1,828 posts
|
Post by Dave B on Mar 18, 2022 11:14:43 GMT
Just last week I had noted this hadn't come back and now an email from The Bridge.
|
|
2,389 posts
|
Post by peggs on Mar 18, 2022 11:16:48 GMT
Is this a first for premium pricing at the bridge or have I just missed it before?
|
|
|
Post by cavocado on Mar 18, 2022 11:21:56 GMT
So pleased to hear this has been rescheduled!
|
|
236 posts
Member is Online
|
Post by jaggy on Mar 18, 2022 11:42:54 GMT
How much are the tickets? And do we think there will be enough ticket options by Tuesday 22 March?
|
|
899 posts
|
Post by bordeaux on Mar 18, 2022 11:47:27 GMT
How much are the tickets? And do we think there will be enough ticket options by Tuesday 22 March? Top price are in the 90s I think but there are front row cheapies at the side for £29.50 which I've just bagged six of - if you booked for the 2020 run you can rebook now (I'm not a member at the moment). Very exciting news. Great play, SRB, Hytner's first Ibsen as far as I'm aware.
|
|
1,828 posts
|
Post by Dave B on Mar 18, 2022 11:58:29 GMT
if you booked for the 2020 run you can rebook now (I'm not a member at the moment). Grr - I had booked through TodayTix so nothing like that for me.
|
|
|
Post by cavocado on Mar 18, 2022 12:37:55 GMT
How much are the tickets? And do we think there will be enough ticket options by Tuesday 22 March? T if you booked for the 2020 run you can rebook now (I'm not a member at the moment). Very exciting news. Great play, SRB, Hytner's first Ibsen as far as I'm aware. I booked for the original run, through the Bridge website, but it's not letting me book yet.
|
|
1,828 posts
|
Post by Dave B on Mar 18, 2022 14:10:24 GMT
Shout out to the Bridge team. I asked on Twitter about booking despite having booked through an agency and they asked me to email the Box Office. In less than 90 minutes the BO had got back to me and manually added my account to the priority list and I was able to book those same front row cheap seats mentioned above.
Have to say this isn't the first time that the Bridge team have been both pleasant and helpful, so very happy to be able to highlight it here too.
|
|
1,245 posts
|
Post by joem on Mar 18, 2022 22:10:41 GMT
Shout out to the Bridge team. I asked on Twitter about booking despite having booked through an agency and they asked me to email the Box Office. In less than 90 minutes the BO had got back to me and manually added my account to the priority list and I was able to book those same front row cheap seats mentioned above.
Have to say this isn't the first time that the Bridge team have been both pleasant and helpful, so very happy to be able to highlight it here too.
The Bridge BO team have this strange idea that they should actually help theatregoers. I hope it will be catching....
|
|
|
Post by mattnyc on Mar 18, 2022 22:31:36 GMT
I’m still praying they’ll reschedule “They Shoot Horses Don’t They”.
|
|
899 posts
|
Post by bordeaux on Mar 19, 2022 8:16:42 GMT
T if you booked for the 2020 run you can rebook now (I'm not a member at the moment). Very exciting news. Great play, SRB, Hytner's first Ibsen as far as I'm aware. I booked for the original run, through the Bridge website, but it's not letting me book yet. Did you get an email announcing the show and saying you could book? Might be worth ringing them.
|
|
|
Post by cavocado on Mar 19, 2022 8:49:13 GMT
I booked for the original run, through the Bridge website, but it's not letting me book yet. Did you get an email announcing the show and saying you could book? Might be worth ringing them. Yes, I got a standard email just saying when the normal booking dates are, nothing about being able to book early. I still have my booking details for the original dates, so I'll contact them.
|
|
|
Post by Jan on Mar 22, 2022 15:00:06 GMT
There seemed to be no queue at all when public booking opened today and still loads of those £29.50 front row seats left. It is a great play, still relevant today, so definitely worth booking even before we know who has been cast in the two big female roles.
|
|
236 posts
Member is Online
|
Post by jaggy on Mar 22, 2022 15:55:29 GMT
Anyone know how good the seats are in the gallery; specifically Row C and B?
|
|
1,828 posts
|
Post by Dave B on Mar 22, 2022 16:54:47 GMT
Anyone know how good the seats are in the gallery; specifically Row C and B?
We've found them to be fine though careful on each side of the stage, they can be quite restrictive (it looks like the seats right by the side of the stage may not be on sale for this which might suggest the action is intended to be pretty far forward.
If you are specifically looking for that area, I quite like C24-30. On the curve so a bit more space than most seats in row C. No real restrictions on view but they are quite high seats.
|
|
2,389 posts
|
Post by peggs on Mar 22, 2022 18:10:46 GMT
There seemed to be no queue at all when public booking opened today and still loads of those £29.50 front row seats left. It is a great play, still relevant today, so definitely worth booking even before we know who has been cast in the two big female roles. Was so focussed on trying to book (and yes easy to do so today) that I'd rather overlooked who was going to form the main trio here. Have seen this once before at the Donmar fairly early on in my theatre days so ripe to see it again.
|
|
236 posts
Member is Online
|
Post by jaggy on Mar 22, 2022 20:31:24 GMT
Anyone know how good the seats are in the gallery; specifically Row C and B?
We've found them to be fine though careful on each side of the stage, they can be quite restrictive (it looks like the seats right by the side of the stage may not be on sale for this which might suggest the action is intended to be pretty far forward.
If you are specifically looking for that area, I quite like C24-30. On the curve so a bit more space than most seats in row C. No real restrictions on view but they are quite high seats.
Thank you!
|
|
|
Post by crabtree on Mar 23, 2022 17:57:10 GMT
which is the Ibsen that ends up with the main characters ascending a fjord?
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Mar 23, 2022 18:12:12 GMT
which is the Ibsen that ends up with the main characters ascending a fjord? The Lady From the Sea, I believe. Though I think a fjord is featured in Ghosts.
|
|
|
Post by floorshow on Mar 23, 2022 18:38:20 GMT
Don't they go on an epic march to a fjord or up a mountain or something at the end of Brand?
|
|
519 posts
|
Post by theatreliker on Mar 23, 2022 20:22:21 GMT
There's something like that with a mountain in When We Dead Awaken isn't there?
What's the one where they're stuck in a cable car?
|
|
519 posts
|
Post by theatreliker on Mar 23, 2022 20:22:31 GMT
There's something like that with a mountain in When We Dead Awaken isn't there?
What's the one where they're stuck in a cable car?
|
|
519 posts
|
Post by theatreliker on Mar 23, 2022 20:22:56 GMT
Oh wait that's an episode of Not Going Out.
|
|
|
Post by Jan on Mar 24, 2022 7:21:02 GMT
Haven't seen Brand. Ralph Fiennes did it years ago but I think it was at the Haymarket so subject to my sanctions policy for that venue. The main Ibsen mountain ascent is in When We Dead Awaken but fjords feature heavily in many of the other plays. There's a bit of important mountain chat in John Gabriel Borkman but no real ascent into the high mountains, only a brisk walk in the woods. There is significant non-mountain climbing in The Master Builder.
|
|
1,087 posts
|
Post by alicechallice on Mar 24, 2022 7:26:40 GMT
Oh wait that's an episode of Not Going Out. I thought you were referring to that horror film ‘Frozen’ aka ‘the other Frozen’
|
|