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Post by ncbears on May 6, 2018 22:09:36 GMT
Finally getting back to the UK after a couple of years. Will be staying in Oxford 24 June through 30 June and maybe a couple days after that in London. So, I have my Theatreboard button - but what should I try to see?
Will probably day seat or discount booth most shows, but if there's something I should book for from the States, please let me know! (besides Harry Potter)
Spouse is conferencing, so I have freedom to come to London on my own on occassion. We've seen in one place or another nearly every musical on the West End that's been running longer than six months - so except for curiosity to see original staging of Phantom of the Opera, I think those are pretty much out. We saw Pressure in Edinburgh back in 2014. Bat out of Hell is having a US tour with a stop in February near us, so unlikely to try for that.
I will be booking Thrill Me (written by a friend of a friend) Tina seems to be getting nice comments. Oxford is having their OffBeat Festival - (Hamlet Super 64 looks fun)
Curious about:
Julie at the National Translations at The National Fun Home at the Young Vic Strictly Ballroom (love the movie - comments on Musicals board are discouraging) Trioperas at Peacock Lieutenant of Inishmore (am I supposed to take spouse to see Aidan Turner?) Genesis Inc and Death of John Doe, both at Hampstead Jungle (can't really tell from comments on the Plays board) Consent (comments are mixed on the Plays board)
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Post by oxfordsimon on May 6, 2018 22:27:56 GMT
Well whatever you do, have a great stay in Oxford! If the weather is good, there are plenty of lovely places to wander around.
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Post by Mark on May 8, 2018 19:33:33 GMT
Avoid Strictly, such a let down..
Tina is great!
Have you seen Everybody's Talking About Jamie? If not, then it's a must see.
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639 posts
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Post by ncbears on Jul 7, 2018 0:57:16 GMT
So, in the end, we saw Victim at Oxford Fringe. It was quite good - although I didn't exactly get the point of the piece. We also arrived two minutes late (took a wrong turn) but since the back row was full, I managed to trip down a couple of steps. The performer was very nice about it. Victim is a one woman show where the performer basically plays (1) a female guard with marital trouble and (2) a murderess who is in jail for life. Along the way, the guard and the murderess channel other characters. The pieces intercut until they meet at the end. That was the only play we saw. Yes, after listing a bunch of plays, we ended up seeing only musicals. In London, we saw Thrill Me. And first off, don't do the gallery seats in the studio. yes, they are comfortable, but the glass railing has a metal railing on top which blocks the view. Thrill Me is about the Leopold & Loeb murder in Chicago in the 1920s - a "thrill killing" one that was done for the thrill of committing the crime. The show builds to the murder - then quickly skips over it - to Leopold and Loeb trying to evade capture and ultimately how they are captured. The music is mostly ballad after ballad - I found the actor playing Nathan Leopold better than the actor playing Richard Loeb. But, the two have been playing the roles together for a while now. I found Loeb's character to be too much of a sociopath from the start - and so he lacked the charm that drew Leopold in. Saturday afternoon, we saw Bat Out of Hell. Originally, we were going to just wait for the US Tour, but advice here seemed to suggest the staging at the Dominion would be unlikely to be the staging on the US tour. I found the show insane - I mean bonkers. I loved the music - couldn't really follow what story there was -loved the staging - loved the older audience rocking out while younger members seemed perplexed. There seem to be people who are multi-repeat attendees because there was a bit of audience talk-back/shout-outs during the show as well as singing along. Here was the major audience participation: {Audience Participation} At the end of "I Won't Do That", Strat pauses and an audience member shouted out "Say It" like it was Rocky Horror. The actor paused, laughed, and then sang "But, I won't do that" Saturday night was Tina! - We ended up with two singles in the stalls. Spouse got Row D, Center. I was back and to the side. Spouse really loved the show. I really liked it. I found myself comparing the stage show to the film What's Love Got To Do With It - and frankly, I found the film superior, for one primary reason. In the film, Ike Turner has a charm to him - you can see why people adore and follow him while disliking him. The Ike Turner in this show is just a mean vile SOB from the first sequence. And I don't know what accent the actor was using - but it was a one note affected accent and really distracting. My favorite moment is the staging of the final concert - I found it imaginative and breath-taking. For the most part, the audience obeyed the admonition pre-show to not sing along until the end of the show. BTW, Adrienne Warren had a knee brace. The instant standing ovation made me think I was back in the US. I found Tina! to be a pretty standard bio-musical, although it used the songs for plot points rather than "And then I recorded this..and then I recorded this" as in Beautiful (which was in the same theatre). And, then it was on to Iceland. We didn't attend any theatre in Iceland.
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Post by TallPaul on Jul 7, 2018 11:27:33 GMT
And, then it was on to Iceland. We didn't attend any theatre in Iceland. Two of the best lines ever posted on TheatreBoard, surely.
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Post by david on Jul 7, 2018 11:40:02 GMT
And, then it was on to Iceland. We didn't attend any theatre in Iceland. Two of the best lines ever posted on TheatreBoard, surely. Nice to see in the current economic climate that they are branching out into new areas. Watch a show and then do your food shop all in one place.
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