155 posts
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Post by synchrony on May 17, 2016 21:37:31 GMT
At what show?!?!! My worst theatre experience was when the woman behind me vomited down my back!!! Was it you?!?! Or is this a more common event than I realised?! Haha! Jersey Boys, a couple of years ago ........ Wasn't you then ;-). My experience was at The Mousetrap. Judging by the stories in this thread, people being vomited on just happens all the time ;-)
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8 posts
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Post by flyingfree on May 18, 2016 12:39:33 GMT
After a show a few years ago at the stage door I had an actress asked me excitedly when I was due. I wasn't pregnant, just fat. I should be able to laugh about this now I've lost a considerable amount of weight but it still makes me cringe.
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Post by Deleted on May 18, 2016 14:14:00 GMT
You never ever EVER ask a woman if she's pregnant, or assume a woman is pregnant, no matter how confident you are, no matter if you can see the baby crowning. You ALWAYS wait for the information to be volunteered, because even if she does have a baby in her, you still run the risk of causing offence. Not worth it, AT ALL.
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243 posts
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Post by musicallady on May 18, 2016 15:32:45 GMT
I went to see my brother conduct NBT's Hunchback of Notre Dame at Leeds with my dad. We were sat in a box with a good view of my brother and the stage. I told dad not to put anything on the rail in case it got knocked off.
Did he listen? Nope. Minutes into the show he knocked a bag on salted nuts over the edge showering the stalls below. I have to say it was so funny. Thankfully the usherette was understanding.
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Post by Deleted on May 18, 2016 16:35:33 GMT
I went to see 'The Suicide'.
The play wasn't stopped after 5 minutes. In fact, it continued to the end.
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Post by Deleted on May 18, 2016 18:51:36 GMT
I'm intrigued by the number of likes in this discussion of personal misfortunes. Are the likers entertained, or is it more a matter of "It pleases me that you suffered, you ****"?
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2,342 posts
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Post by theglenbucklaird on May 18, 2016 21:10:48 GMT
I'm intrigued by the number of likes in this discussion of personal misfortunes. Are the likers entertained, or is it more a matter of "It pleases me that you suffered, you ****"? For me my five likes have definitely been for wanting to intrigue mods
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2,342 posts
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Post by theglenbucklaird on May 18, 2016 21:11:18 GMT
I'm intrigued by the number of likes in this discussion of personal misfortunes. Are the likers entertained, or is it more a matter of "It pleases me that you suffered, you ****"? For me my five likes have definitely been for wanting to intrigue mods Six likes
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Post by Deleted on May 18, 2016 21:58:19 GMT
I'll never forget the time me and my mother went to see Cabaret in New York at Studio 54 (Alan Cumming and Michelle Williams - wonderful)
We were sat at the Kit Kat Klub cabaret style tables towards the front of the stalls. The seats on these tables were assigned, but not numbered. We were shown to our seats by an usher, and were joined by another young couple; a father and his grown up daughter. First half went up, no problem.
At the intermission (!) my mother and I went to the bar. We returned to discover that the other couple had moved into our seats and had even moved our coats and bags into their old seats. My mother politely asked them to move back to their original seats, to which the daughter replied that she couldn't see from those seats and wanted a better seat for the second act. Mum quite rightly told her that they were our seats that we had paid for.
It was at this point that the daughter stood up and screamed in my mother's face "HE'S A TONY VOTER!" My mother, never one to miss a trick shouts back "I COULDN'T GIVE A TOSS!"
The elderly gentleman and I exchange apologetic, yet knowing looks and a red-faced usher requested that they move back to their original seats. Cue much huffing from the daughter who insists to her father that he doesn't waste any of his votes on the show.
As the curtain came down she scurried off, while the old man turned to us and said "That was great - it's got my vote!"
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Post by Deleted on May 19, 2016 7:34:48 GMT
If you look at the pattern of my likes, you'll see they correspond to grid co-ordinates. Which grid?, I hear you ask. Well, if you're my contact, you'll *know* which grid.
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5,707 posts
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Post by lynette on May 19, 2016 17:49:41 GMT
For me my five likes have definitely been for wanting to intrigue mods Six likes Ain't so easy to intrigue me.
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218 posts
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Post by Elle on Feb 25, 2018 19:56:59 GMT
I just found this thread so will add my experience. It's the last night of a trip in NYC and I'm seeing Priscilla, Queen of the Desert at the Palace Theatre. First act and I'm enjoying the show but something strange is happening... My face feels like it's on fire, it's itching like crazy and so is my upper body. Had never felt anything like that before. Made it to the interval and when the lights go up I have a look at my face, it's flaming red and covered in huge bumps! OMG what is happening?!? I couldn't stay there with my scary face and the itching so I ran out of the theatre back to my hotel, which was luckily close by. I kept my head down the whole way as to not freak out the tourists on Times Square.
