Favorite show mishap

KathyNYC2
#25Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/22/14 at 12:19pm

Just this week - not my FAVORITE mishap but still an "interesting" evening at Matilda this past Friday.

First was fun..Matilda changes the large kid cast from show to show but on Friday night there was an unexpected last minute change. On the board outside and in the program, it was noted that Mitchell was going on as Bruce - but we heard over the loud speaker right before curtain that Chris Sumpter was going to be Bruce. All the kids on stage behind the curtain squealed and applauded really loudly...maybe it was his first time?? It was kind of sweet.

Then during the show, the "bathroom" set didn't pop up (and then sort of popped up late,but not exactly all the way)..so Matilda had to run off stage to get the hair tonic bottles...twice. Not sure if Paige knew this was going to be a problem beforehand, but she didn't miss a beat. There were a couple of other things that happened as well. Its hard to tell from the side but it sounded like Bruce's mic went off at the end of Revolting Children because Chris was doing a great job singing and then you couldn't hear him. Also it looked like Matilda and Trunch entered for their curtain calls from different spots on stage because a set piece did not move? Not sure about that one..

I have sat in lottery side orchestra seats before where you can pretty much see into the wings but I have never seen so many backstage people frantically "running" round doing things.

To top the evening, I noticed that a few cast members kept looking down into the audience and this poor older woman usher kept running back and forth throughout the show. She later told me there was a drunk in row AA - I guess not rowdy enough to be removed?? but enough that was distracting for the cast and more work for the ushers.

The joys of live theater...



Updated On: 6/22/14 at 12:19 PM

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CurtainsUpat8
#26Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/22/14 at 1:33pm

I'm sorry but this is still the best..

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7INfm99741E

Wilmingtom
#27Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/22/14 at 2:05pm

High School prduction of West Side Story. Tony missed his entrance and the kid playing Chino, not knowing what to do, shot Maria. Maria, not knowing what to do, eventually grabbed her chest and fell to the floor. The stage manager, not knowing what to do, brought the curtain in. End of show.

Pasdechat
#28Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/22/14 at 3:38pm

Not a real mishap but still made me laugh: in Evita's "I'd be suprisingly good for you" Peron (M. Cerveris) sang "please go on, I enthrall you" instead of "YOU enthrall me" - some fine self-confidence there!

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Polka Dot2
#29Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/22/14 at 4:41pm

Oh my goodness I cannot stop watching that Into the Woods clip! Best thing ever!

One of my friends told me a story of an amateur production of West Side Story. Chino aimed his gun at Tony, pulled the trigger, but the sound effect or blank (whatever they used) didn't go off. Not knowing what to do, Chino had a stroke of brilliance - he took his shoot off, yelled "Poison shoe!" and threw it at Tony. The shoe hit him squarely on the forehead. The actor playing Tony had a moment where he looked at Chino, and you could just read his thoughts: "Poison shoe? Are you kidding me?....But I do have to die...do I have any other choice?" And he slowly crumpled to the floor, dead.

My other favorite story was from an undergrad production of Brigadoon that I played Fiona in. We had these beautiful flats of the houses in the town - they were designed to specifically have that classic old musical look. Stunning. But, because Fiona's house was in the middle of the stage, there wasn't anywhere to be before an entrance except directly behind the flat. So I was near the door, and the girl playing Jean had to crouch on the floor below the window. If I remember correctly, this moment happened right after Fiona and Tommy had their first kiss together onstage. I walked back to the flat with that internal bubbling of quiet excitement, I just got my first kiss kind of way - and the door to the flat was somehow stuck. I couldn't exit. I tried once or twice more, but you couldn't pull too hard on the door because you'd risk the entire flat moving. At this point the audience knew something was weird. I turned around, and the actor playing Tommy was looking at me. I said in my Scottish dialect, "The door is stuck." Tommy walked over in a very manly way - but he couldn't get the door open either. The two of us along with the audience burst out laughing (and I truly believe our characters would have laughed in this situation). Then Jean popped up from her spot under the window, and I yelled out, "Jean!" She opened the door, and I gave Tommy a smile and exited. I had to re-enter in the middle of his next song, so I purposefully left the door ajar just a hair. After the song was over, I went back to the house, opened the door, turned back to look at him and gave him a "AH! The door worked!" type of nod. The audience cracked up. Best moment of the entire run. I love gems like that.

