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Post by joni89 on Feb 6, 2023 17:30:58 GMT
Doesn't look like it is selling very well for the June tour dates in Cardiff. Saturday pricing of £29-£39 is very reasonable as well.
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Post by og on Apr 14, 2023 9:57:54 GMT
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Post by Dr Tom on May 6, 2023 8:45:34 GMT
Saw this yesterday at the Leicester Square Theatre (one day shy of Tony's 70th birthday - which will be forever forgotten about as it's also the big day for King Charles III).
After selling very well last year, the advertising for the central London version just isn't very prominent.
Have to say, I found this very funny, very zany, and the second half seemed much improved on when I saw this at the first preview last year. There are new/different jokes throughout. About half the cast are new, but all very settled in their roles.
The audience was an interesting mix of people. The theatre was not too full and my heavily discounted ticket got me a prime spot on the third row. It seemed like quite a lot of work to get people from the bars (which are in the theatre) to take their seats.
Just surveying the people around (and not intentionally listening in, but it's hard not to), in front I had a non-English speaking couple who kept saying "Tony Blair" loudly to each other, as if they'd just worked out they were attending a show about a real person, but they weren't sure who. At one side, I had a guy explaining to his boyfriend who Harry Hill was. At another, I had a young woman in a hijab attending on her own who didn't laugh or clap once, but stayed for a second half which could be taken in a particularly offensive way. And behind, a group who were hoping they'd make another event at 9:30pm, with one excitedly explaining how Tony Blair was the prototype for Boris Johnson.
(the last group I presume did make it, as the show ran from about 7:05pm to 8:55pm)
I do think, if you're under about 40 years old or didn't grow up in the UK, this will be a hard show to follow. If you can appreciate the political situation at the time (good and bad) and get the humour, this can be very funny. Somehow, it's a show that has stereotypes that I could usually get offended about, but I can watch totally sober and end up with moments of hysterics. Make of that what you will!
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Post by anita on May 6, 2023 9:07:33 GMT
I must say I enjoyed it.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on May 6, 2023 10:26:52 GMT
Interesting to see all of the former PMs and spouses rolling up at Westminster Abbey this morning for the formalities. All very kissy kissy with eachother, you’d think they were in the same party. Cherie Blair grabbed John Major’s hand and he had a hard time shaking her off. Liz Truss showed up…the nerve of the woman!
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Post by TallPaul on May 6, 2023 14:43:07 GMT
Well Labour and the Conservatives are now largely the same party...
With Dame Norma poorly, I think Dame Cherie was being extra nice to Sir John.
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Post by Dawnstar on May 6, 2023 20:23:33 GMT
The theatre was not too full and my heavily discounted ticket got me a prime spot on the third row. May I ask where you found a discount? I was looking a few days ago & couldn't find any. As I've detested Blair since 1997 & only want to see the show because of a cast member I don't want to pay the £40-ish that all the tickets on the theatre's website are priced at.
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Post by showgirl on May 7, 2023 3:46:57 GMT
Now that there are positive reviews of this (sounds as though it has benefited from significant re-writing since the original production), I'm quite keen to see it but also looking for an offer as I missed out on the chance of early bird tickets for it at Guildford because the older reviews were so poor.
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Post by Dr Tom on May 7, 2023 6:52:53 GMT
The offer I had access to wasn’t public. I’m also not finding anything I can share, which is surprising, other than to make sure you’re on the discounter mailing lists. It might be worth asking at the box office on the day, or booking a cheaper seat at the book, as there’s likely to be space available to move forward.
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Post by Dr Tom on May 16, 2023 20:18:14 GMT
For everyone who has asked about ticket offers, TodayTix has these discounted now to £20 for the next few days.
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Post by Dawnstar on May 16, 2023 22:17:22 GMT
Dr Tom Thanks. I was having a look earlier this evening & found a couple of of other sites also with discounts. Presumably they've given up hope of being able to flog sufficient tickets at full price to hide the need to discount. Thinking of going on Thursday.
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Post by NorthernAlien on May 18, 2023 8:36:02 GMT
There have been at least two musicals about Boris in the last couple of years. Anyway, this one about Tony is heading to Edinburgh, part of the offering from The Pleasance. Presumably one of the Boris one's will also make a return. Could be interesting to compare the queues for them...
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Post by Someone in a tree on May 18, 2023 18:09:59 GMT
I really liked Jack Whitle who somehow delivered a really good performance as Blair. I wish I could be positive about the rest. The writing fails on every level.