In my room I see that my chest and back are also red and covered in those bumps. Some quick googling and it turns out to be hives which I never had in my life. More googling and the shrimp I had for dinner before the show was probably to blame. To be sure 2 months later I had shrimp again, since I like it a lot, but again broke out in hives. So haven't had any shrimp since 2011 and still have not seen Priscilla in full. 👎
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Post by Deleted on Feb 25, 2018 20:25:45 GMT
My first night at a festival, I was mugged at knifepoint during my first LSD trip age 15.
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2,859 posts
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Post by couldileaveyou on Feb 25, 2018 20:33:28 GMT
Watching an Evening at the Talk House at the NT is the worst thing ever happened to me at a show
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1,348 posts
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Post by tmesis on Feb 25, 2018 21:03:18 GMT
Watching an Evening at the Talk House at the NT is the worst thing ever happened to me at a show Yes I'd forgotten how awful that was - time literally stood still (but not in a good way.)
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2,302 posts
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Post by Tibidabo on Feb 25, 2018 21:10:43 GMT
Worst thing that happened to me at the theatre was finding myself In The Room Where It Happened, through no fault of my own.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 25, 2018 21:41:20 GMT
I have only just seen this thread...
Years ago now, I was driving into London (those were the days when you could, and you could always park near to the theatre!) to see Joan Collins in Private Lives. I lived on a busyish road then, but this particular Saturday night the road was completely deserted. As we approached some traffic lights, a toddler of no more than about two suddenly ran across the road. From one side to the other. Just like that.
Thank God we’d had to stop for the lights. And thank God the road was quiet so the toddler was completely unharmed. I jumped out of the car and ran to it (I wasn't sure whether it was a little boy or a little girl) to stop it from running back the way it had come. And I waited. For someone to appear and to take it.
But no-one did. There wasn’t another soul in sight, not an open door of a house to reveal where it had appeared from, and not a mum or a dad with an empty pram. So we just waited with me holding on to this toddler. It wasn’t distressed. In fact I seem to remember it was quite happy.
But we were on our way to see Private Lives and time was getting on! Some other cars passed us by then I think but there were no people on the street to claim the baby.
I had absolutely no idea what to do with it and started going up to the houses on the side of the road where it had run from, but every door was closed. I felt sick, thinking that here I was holding a toddler in my arms (now chuckling) and if anyone did appear it might look like I was kidnapping it!
So I walked with it, trailed by my friend in the car we were driving in, to the police station (remember them?) about 400 yards away so I could hand it over.
And I explained that this baby had run across the road in front of us and that I had stopped it from running back into the road, but I simply didn’t know where it had appeared from. I can remember feeling sick, wondering if the policewoman would think that I’d been trying to take it and I’d had second thoughts. But she was really kind to me, sensing my distress, and she took all my details, including the exact location of where it had been found. And then she tried to take it from me, but it didn’t want to let go of me, and she commented, “I can see they like you!” Eventually I handed it over, feeling terrible, and we went to see the show. I couldn’t concentrate at all, wondering if the child had been reunited with its parents, or whether I was going to be arrested later that evening for child abduction...
After the show (crap, from memory) we returned to the police station to check on what had happened. And the new team on duty told me that they had no record whatsoever of a child being handed in. Yup, that’s right. No written record that they could find at that moment in time. “There’s no kid here now, sir...”
So I didn’t sleep that night.
About 10am the next morning, my doorbell rang, and I answered the door to find a man standing there with a pushchair. And in the pushchair was a little someone I recognised! Gurgling. Dad thanked me profusely for saving his child’s life, and begged me not to tell his wife (out at work at the time he was supposed to be supervising the child) that he hadn’t noticed the baby run out of the side door of the house. It must have run along the side path, down the front garden and across the road.
I never did see the man or the baby ever again, even though they lived only a few minutes from where I lived. And I never did find out whether it was a boy or a girl. (They’ll be about 30 now!)
I dread to think of all the ramifications of a similar incident now...
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2,302 posts
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Post by Tibidabo on Feb 25, 2018 22:08:45 GMT
I never did see the man or the baby ever again, even though they lived only a few minutes from where I lived. And I never did find out whether it was a boy or a girl. (They’ll be about 30 now!) I dread to think of all the ramifications of a similar incident now... So that was you? After all these years. Thanks! I was trying to make a break for it, numnut!