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DramaTeach
#30Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/22/14 at 5:03pm

At the first night of previews for Bridges of Madison County, a big set piece rolled off the stage and into the audience/pit. The actress who hit it looked absolutely horrified and froze unsure of what to do. She silently walked offstage while they made sure everyone was okay, and then she returned to continue to enthusiastic applause.

The other mishap that I witnessed would definitely not be considered a "favorite." I was there the night of Rocky previews when the show was stopped four times (for a significant amount of time during each) due to tech/set issues. It was very hard to stay focused on the world that the show was trying to create.

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dramamama611
#31Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/22/14 at 6:19pm

Re: the Helen Keller fall

There have been upteen stories that that was planned. And pretty stupid as in the Keller household, there would not be a ledge to fall off of.


If we're not having fun, then why are we doing it? These are DISCUSSION boards, not mutual admiration boards. Discussion only occurs when we are willing to hear what others are thinking, regardless of whether it is alignment to our own thoughts.

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haterobics
#32Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/22/14 at 6:28pm

How is Helen Keller a fail? Stayed in character the whole time!

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dramamama611
#33Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/22/14 at 6:54pm

And its a fail because the audience is now worried about the ACTRESS not the character.


If we're not having fun, then why are we doing it? These are DISCUSSION boards, not mutual admiration boards. Discussion only occurs when we are willing to hear what others are thinking, regardless of whether it is alignment to our own thoughts.

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BobbyBubbi
#34Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/22/14 at 7:08pm

The Full Monty national tour in Denver,matinee performance, the part where they crawl through the window (a men's bathroom of a bar, correct?) in the first act, they got through, but the back of the building fell off and the timing was perfect everyone thought it was part of the show and the audience erupted in laughter. But I knew it wasn't supposed to happen. Everyone onstage stayed in character, reacted appropriately and went on with the scene. Then they all paused (still not sure how all the actors got the message because they all froze at the same time, so there must have been someone back stage who gave them a signal or something. Then they brought down the actual theatre curtain (not the shows customary scrim) and an announcement was made please stay seated and the the show would begin again in 10 minutes. During the pause you could hear screw drivers and people hurrying to fix the set. I was pleasantly surprised at everyone's professionalism. The show continued without a hitch.

Another one- when I saw phantom of the opera in New York the chandler was being risen back up to the ceiling during intermission, an unusually tall man stood up in the front row and the chandler smacked him square in the face.

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hushpuppy
#35Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/23/14 at 3:13pm

Many years ago, in 1979 IIRC, there was an all-male production of HELLO, DOLLY! at the former Kabuki Theatre in San Francisco, starring Michelle. The opening number went off fine, but as the curtain parted on Vandergelder's store it caught on a piece of scenery, and, in full view of the audience, Vendergelder's Hay and Feed began to fall apart, piece by piece. Bless the actors' hearts, they gamely carried on, singing 'It Takes A Woman' while dancing all around the crumpled set as if nothing were amiss.

When Michelle made her entrance as Dolly, she stopped center stage, took a long look around, and said 'Well Horace, it looks like you had a small earthquake in Yonkers this morning'. Of course, it, you should pardon the expression, brought down the house.


'Our whole family shouts. It comes from us livin' so close to the railroad tracks'

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eperkins
#36Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/23/14 at 3:55pm

I saw Debbie Allen doing Ain't Misbehavin' on Broadway. She gets to "Keeping Out Of Mischief" where she is sitting on the piano bench with the piano player. The only real light on her is the follow spot - and it burned out right in the middle of the song. She snuggled closer to the piano player to get in his music light. Perfect.

