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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Food and drink in theatre

171 replies

Lookforthegoodthings · 21/12/2024 00:02

Taking my Dd, 6, to The Nutcracker at the weekend. It states that there is no food or drink to be consumed. The show is 90 minutes long. Surely you can bring a bottle of water for children? (and I will need to take a small snack)

What have you done when taking Dc to see a show?

OP posts:
Cynic17 · 21/12/2024 12:16

People can go 90 minutes without food - obviously. In my glorious rule, all eating in the theatre will be banned - it's a vile habit.
All theatres and performances are different, OP - just check the rules for the production before you go in. This is an opportunity for your child to learn some basic etiquette as a "grown up girl".

And - everyone - please think of the theatre staff and volunteers who have to clear up after you - Christmas shows always have huge amounts of litter, sadly.

thismummydrinksgin · 21/12/2024 12:18

The theatre will give you tap water but I highly doubt they will have any problem with a child having a bottle of juice

RaraRachael · 21/12/2024 12:20

Unless there's a medical reason I'm sure your child can last 90 minutes without a snack or drink of water. People eating and drinking at the theatre'shows is a big bugbear of mine - why do they need to do it?

I'm old fashioned (there were no such things in my day) but I don't get the obsession for kids to always have a water bottle with them. None of my friends did and we survived.,

bruffin · 21/12/2024 12:27

GiveItAGoMalcom · 21/12/2024 00:43

Every theatre I've been to in London does.

I can't imagine them stopping anyone as they might have a hidden disability, or end up peeing themselves on the seat?

thats not true, The savoy doesnt allow you back in, nor does the Donmar warehouse, signs inside the loos that say you will not be allowed back in. In fact Macbeth (cant remember where it a moved to ) had to stop the performance because a man insisted on trying to get back in after going to the loo despite signs everywhere saying you cant.

https://www.scotsman.com/news/david-tennant-pulled-off-stage-after-west-end-furore-over-toilet-break-4907116

edited to say.
even if they do let you back in, it is not until a suitable break in the procedings.

Viviennemary · 21/12/2024 12:28

Lookforthegoodthings · 21/12/2024 00:32

But why can’t I bring my child’s water bottle that I take everywhere, as do all my mum friends etc. I don’t understand the issue, if a kid needs a drink, they need a drink 🤷🏻‍♀️

I don't think your 6 year old sounds old enough to cope with this. Six is very young to go to an evening performance of a ballet. Does she realise she must sit still and be absolutely silent. That's what matinées are for.

weareallqueens · 21/12/2024 12:37

I've had my bag searched at every professional theatre I've ever been at, London and regional. I've actually been detector wanded at a couple 🤷. Stupid and/or intentionally disruptive behaviour means it's needed.

No. The Manchester bombing is why it is needed. Not to deter Maureen from bringing in a packet of minstrels.

This thread is genuinely one of the most batshit ones I've ever read.

MyBirthdayMonth · 21/12/2024 12:44

Anybody old enough to attend a public performance should be able to last 90 minutes without shoving something into their gob. No wonder there's an obesity crisis.

StrikeForever · 21/12/2024 12:52

Pinkmoonshine · 21/12/2024 01:23

Theatre going has been ruined for me by people who can’t not eat / drink / get up and go to the loo / check their phones and talk. I’ve noticed a total deterioration in concentration of theatre goers since covid and it’s really depressing.

I have had to stop going to the theatre for this reason, I experienced my ‘last straw’ at a ballet a few years ago. It was my favourite, Romeo and Juliet. There was a loud woman who became aggressive when asked to stop talking. The ballet was completely ruined for me.

BobbyBiscuits · 21/12/2024 12:57

Most theatres I know of allow drinks and snacks in the auditorium? It seems a bit harsh. They might say no outside food but you can buy it at the bar. I'm sure they can't moan about water, if you buy it off them. You could tell a white lie and say it's for medication. But I wouldn't be happy going somewhere that strict!

No33 · 21/12/2024 13:02

You've been told no food or drinks, and your response is to take food and drinks?

Just do as they have asked.

Dungareesarecool · 21/12/2024 13:03

No33 · 21/12/2024 13:02

You've been told no food or drinks, and your response is to take food and drinks?

Just do as they have asked.

This sums up society right now.

The rules say one thing but each person believes they are exceptional and the rules don’t apply to them.

RaraRachael · 21/12/2024 13:08

Theatre and show visits are so expensive that I want to enjoy a professional performance without people eating and drinking, going in and out to the toilet, children whining and talking who are far too young to be there and singing along.
Grrrrrrr! Surely basic manners is not too much to ask?

Ezlo · 21/12/2024 13:10

I've never forgotten or forgiven the stupid woman sat next to me at The Lion King in Manchester who noisily ate her Graze snacks. She had the audacity to look at me like I'd shat on her shoes when I looked at her because she was affecting my enjoyment of a show I'd paid a lot to see.

Also going back years now at Mamma Mia in Blackpool, the woman behind us with the kids who did not shut up the whole performance. Awful behaviour.

