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Rachel Kohler's avatar

Almost every play I've ever wanted to walk out of has been a community theatre production in which I've known at least a couple of the actors, and at that point, social nicety demands that I suffer through and then try to say something complimentary at the end which is not a lie (usually something along the lines of, "Wow, you all work so hard on this!")

The sole professional production I've wanted to walk out of was the Broadway musical version of Moulin Rouge, a play which seems to have entirely missed the point of the original movie. I stayed because the tickets hadn't been cheap, and we hoped the second half would redeem itself (spoiler alert: it did not).

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Anna Sayburn Lane's avatar

Many, many years ago I worked as a theatre critic for the local newspaper (imagine a time when that was a thing!) and ached to walk out of quite a lot of dreadful productions, but of course I never could. I don't remember longing to leave out of disgust or horror, but certainly from boredom at stilted productions and particularly bad comedies. A night at the theatre can go on for a very long time when a creakingly unfunny farce is in progress.

I do now leave if I'm really not enjoying a play, although I'm usually too engaged (or at least interested) to want to leave. Nothing feels more liberating than walking away from something you don't have to sit through any more!

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