sorano916 said: "adamgreer said: "Speaking of the fandom, are people going to see this in costume? Cosplay and costumes are a big part of this fandom."
Many people had Harry Potter-theme t-shirts or scarves. I saw a good number of people with robes. There were also a handful in full costume... There were at least three Newt Scamanders around even if he's not in this storyline at all. LOL.
perfectlymarvelous said: "They're children's books, and the first three are quite short and can probably be read in a couple of hours each. Read them, or listen to the audiobooks, as the films will not help you understand the show even a little bit. Then you can get mad with the rest of us about how many canonical rules the play breaks."
Stop saying that like it's true. I stand with J.K. Rowling on this. It's a great and welcomed addition for me. I wi
CT2NYC said: "Am I the only one who's expecting to like the show MORE than the film version? I thought the movie was wildly overrated, and I'm looking forward to seeing if they've improved on the source material."
I too think Frozen is a tad overrated and was expecting them to improve with the Broadway show (for me it's the exact same case with The Lion King). Apparently, they were glad to just deliver the movie with a couple more songs and no actual
j.garcia said: "I think they only released the London one here, sort of how like Sister Act never got a new US recording when it came over from the West End as many of the principles also transferred with the production.
If I'm wrong I'd love to get my hands on the Broadway cast as well."
You're correct. The only English cast albums Mary Poppins have are the London and an Australian one, recorded live.
We don't have many shows at the same time in my country so I always end up going to the same ones. One of those years I saw the same show 24 times. But never stage doored. It was one of these shows who seemed to attract needy people and whenever I glanced at the stage door I saw people more in need to tell actors their life stories and the huge necessity to take a picture to post on instagram/facebook, so I never minded. The only time I can recall stage dooring was when I attended an open
To further dismiss these claims, during rehearsals of the Brazilian production of Wicked, the cast said they asked this to the creatives that came from abroad and they said that they just aren't best friends, but there was no rivalry whatsoever between them.
I've heard that things look basically the same - all they've done was update machinery and stuff like that to make use of present technology, reducing loading time for the stops. Probably why Taymor didn't need to be that much involved.
I don't even want to know how many playbills I have. The only thing I buy from shows are t-shirts, but I only have like 10.
The show I most saw was Wicked (24 times on the 10 month run the show had in Brazil) and Man of La Mancha (almost 30 times, but that's counting a revival of the same production that happened two years later)
The last time the composers said anything, they were working on it (and the show does need a lot of work if they want to find an actress possibly able to play her 6 times per week).
And Karen was never competition. Sorry, girl. She just wasn't made into a star yet.
Not at all. In fact, if I were you, I would now avoid the movie at all costs to see the musical "clean". You'll be able to give one of the few honest reviews, since the musical have to be good on its own to prove itself to you.
The movie will always be there after you see the show. I'm not crazy about it and you're not really missing much if you've listened to Let It Go.
I never gave Disney movies much attention as a child, but then I started to appreciate them for all the hard work put into them. It was an easy step to start adoring all things Menken and get to know Broadway's version of Beauty and the Beast. I started listening to the cast album, the recording of the Brazilian production, got to know how a Broadway show get to Broadway when they were doing The Little Mermaid.
In 2009, Beauty and the Beast came back to Brazil and I got, by a leap
QueenAlice said: "Every production is produced as a separate LLC with its own investor pool. Sometimes the original investor pool (especially front money investors) sharein a small percentage of the profit fromfuture productions but it completely depends on what terms the producers offer at the time of initial signing. There isn’t a set rule on this. I know someone who was an investor on Wicked and then reinvested their return in subsequent tours and international companies and