Audiences for Touring Broadway Shows are Exhausting
I have reached the point where I started to dread going to see touring Broadway productions, and it has absolutely nothing to do with the performers on stage.
The productions themselves are often excellent. The casts are talented. The orchestras are strong. The staging and technical production is impressive given the realities of moving a major show from city to city.
The problem is increasingly the audiences.
Over the last few years, I have noticed a steady decline in theater etiquette at touring productions. Not occasional distractions. Not the inevitable cough or dropped Playbill. No, I mean a constant stream of behavior that would have been considered unacceptable not very long ago.
For example, yesterday was Beauty and the Beast at the Fox Theatre in Atlanta. The Fox! People were still up and down all night, phones out the whole time. The woman in front of me had hers up maybe ninety-five percent of the show. Scrolling. Texting. I swear to God she was on the Applebee's website.
Earlier this year I saw Les Misérables in Fort Lauderdale. I traveled nine hours each way. Hadn't seen it in thirty years. I watched more people going back and forth to the bathroom than I watched the show.
That's not two bad nights, either. Phones stay out through half the show even after the announcements. Not a quick glance. More like someone at home half-watching Netflix while they scroll Instagram and wait on DoorDash. People talk at normal volume during scenes that matter. Whole rows get up two or three times in one act. Screens pop on because somebody needs to check a text or confirm what time it is. People rush out before the end like their team is losing and they're trying to beat traffic.
The part that gets me is most of them don't seem to notice they're ruining it for everyone around them.