol! He's our in, because everyone else in the play is a bit horrible, or in Cumming's Hamm's case, monstrous. In fact, this whole play is like an evil precursor to the TV sitcom "Mum", in which Lesley Manville's titular Mum is also in the endgame of her life, her whole life reduced to an everyday routine of vacantly and good-naturedly listening to other people rabbit on vapidly. In that sitcom, as here, Karl Johnson rabbits on while caring for his even more ailing wife, and for fans of "Mum," once you feel the parallels, you might warm up to this play, even if you think you don't like Beckett. As Jane Horrocks' blink-and-you-ll-miss-her Nell says, "nothing is funnier than unhappiness," and that is the key to the gallows humour of both "Mum" and this play, as the characters in both wrestle with the endless inanity, boredom, repetition and futility of everyday existence. Of course, Hamm, the central character here, is the opposite of the self-effacing "Mum." A preening drama queen in a world with no drama, with useless legs and useless eyes, he has only old stories and old cruelties to fall back on to keep himself going. With increasingly precise comic timing, Cumming effortlessly embodies this drama queen, a monster, yet a pathetic one, needy and desperate for attention from the only able-bodied person in his orbit, Daniel Radcliffe's Clov. The double act of Cumming and Radcliffe works well because it hits the wheelhouse of both actors, with Cumming's camp cruelty, slyness and neediness meshing and clashing perfectly and thoroughly with Radcliffe's workhorse decency and earnestness. Watching Radcliffe dutifully suffer in Cumming's orbit, in a world where he has to constantly climb ladders to reach pointlessly high windows, is funny precisely because he takes it so well lol! This is peak gallows humour, and it worked for me, because Karl Johnson provided the human connection I needed! 4 and a half stars.
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Post by jamb0r on Jan 31, 2020 9:59:14 GMT
What a load of pretentious nonsense. HATED this last night - first time in years that I have been desperate to get out of a theatre. The audience were insufferable too. Glad I only paid £10.
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Post by Peroni on Jan 31, 2020 12:43:11 GMT
Saw it last night from a mid stalls PwC seat and...meh. The first play felt pointless, while Endgame started off well with absurdist funny moments but then it all got so flat and boring... Cumming was great but his monologues were confusing and made Karl Johnson`s character almost fall asleep - for a reason! Radcliffe's acting was one note - a good one, but you cannot develop a character or push the play forward with an acting that doesn't have some range...
3 stars - go see if you feel like, but it's not unmissable.
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Post by dave72 on Jan 31, 2020 13:37:52 GMT
For those of us who believe that Endgame is one of the most important plays of the 20th century, this seems like a must-see.
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Post by Forrest on Jan 31, 2020 19:47:17 GMT
I had the feeling this would divide audiences, and judging by the board, I was right. I loved it, actually much more than I expected to. Rough was lovely and funny, a great start to the evening, but Endgame, for me, was an absolute gem. I've read some Beckett, but not this play in particular, and while I have never seen his work on stage before (as far as I can remember), I knew his writing was my cup of tea. I was one of the people who found the play largely hilarious - Beckett's humour is exactly the kind I like, halfway between being genuinely laugh out loud funny and making you feel bad that you are laughing because the joke is always at someone's expense and it is rather brutal. Which is why the play also felt devastatingly sad at the same time. Everyone in that home lives, or better to say exists (for living is hardly a word for it ), in a world of vast nothingness. Nothingness surrounds them literally, but each one of them is also drowning in it, personally, since they have so little joy to hold on to. And they are all so troubled and so utterly unhappy in their little fortresses of solitude, and that makes that line Steve had already quoted - that nothing is funnier than unhappiness - the perfect short summary of the play. Hamm's humanity is most compromised, he acts as their tormentor, but there are tiny, barely noticeable sparkles of something else in him too. He blames all of the world for his misery, but still longs to have something more, and though he tries, it's like he doesn't remember how to find joy in anything any more. Daniel Radcliffe's Clov is so endearingly obedient, despite the fact that Hamm's behaviour both infuriates him (but he bottles it up most of the time) and makes him long for some recognition and appreciation, which made me literally giggle with joy in those moments when he allowed himself a few brief escapes into quiet rebellion. (My favourite thing was when he nonchalantly kicked the dog, barely noticeably. It was one of those moments when I wanted to give him a hug.) Johnson's character is the most gentle one, clinging hopelessly and helplessly to the love he has for the person next to him who is disappearing, but also to the illusion of a normal life and a normal family. He struck me as both a symbol of gentleness fading away in a brutal world, discarded as unnecessary, as well as of one whole generation of romantics driven by different principles dying out. Basically, I wanted to simultaneously laugh and cry watching it most of the time. Maybe I just read too much into it, but I thought it was amazing. Cumming's performance was the absolute standout. Radcliffe was, perhaps, the weakest point: I did feel for his Clov, but somehow didn't find myself thinking: I can't wait to see this man on stage again. His performance felt well rehearsed, but not overly honest and a little restrained. (Maybe I just have brutally high expectations, but I love it when magic happens on stage, and I didn't get that from him.) Oh, and that set was terrific - beautifully simple and surreal at the same time. Those tiny windows in that enormous room - that are paradoxically the only source of any light and excitement - and the (dirty-pastel) look of everything being seemingly normal, yet strange, like a surrealist painting.
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Post by theglenbucklaird on Feb 2, 2020 9:56:44 GMT
This wasn't for me and I should've known but it's hard to resist £10 tickets. I thought the first part was unnecessary. I would rather not "waste" 25 mins plus 20 mins break on it. Endgame was well played all around it's just not my kind of a play. Not the sort of doom I want on a miserable January day. The chap next to me fell asleep. My partner didn't like it at all and asked me never to book Becket again. I was already feeling a little blue and now I woke with a stinking bad mood and I yet to tell my partner next week's theatre In the NT will be 4 hours long.😭😭😭 This. My wife insisted rather than asked though. 'Juliet Stephenson or Cummings, I don't care. Please no more Beckett'. Cummings was really good though
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Post by david on Feb 3, 2020 12:02:42 GMT
Could someone from the admin team ( BurlyBeaR) please remove my notice posted on the notice board as the ticket has now been collected. Thanks.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Feb 3, 2020 12:50:38 GMT
Could someone from the admin team ( BurlyBeaR ) please remove my notice posted on the notice board as the ticket has now been collected. Thanks. Done that 🙂
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Post by floorshow on Feb 8, 2020 19:03:04 GMT
Outstayed it's welcome by 15-20 mins, became increasingly ponderous for no good reason.
Liked it before the energy in the room dropped off - was a satisfyingly bleak and painful situation. Radcliffe was enjoyably physical, Cumming stumbled over his lines a few times in Rough, which was a surprise. V good hand acting from Horrocks. Certainly not a must see though.
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