ShinyAppleDreamingOfTheSea · 21/12/2024 13:20

I've always got a bottle of water in my handbag and any theatre or gig I've been to has always let me in with it after the bag search.

It more likely means that you can't take teas and coffees or drinks bought at the bar through, and eating can be noisy and distracting.

Don't know where you are going to but Birmingham Hippodrome does let you take drinks and ice creams into the auditorium.

GiveItAGoMalcom · 21/12/2024 13:22

NestaArcheron · 21/12/2024 11:03

I'm sure the audience can cope with a child asking to use a toilet - if you can't, maybe you aren't fit to go to the theatre or out in public for that matter. If you're this miserable you might as well stay at home 24/7. I have no idea who you think you are telling people they aren't fit to attend a theatre because they asked a perfectly reasonable question.

I'm sure the audience can cope with a child asking to use a toilet

It's a bit different when an irresponsible parent is giving them water, knowing that this will very likely be the outcome though.

The audience coped with my husband having a nosebleed once, but I didn't punch him on it.

tinydynamine · 21/12/2024 13:31

We used to go several hours without drinking anything at school in the 70s. Nobody thought anything of it.

IHaveNeverLivedintheCastle · 21/12/2024 13:36

bruffin · 21/12/2024 12:27

thats not true, The savoy doesnt allow you back in, nor does the Donmar warehouse, signs inside the loos that say you will not be allowed back in. In fact Macbeth (cant remember where it a moved to ) had to stop the performance because a man insisted on trying to get back in after going to the loo despite signs everywhere saying you cant.

https://www.scotsman.com/news/david-tennant-pulled-off-stage-after-west-end-furore-over-toilet-break-4907116

edited to say.
even if they do let you back in, it is not until a suitable break in the procedings.

Edited

The Royal Opera House doesn't let you back in. I don't think the small London theatres like the Wyndham do.

Dwappy · 21/12/2024 13:41

I went to one of those films in concert earlier this year at the Royal Albert Hall that was at 2pm in the afternoon. We arrived 5 mins late because of train issues and we weren’t allowed in until a suitable gap. And we had aisle seats. We had to wait about 15 mins until they’d let us in. I didn’t complain though obviously as it states the rules. We were late so that’s it. Not their problem.

RaraRachael · 21/12/2024 14:02

tinydynamine · 21/12/2024 13:31

We used to go several hours without drinking anything at school in the 70s. Nobody thought anything of it.

This exactly. It really annoyed me when teaching to have children drinking out of bottles of water (or even worse, squash) that sat on their desks, while I was teaching something important.

Movinghouseatlast · 21/12/2024 14:30

I worked as an usher at the RSC in the 1980's and even then we waited until.a suitable break in the play to allow people back in.

Slurping and munching in the theatre is distracting to other audience members so its best not to take food in even if it's allowed if you have any basic manners.

Why people can't go 90 minutes without eating is beyond me really.

DinosaurMunch · 21/12/2024 14:33

Lookforthegoodthings · 21/12/2024 00:02

Taking my Dd, 6, to The Nutcracker at the weekend. It states that there is no food or drink to be consumed. The show is 90 minutes long. Surely you can bring a bottle of water for children? (and I will need to take a small snack)

What have you done when taking Dc to see a show?

Of course you don't eat or drink during the performance. 90 minutes is only an hour and a half!

Does your child go to school? If so they will go longer than that without food every day.

Get something in the interval if you want.

TheaBrandt · 21/12/2024 14:39

It’s not the kids that are a problem but bloody adults. We were at a show last night a group of dimwits arrived late but were inexplicably let in cue huffing faffing then rustling as they break out the sweets. And also talking!. Grim. Wornen in their 40s and 50s on a big group night out dolled up to the nines. I was cringing for them not knowing how to behave in a theatre. Our teens were horrified but satisfyingly they got told off by an usher at the interval.

ThinWomansBrain · 21/12/2024 14:47

I went to a regional theatre last week, open bottles of water were removed, you could collect them on leaving if you wanted.
And most theatres don't allow you back in if you've left to go to the loo unless there is a break - you've already disrupted everyone around you, and possibly the performers, in leaving,
If you or your daughter (or you) can't survive 90 minutes without multiple snacks/water/loo breaks, maybe not adult enough for theatre trips?

I was at the ROH a few months ago, direct from work, a few months ago - wasn't allowed to eat nuts in the auditorium even in the interval.

C152 · 21/12/2024 14:50

Lookforthegoodthings · 21/12/2024 00:43

Hey? If a 6 year old needs a wee, they won’t let us back in? This all seems so over the top. I don’t remember it being like this years ago

It was like this when I was a steward over 20 years ago.

Sharptonguedwoman · 21/12/2024 14:53

Lookforthegoodthings · 21/12/2024 00:30

I don’t need a drink or snack really, but surely they won’t stop a 6 year old having her water bottle in my bag? That seems crazy, bag searches do too

Might be wrong as it's my sister who's been to the Nutcracker not me. She has mentioned the tunes and dances the children know as being in the second half-so maybe there's an interval. I would ring the theatre and ask.

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