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Nydiva2
#37Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/23/14 at 5:18pm

I've seen plenty of mishaps in my time, but my favorite was in one scene from On The Twentieth Century. At one point Oscar (John Cullum) did a quasi-ballet lift of Mrs. Primrose (Imogene Coca). Somehow, Imogene's hair got caught on John's jacket button. The strand wound so close to his chest, that he couldn't get his fingers in to free the hair; neither could Imogene reach far back enough to get herself clear. They did most of the scene with her practically dangling from his chest!

Trouper that she was, when it was time for her exit, Imogene reached back as far as she could and gave a tremendous YANK which did the trick. John mimed unwinding the hair, putting it back, and giving a quick kiss on the top of her head.

After the show, when I went backstage, they were patching up Imogene, who actually tore out a chuck of hair enough to have her scalp bleed!!!! What fortitude!!

AwesomeDanny
#38Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/23/14 at 5:35pm

I've seen many, but this was by far the most exciting. A few months ago, at Steppenwolf, I saw the world premiere of Katori Hall's play "Saturday Night/Sunday Morning" in their 80-seat blackbox space. The play is set in a beauty parlor in Tennessee in 1945, and it is inhabited by a group of African American women who live and/or work there. About halfway through act two, one character is doing another's hair and uses a cream that is supposed to straighten it but ends up burning off much of her hair in a hilarious scene that the audience got very into. Maybe a little too much--the exchange between the women goes "now what are you going to do for me?" "Well I can buy you a wig, I'll give you three weeks' rent for free--" and then in perfect unplanned unison, and audience member and the actress say "JUST THREE WEEKS?!" It's hard to get big laughs in a small theatre, but from then on, what was already a very strong production became an uproarious time, and the 80 people very well could have been an audience of 800.

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fyeahmaria
#39Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/23/14 at 5:48pm

This is from memory so details might be a bit off:
I went to If/Then a couple of months ago and witnessed a hilarious mishap. In the very beginning when she (Idina) is in the park, she gets an important phone call. Everything was going perfectly, until we hear the phone ringing, and Idina stars going through all her pockets, before bursting into laughter. The audience was pretty confused for a few seconds before she says something like (out of character) "I don't have a phone, could I have a phone please?" while still laughing immensely. LaChanze fished a phone out of her purse and everyone goes back to their spots. Before starting the scene over Idina looks up to the sound booth and asks "You ready?". Still chuckling she says to the audience and James "Now what was my line?". The scene starts over, and when we hear the phone ringing again she triumphantly takes it out of her pocket. A few lines later James asks for her phone number and she jokingly says "I'm sorry, it's a new phone!"


Sometimes you have to be a little bit naughty.

hanabana
#40Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/23/14 at 6:46pm

When I went to Newsies (a while ago, when Corey Cott just started), Ben Fankhouser started his notes on "Seize the Day" way too quickly, and then kinda had trouble finding the right tempo and sing with the orchestra. I am 98% sure I saw Corey make a very subtle hand gesture to him to slow down, and Ben was then able to find the tempo, and they continued with the song. I say 98% sure because my two friends who went with me said they saw no such thing, but then again, they are not as attentive to music, so I think they just missed it. I loved that because it really showed how much the cast cared about each other and helped each other out when needed. It was afterwards that I found out the two of them went to school together and had been performing together for a long time.
I haven't seen many though - the only other one I remember was when a cast member made his big entrance, he almost fell, but somehow managed not to.

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JBroadway
#41Favorite show mishap
Posted: 6/24/14 at 12:18am

I remembering seeing American Idiot in Berkeley and someone (I want to say it was Josh Henry) slipped on a piece of paper in that office scene. He managed to catch himself on the desk and gave a big smile at what had just happened. It was quick and probably not that noticeable, but still funny.

Also, not really mishaps, but funny thing:

I saw One Man, Two Guvnors late in the Broadway run, and people (besides the audience plant) began offering food and Corden came up with the most brilliant improvs. For example, one women offered him a roll from a restaurant, along with one of the cloth table napkins that restaurants have, and he chastised her for stealing the napkin. I don't think that was a plant right? I seem to recall hearing that the only plant in that scene was the "hummus" one.