Jody Palm is working on school work
I’m a former actress and I’ve never been to see a show in New York. How odd is that?
I’d like to spend a week in New York doing nothing but seeing shows on Broadway and off.
How I did it: Being a theatre lover and a Thespian I was thrilled to get the chance to see two Broadway shows and a few off- Broadway. The best show I have ever seen was The Fantastics, which was Off-Broadway and the theatre was situated in the midst of a residential street in Greenwich Village. While nothing compares to Broadway, the little theatres that hold maybe 50 people is an expereince all itself that cannot be compared. And I … Read how I did it…
Jody Palm is working on school work
I’m a former actress and I’ve never been to see a show in New York. How odd is that?
I’d like to spend a week in New York doing nothing but seeing shows on Broadway and off.
Kinsdale twitter me at KimRadd! :)
I have a feeling this may be put off for a while… hope it happens sooner than later.. (crossing fingers!)
DanT1999 is happily asserting imperfection
I took my brother to New York over the weekend, and since he is studying theater we obviously had to go see some Broadway plays during our trip. I know there are some places near Time Square where you could buy theater tickets at a discount, and in fact the hotel we stayed at was next to one of those places. When we saw how long the lines were, however, even hours and hours in advance of any show time, we decided getting discount tickets was not for us. So, we just browsed through one of the Time Out guides to see what was playing and walked around to the theater box offices to see what was available at the cheapest prices. We got tickets to “Young Frankenstein”, the Mel Brooks play for Saturday night for $47 a piece and tickets to “Rent” for Sunday night at $55 a piece. Although our seats were way, way at back of the theater since we got the cheapest, our view and ability to enjoy the performances was actually quite excellent.
We were a little wary about “Young Frankenstein” since although it had won some awards the review we read called it “bloated” and “unfunny” and the word of mouth was also rather mixed. I thoroughly enjoyed it, however, as did my brother, and I thought it was quite funny. I will admit that the ending seemed contrived. My brother told me that this is a weakness of many of Mel Brooks’ works because he focused so intricately on the buildup of the plot that the endings are often rushed. I don’t know any better myself so I’ll reserve judgment until I become better acquainted with more Mel Brooks plays.
I had already seen a small, local production of “Rent” a few years ago, but my brother hadn’t seen it yet, and this was the play he was most dying to see since it was going to be ending its run in New York this September 7th after 12 years. So, we had to go. Compared to my first experience seeing “Rent”, the Broadway production had better acting and a more impressive set. It was definitely worth seeing again. My only real complaint about “Rent” is that sometimes the message gets lost because everything is being sung and the music is so loud it’s hard to discern what’s being said.
rattaya is excited about the Christmas tree!
i saw Rent when it was the new hip thing…back in 1997. man, i’m old! also we saw the king and i then and…it was boring
That’s a quote from an old Sierra game. But I do!
I went April 2007 with my dad – I saw Stomp, Wicked, and Hairspray :) It was so great!
glazecovered is starting anew
I was in NYC once, and only for a few days. Broadway wasn’t on the menu, unfortunately. But many things from NYC have captured my heart, and I will go back for more…
i saw rent and chicago, they were both great although i would recommend chicago more so