SeanMartin2 said: "darreyl102 said: "Bumping this up because I couldn't find another thread about it. How much of the show was cut? It's wiki page is kind of confusing."
As noted about fifteen minutes, but it was done very carefully: a line here, a line there, so it's pretty much the entire show minus a bit of extraneous dialogue."
Unless you watched one of the two hour reruns where they cut substantially more: No Control, Da
Det95 said: "Does anyone know if all the tour stops have a lottery? If there is one I’d like to enter when it’s in Detroit at the end of the month, but I haven’t seen anything regarding a lottery."
It does not require a lottery like DEH, Wicked, and BOM so it's gonna depend on the venue.
I think Wicked is one of the few tours that has an in-person lottery required by the producers. And that it's always the "Two and one-half hours prior to each performance, people who present themselves at the theater will have their names placed in a lottery drum; 30 minutes later, names will be drawn for a limited number of orchestra seats at $25 each, cash only. This lottery is available only in-person at the box office, with a limit of two tickets per person. Lottery participants
GavestonPS said: "CarlosAlberto said: "Miles2Go2 said: "CarlosAlberto said: "HAIRLIVE is on NBC, not FOX"
Oh, my bad. I saw the ad tonight on Fox and assumed it would be on Fox."
They ran a commercial for an NBC show on FOX? Highly unlikely."
I would have said the same thing, Carlos, but I saw ads for RENT LIVE on various networks. I rarely watch Fox (its shows just don't interest me, as a r
tourboi said: "CATS is definitely a multi-year tour.
Honolulu has announced for those keeping track. This is their first (ever?) broadway series... they've gotten the occasional one-at-a-time bookings in the past of bigger shows (Wicked, Lion King, etc) every few years but never a subscription season with more than one show lined up. So this is exciting for the touring world.
You know it's bad when during the opening number, a stage hand has to walk a handout mic out to a character because theirs doesn't work....
Touring production prices Oct 18
2018, 04:59:35 PM
Nashville has started doing a lot of general $25-30 rush tickets recently for pretty much everything ranging from an almost sold out Sound of Music (random singles) to being able to seat any size group with reasonable seats for a poorly sold School of Rock. Beyond that you can almost always get some sort of university or corporate part discount (usually 15% off). I wonder since they are an independent theater (ie not Broadway Across America), if that gives them a little more flexibility in terms
KFC1991 said: "Thanks guys. Unfortunately, the lottery in my city had to be entered two weeks ago! I'm super disappointed, since every other lottery here is drawn the day before the show.
There are plenty of full view seats, but they are far away from the stage. I'll be seeing this in an (egad!) 4,600 seat theater."
Are you sure that they aren't doing a day of lottery as well? I'm pretty sure that they are required to do a day of lottery fo
kade.ivy said: "njfl, thanks. I go to TPAC a few times a year. I saw Waitress there a few weeks ago, and there was an understudy on for a principal (Becky), and it was only the understudy board that showed the change (no slip or preshow announcement)."
Bad news for you. Only the lobby board had the alternates and the Gustave performer listed.
I know in the recent past, we've had inserts (Wicked, Book of Mormon) or an announcement (Sound of
kade.ivy said: "For those who’ve seen it recently, have they been giving understudy slips? I’m seeing it in Nashville and like to keep track of who I see. I’d really like to not have to resort to underlining my program.
Is the equity rule still not that there has to be two of the three of notice on the cast board, program insert, and preshow announcement when standbys and understudies are on? I’ve only seen it on the cast board the past two national
Most of the regional theaters sell subscriptions first which include all of the shows in the season. Afterwards (often 8-10 weeks before the show), they will put single show tickets on sale. I'd just wait. There's no reason not to and while some secondary sites are legit, none of the ones you listed seem to be.