I can't believe producers have the nerve to present this cheap cr*p. I've been to better funded student fancy dress parties
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Post by Dawnstar on May 19, 2023 16:36:45 GMT
After Someone in a tree's comment I hardly dare say that I enjoyed this more than I expected to last night - though admittedly my expectations were pretty low. I found it fairly entertaining, though some parts were a bit too near the knuckle for my personal taste. I do hope they don't get any Islamic jihadists coming to see it or they'll be having fatwas against all those involved! To my surprise, I even found Blair somewhat sympathetic at times, though whether that's due to how the character is written or because I like Jack Whittle I'm not entirely sure. I'd have to see the show with a different actor to find out, which isn't going to happen as it's not a show I'd otherwise have seen or one I want to see more than once. I thought all the cast gave good performances, especially Jack and Howard Samuels as Peter Mandelson & others.
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Post by Rozzi Rainbow on Jul 30, 2023 16:58:41 GMT
I saw this in Darlington earlier this week. I had no idea what to expect, but was intrigued. Overall I thought it was fun, even though parts were a bit weird and silly.
I grew up in the 90s, so most of the politics went over my head. But I loved the Peter Mandelson character. And I liked the music, and thought all the cast did a great job.
Glad to have seen it, but wouldn't be bothered about going again. They went to Sedgefield Parish Hall (Tony Blair's constituency) for the end of the week.
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Post by NorthernAlien on Aug 6, 2023 0:41:35 GMT
Saw this at the Fringe on Friday. It's now the end of Saturday and I can't recall a single one of the songs. It was all just very bland, in my opinion.
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Post by mkb on Aug 11, 2023 11:06:25 GMT
I had been looking forward to seeing this. I enjoy Harry Hill's humour, and I Can't Sing was good fun. This was going to be the highlight of my Fringe week. So, it was disappointing to discover it's a dud.
It didn't help that the Edinburgh production (straight through, no interval) is being staged in a conference hall that's not fit for purpose as a theatre. The bare, wooden walls mean there is so much background reverberation/echo that, with my imperfect hearing, I could not discern about a third of the lyrics. (I'm the same with conversations in a loud pub, where I'm always having to ask my husband what's been said. He had no problem here. CORRECTION: He says he did struggle a little.)
Getting annoyed that I had no idea what was sung in the opening number, my mood began to sour, made worse as none of the jokes were landing. Nothing was funny. I sat stony-faced throughout. I don't think I broke a smile once.
When impersonating a character, get the wig right and you're 80% there. The wigs are dreadful. I don't think there was a single politician you'd identify just from looking. The voices and behaviour are well off the mark in most cases. This screams amateur.
The decision to portray Blair as Tim-nice-but-dim makes zero sense. In office, Blair was sharp and Machiavellian. The one thing he wasn't was dim. We are watching an entire fiction. Even historical details here are frequently wrong and there are several anachronisms.
The thing Spitting Image got right was to use exaggerated caricatures for blisteringly sharp satire, but there had to be an essence of truth in the representation for it to work. (The exception was the Brummie Queen Mum, which they freely admitted was because no-one knew what she sounded like.). This musical is a world away from that approach.
The only number that delivered a cutting satirical swipe was the final one concluding that the whole world is run by assholes of whom Blair was merely another, but, by then, this was too little too late.
One star.
Act 1: 19:31-20:22 Act 2: 20:22-21:06
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Post by Deleted on Oct 7, 2023 18:09:21 GMT
Saw this at the Lowry today. The set and the costumes are look cheap and are starting to look a little rough, but the cast were superb, especially Jack Whittle as Tony Blair. While the songs are really not that memorable, they are fun and help move the story along. You can tell it's a Harry Hill show from the humour throughout and did have me laughing throughout the show. If this does tour again, I would happily go and see it - although I do hope they invest a bit more in the staging.
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Post by david on Oct 10, 2023 22:33:12 GMT
First night at the Liverpool Playhouse tonight. A mixed bag of a show for me. A really good cast here led by Jack Whittle as Tony Blair who I thought was great. You can tell it was written by Harry Hill with the type of humour in the script. I really enjoyed it this evening and pace wise zipped along nicely over each Act. Plenty of laughs with some witty musical numbers that as @jonp has said and I’d agree with him that whilst they help move the story along, they really aren’t really memorable ones outside of the show. I was disappointed in the basic set. I would have liked to have seen a bit more substance to it. Being sat on the front row for this show should have come with a warning. I was sat dead centre in front of the stage meaning I was in the direct line of fire near the end of Act 1 when Jack Whittle spits out some chewed carrot. Unfortunately the distance between Jack and myself wasn’t enough and I ended up having pieces of the carrot hit me! To make up for it I did end up with a balloon model dog made onstage by cast member Howard Samuels at the end of Act 1 -
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