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Bad Theater Behavior |
Fools.
I went to see Not the Messiah at Carnegie Hall with Eric Idle, Marc Kudisch, Lauren Worsham, etc. I was up in the balcony lamenting my misfortune at being seated two or three rows behind someone who had to be at least 6 feet tall when out of the corner of my eye I noticed someone in front of me on his phone. Fine. But then the performance started and he didn't put it down. He was on and off that phone throughout the first act and finally an usher came when he was doing it again during the second act and told him to put the phone away. Grown man. Now, I have a doctor in the family so I'm sympathetic to someone who wants a night out at the theater but still has to be on call. This was not that.
Also, just in general, stop taking pictures, people. During the performance, during intermission, at curtain call. Just stop.
This is more of an issue with concessions than audience members but I was a little annoyed that after the intermission of Cabaret a number of people near me came back to their seats with coffee which they slurped throughout the second act. Plus, I'm one of the few people who hates the smell of coffee.
-Right away, during the opening number, the girl in front of me raised her hands up over her head to begin braiding her hair. She was pulling the strands out piece by piece above her head, blocking my view.
-Cell phone checking and texting constantly by more phones than i care to remember.
-Constant chit chatting.
-Rattling drinks the entire second act that were just ice.
-So many people were getting up throughout the show. One person went down the aisle, and instead of exiting out the nearest exit, the person ran all the way across the balcony to the opposite exit.
-The gentleman next to my friend was a muscular fellow. He was massaging his wife sitting next to him and in doing so kept bumping my friend.
-During the song, 'Cabaret' the same gentleman gets out his candies and tries (fails) to eat them quietly throughout the entire song.
-SPOILER: When Sally is telling Cliff she gave up the baby in the climax of the show, time for another bathroom break, everyone up!
-SPOILER: Now when the cast is assembling back on stage for the final moment, bathroom break is over and everyone back up so this person can enjoy the last 45 seconds.
My friend said, "I loved the show. I feel like it would have brought me to tears had there not been all the distractions."
These distractions can ruin what can be a magical moment in theatre.
At Pippin recently, a woman was talking non-stop-this was before the show started-I knew she was going to keep this up when the show started and she did. I turned around and very pointedly told her to please stop talking. She said she was sorry! I turned around and she didn't talk again.
Yes, for prices you pay-there's not always discounts-people can't behave that way. Now that I think of it, Pippin was a rush seat-but it doesn't matter. It's a theatre not your living room.
P.S. I do blame the concession companies-having sellers going up and down the aisles selling wine and soda, etc. It just adds to the stadium atmosphere. Back to the old, "no drinks allowed back to your seats!", I say!
joined:12/4/07
joined:
12/4/07
I also told the gentleman in front of me to turn off his phone the first time I saw him go to check it. He almost started a fight with me. He puffed up and got all defensive and proceded to call me names. (He didn't turn the phone back on though!)
The rest of the people with their phones out were out of my whisper zone.
The biggest offenses were at the end of the show, so I couldn't go to an usher. But when people are digging into their candies, rattling their drinks, and checking their phones at the emotional climax of the evening, they obviously missed the whole point. They spent almost 3 hours and however much money and the theme of the show went over their heads completely.
I agree with the folks who have already commented, but I think you should be encouraged to follow it up the chain of command, so to speak. The Producers set the tone for their productions. They pay the bills. If they want the ushers to stop bad behavior they can make it happen. If the usher (or even the house manager) thinks there is no consequence for ignoring a bad situation, then why should they bother?
The last time at the theater, when I subjected to the horror that was Edwin Drood, I sat in the way back, and some girl proceeded to cough on me all night. She didnt cover her mouth, didn't say excuse me, just coughed in my direction the whole show. Cheap seats? Never, ever again!
I read this sentiment the other month that the cheaper seats hold patrons who don't behave as well as others. I didn't want to believe it but it's been proven to me twice now.
Front mezz is nice because there aren't any people in front of you to misbehave.
If I want to see more than a handful of shows a season I need to get the cheap seats. I'm sympathetic to the cough-ers but I have my limits. If you're that sick, maybe you shouldn't have come out. Cough medicine and cough drops do exist. Unapologetically coughing on someone else? Inexcusable.
