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An audience member called the police at Beautiful yesterday

Posted by: mikem 10:48 am EST 01/18/15

So I finally saw Beautiful last night, and at intermission, I noticed about 6 policemen in the lobby outside the mezzanine, along with an empty stretcher. I overheard the woman involved talking to someone about it. She said the person next to her “slapped her leg,” she wanted that person ejected, the house management wouldn’t do that, so she called 9-1-1. She was asked if she was physically hurt at all, and there was a big pause, and then she said something about how she had a knee replacement so anything involving her leg hurts. She actually wasn’t that emotional about the whole thing. She seemed more stubborn than anything else.

I don’t know how it got resolved. The intermission was a bit longer than usual, but not that much. I wonder how often stuff like this happens. Maybe it happens all the time but we just don’t know it.

I don’t know if the house management offered her another seat (not that she would have taken it). I don’t think they could throw out another patron based on someone else’s story, but they should have offered her another place to sit (although the show was sold out). Maybe they did and she refused.

“Other that that, Mrs Lincoln, how was the play?” I enjoyed the show, although the book, like with many jukebox musicals, often just seemed like an excuse to throw songs up on stage. But I was very impressed with Jessie Mueller. She has major presence on stage and, even after a year, she is giving a warm, detailed, committed, and winning performance that was well-deserving of the Tony. J Scott Campbell, the new Gerry Goffin, plays the character like an overgrown kid. That’s a completely reasonable interpretation, but I think it undercuts the poignancy of the later scenes. Did Jake Epstein play the role that way as well?


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re: An audience member called the police at Beautiful yesterday

Posted by: Greg_M 01:58 pm EST 01/18/15
In reply to: An audience member called the police at Beautiful yesterday - mikem 10:48 am EST 01/18/15

I remember when a group of people passed by my seat to get to their seats, they all stepped on my feet, I didn't say anything - until half way through the show when they hadn't stopped talking, then the swearing started - some people have no class


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re: An audience member called the police at Beautiful yesterday

Posted by: mikem 05:42 pm EST 01/18/15
In reply to: re: An audience member called the police at Beautiful yesterday - Greg_M 01:58 pm EST 01/18/15

I forgot to mention the couple sitting next to me, who were the loudest talkers-during-the-show I have ever seen. They didn't seem to get the memo that, if you are shouting at each other to be heard over the music, maybe you shouldn't be talking at all.


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re: An audience member called the police at Beautiful yesterday

Posted by: gcarl44 07:20 pm EST 01/18/15
In reply to: re: An audience member called the police at Beautiful yesterday - mikem 05:42 pm EST 01/18/15

I encountered the same thing at Honeymoon in Vegas on Tuesday. Three women behind me would not stop talking. I told them to keep quiet at least 3 times during the show. Have these people never been to a theater before?


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re: An audience member called the police at Beautiful yesterday

Posted by: BruceinIthaca 06:18 pm EST 01/18/15
In reply to: re: An audience member called the police at Beautiful yesterday - mikem 05:42 pm EST 01/18/15

I think your last sentence should be simpler: "You shouldn't be talking at all." Only exceptions: "Do you need me to call 911?"


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Jukebox musicals with an overture?

Posted by: mikem 10:57 am EST 01/18/15
In reply to: An audience member called the police at Beautiful yesterday - mikem 10:48 am EST 01/18/15

I forgot to mention: I was surprised that the show started with a true overture (not underscoring to action on stage, but an orchestra playing a jukebox musical's songs while the stage is empty). Are there other jukebox musicals that start with an overture? It seemed very strange to hear familiar, non-original songs woven together like that.


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re: Jukebox musicals with an overture?

Posted by: TXTyler 11:23 am EST 01/18/15
In reply to: Jukebox musicals with an overture? - mikem 10:57 am EST 01/18/15

Mamma Mia certainly has a traditional overture that weaves a few songs together nicely. There's no action (except lighting on the curtain) until the overture is over and "I Have a Dream" starts.

Ty


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