Dear Prudence: Sing-along Sally
Upon intermission, I asked her if she noticed all the people seated in front of us turning around to stare at her and thereafter suggested that her whispering bothered them. She was shocked that this behavior would be considered rude and then stated that it was their problem. She proceeded with this through the end of the play. I’m shocked no other patrons confronted her. Based on this fact, I wonder if perhaps I am wrong and overly sensitive. Who is right?
Answer: Oh my God, you’re right. On no planet, no parallel dimension, is singing along with a musical from the audience considered good theatergoing etiquette. A few years ago a woman was thrown out of The Bodyguard musical for doing exactly what your friend did.
Obviously there’s nothing to be done about it now, aside from committing to never seeing a live musical with her again, but if you simply want the rush of being told you were right by a stranger on the internet, allow me to grant you that rush: You were right, and your friend was rude.

no subject
no subject
Singing along is okay at certain types of concerts, not all concerts but certain types. I don't think there are many folk musicians who start playing something like "This Land Is Your Land" or "Puff the Magic Dragon" without assuming that the audience will sing along, and a lot of popular musicians selling out big venues aren't going to mind so much because the audience isn't generally there with the expectation of new interpretations. Going back to the Beatles, one could go to their concerts and literally be unable to hear the performance because of the audience screaming. I think it was my step-father who told me about going to a performance of theirs that was like that.
It's one of those nuanced things that's hard to entirely explain or to draw precise lines for, but musical theater performances are pretty far on the don't-sing-along-audibly side and so, for me at least, unambiguous. People in the audience have paid money to hear these particular performers. Singing along so that other people can hear robs them of the experience they expected.
no subject
no subject
(I was taught at a young age that if I absolutely had to indulge my urges in an inappropriate setting, I was to silently mouth the words. It worked well for me in my childhood. Occasionally still does. *g*)
no subject
Last time I went to a musical I may have mouthed every word while sobbing in joy but I did it silently!
no subject
There are situations where singing along is encouraged - there's actually a Sound Of Music Sing-a-long where the audience participation is practically demanded (cosplay, themes, the whole hog). But, yeah, if I'd paid for a ticket to see anything professional in a theatre, I'd be pissed off to have someone in the audience mumbling under their breath.
On the other hand, I'm confrontational enough to say something - politely, but speaking up nevertheless. Admittedly, LW didn't know the ettiquette, but surely the fact that nobody else is doing it would be a small hint that this is not common behaviour.
I probably wouldn't have responded with quite the drama that Prudence did, though. "Oh my God, you're right" sounded incredibly sarcastic to me when I started reading the response.
no subject
no subject
Which doesn't mean it's okay for adults at an adult show! Especially if it's the kind of show where people paid a fortune for the tickets, which is basically any show in a major city.
no subject
no subject
My family brought my sister and I to musicals from a fairly young age, when we were old enough to know to behave. Even we, at earlier than 10yrs old, knew better than to sing along during a live performance. That's just... okay, concerts are one thing. Musicals are another.
*twitch*