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5,161 posts
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Post by TallPaul on Feb 26, 2018 13:11:53 GMT
I never did see the man or the baby ever again, even though they lived only a few minutes from where I lived. And I never did find out whether it was a boy or a girl. (They’ll be about 30 now!) I dread to think of all the ramifications of a similar incident now... So that was you? After all these years. Thanks! I was trying to make a break for it, numnut! But @caiaphas has already told us that the child will now be about 30, not almost 60!
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243 posts
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Post by musicallady on Feb 26, 2018 16:03:08 GMT
Took my brother who was about 12 or 13 to see the UK tour of Seven Brides for Seven Brothers ar Darlington Civic Theatre. We were sat dead centre of the front row right behind the Musical Director. Throughout the show my brother kept tutting and commenting on how the MD was conducting and the mistakes the orchestra were making. I kept telling him to be quiet but he carried on. At the end of the show the MD turned around and told me everything he’d said was correct. My brother went on to be MD of English National Ballet and he has worked with that MD!
Another time I’d had a rough day at work and rushed to get home, changed and off to see “A Royal Gala” at the Theatre Royal with Fergie and Andrew so secutity was tight. At the interval I was in the foyer with friends lookinh in my bag for some chocolate. Never thinking I said - bloody gun takes up all the space - as a joke. Next thing I knew I was in a private room having my bag and person searched. I was let off with a friendly warning and tgey kept my chocolate. A few months later I was at a performance of NBT where a Royal was involved, I can’t remember who. Never thinking I said the same gun thing again and again I was bustled into a room and searched again. The guys couldn’t believe it was the second time I’d said it.
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1,972 posts
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Post by sf on Feb 26, 2018 16:19:20 GMT
A matinee of the Monkees jukebox musical "Monkee Business" at the Opera House in Manchester. The theatre unfortunately wasn't destroyed by a giant flaming asteroid before the curtain went up, so I had to watch the whole thing.
Oh, the horror. The horror.
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2,302 posts
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Post by Tibidabo on Feb 26, 2018 16:37:15 GMT
So that was you? After all these years. Thanks! I was trying to make a break for it, numnut! But @caiaphas has already told us that the child will now be about 30, not almost 60! Oh I dangle, how you bite! Now, how about you go practise tangling your new headphones eh TallPaul?
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5,073 posts
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Post by Phantom of London on Feb 26, 2018 16:59:26 GMT
The usual going to Joseph at the Churchill got a puncture in the car expensive and 2 parking tickets recentley at Fat Friends at Churchill and Follies at the National.
Now an embarrassing one for this poster.
I was at the Royal Court in Liverpool whilst in was doing modernisation. You had to walk an age to get to the toilets via a convoluted route, where we came across the ladies, then right next door to that obviously was another ladies, so all the men piled into the second ladies, couple of minutes later the duty manager came along and cleared the men out, but not all men i.e. me sitting on the throne in a cubicle, slowly and surely the re-designated site filled up with ladies, some interesting conversation was overheard, anyway I had to exit through all these local ladies laughing at me felt proper humiliated, obviously I needed to wash my hands, which I did, but still had a red face 👹👹👹.
Didn’t hang about to dry my hands.
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98 posts
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Post by haz23 on Feb 26, 2018 17:32:21 GMT
When I worked as an usher, I had a child projectile vomit on my shoes during panto and a man grab my tie and physically shake me all because I'd asked him to return to his seat for Act Two (he was very drunk and it was terrifying, typical Jersey Boys audience!)
Worst one though was when Calamity Jane was on tour and I was hurriedly running up some stairs backstage when I tripped, fell flat on my face and ripped my skirt up the back (thankfully I had tights on!) but when I heard a voice say "Are you ok?" and I turn to see Tom Lister, who was not wearing a shirt at this point I will add, looking very sympathetic towards me. SO embarrassing.
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218 posts
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Post by Elle on Feb 26, 2018 18:16:01 GMT
I remember something else. At Kinky Boots on Broadway I was sitting in the lowest box nearest the stage. I placed my hard glasses case on the railing for just a second and of course it fell off. It hit a lady right on the head in the front stalls! I felt so bad and was so embarrassed. I apologized profusely from where I was sitting but had no time to go down to her as the show was starting. She seemed OK thank goodness.
During the interval I went to her seat and waited for her so I could apologize properly but she was away the whole time so I didn't get to speak to her. From my seat I saw that she did return later though, phew was worried for her. After the show I asked an usher if a glasses case had been found and they said that a lady had handed it in. Even though I smacked her right on the head with it she still turned the case in, bless her. The case was broken from the impact. 😳 I will forever feel bad about this. Lady, I'm sooooooo sorry!
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