During a good part of act one, the ushers were walking up and down the aisles trying to figure out where the noise was coming from (along with many audience members) which was distracting enough. The couple left right before the act one intermission - and then the woman returned without the baby. I was surprised they let her back in.
I don't think bad behavior happens only in cheap seats..
joined:12/27/11
joined:
12/27/11
They're out there.
Another time, I was very, VERY lucky to have front-center mezz tickets to "Side Show" right before they posted the closing notice. During the first act, aside from a few comments the woman next to me made to her husband ("wow, look at that makeup!"), I was left in peace to enjoy the show. After intermission, however, the woman and her husband returned, double-fisting M&Ms and wine and soda. I'm sure the woman didn't realize just how much noise those plastic candy bags or shaking ice make, but she certainly made those concessions last through most of the second act. Right after the finale and the ovation, the husband turns to her and says, "Wow, this is a handy cup they gave us here!" Handy indeed, sir, for driving me nearly to distraction.
What? Are you sure she wasn't trying to breast feed? That's insane. And most likely not good for the baby.
She obviously hoped the baby would sleep through the show. And none of the ushers who walked right by her saw the baby when they were trying to figure out where the noises were coming from...so she hid it really well for over an hour.
I hope fun home will not suffer because of this
I just think its rude and insulting to bring food in the theater, You can drink and eat in intermission outside
joined:6/5/09
joined:
6/5/09
"I don't think bad behavior happens only in cheap seats.."
Very true.
Wealth doesn't automatically confer good manners. In fact it can often confer a sense of entitlement that results in very bad manners indeed: talking during the performance, use of cell phones, eating, crinkling of papers... I've witnessed all of these in the expensive seats. And I've seen perfect behavior in the cheapest seats.
Bad manners cross all demographic lines.
The two worst times were at Pippin a few months ago and this past night at Cabaret. Both times were in the second to last row. Interestingly, no phones rang at either show. It was the mass of people texting and talking. What makes the two evenings stand out is the fact that it wasn't a singular offender, rather everyone around me were culprits making me think, "am I the crazy one, here? are we even at a show, or are we all just hanging out in seats that happen to be in rows? i think there is some music going on down there, but who knows."
I agree that bad behavior can happen across all seat types. There are certain types of performances and theaters where I will scrutinize my seat selection way before plopping down my cold hard cash. I recently went through this for The Iceman Cometh at BAM. I eagerly awaited tickets to go on sale and then quickly purchased two orchestra row A seats. I figured the closer, the better and this way I will have no one in front of me possibly distracting and annoying me. Good strategy right? Yep. That's what I figured especially for a five hour play.
Now I have learned that BAM will sell it's rush seats as cushions for floor seating in front of row A. I am all for offering rush options but not when it comes to changing the specs I used to pay top dollar. This is unfair and should be worked out before all tickets go on sale so customers know what they are paying for without any surprise caveats down the road.
Needless to say, I have imaginings of hipsters with blankets and flasks of bourbon writhing on their cushions in front me in Katz' glow and I haven't even left my house yet.
Yes I know. Get off my lawn.
The producers at The River pulled this same ploy. I paid top dollar $175 (I know now, rather foolishly) for "front row" and then 6 weeks later they created new front rows for $99. How much more of this bait and switch should WE put up with?
joined:12/29/08
joined:
12/29/08
Yesterday at THE VISIT at 1:50pm (2:00 curtain), a woman (70+), her son (40+) and her husband (also 70+) were seated next to me. The woman took out a cup of yogurt, gave it to her son, who then opened it and started eating it. THEN, she took out an ENTIRE JAR OF PEANUT BUTTER with a butter knife and slices of bread and began smearing peanut butter on the bread. The man next to them said "Are you kidding me? There is a time and place for this" to which the son yelled and shoved his hand into the other mans face "MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS AND STOP TALKING". I decided to wave down an usher, which didn't work, so they continued to eat their peanut butter and yogurt. Had I been able to get out of my seat I would have gone up to an usher myself but I was seated against the wall with no aisle. The only way out was to walk over all of these people and I knew that wasn't going to go very well. I really don't understand how people can be so rude and inconsiderate to those around them. Not to mention - the visit was 90 minutes. They could have eaten their yogurt and peanut butter OUTSIDE before entering the theater.




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joined:11/17/14
joined:
11/17/14
Posted: 2/4/15 at 4:26pm