My experience is similar to Db's. When I lived in East Sussex, I went frequently to Touring Opera presentations of Festival productions, at prices well below those of the aeolie selects, and with no dress code. Similarly, Covent Garden productions always had tickets available at prices I could afford - and that's not including the schools performances of both companies at that time (all tickets a fiver).
Out of interest, I've just checked recent Glyndebourne Touring Opera Ticket prices: La Traviata for a tenner (which is actually cheaper than the cheapest ON tickets) and Covent Garden cheapest prices at £25 - which is 90p cheaper than the cheapest tickets to see, for example, Dara O'Briain at the Birmingham Hippodrome, and £6 cheaper than the cheapest tickets to see Manchester United.
But, returning to the point, I doubt somehow that the BBC employees who criticise some of their salary-funders as "elitist" are more likely to be seen in the cheapest seats at Opera North than with "the well-heeled corporate types at the Royal Opera House".
Out of interest, I've just checked recent Glyndebourne Touring Opera Ticket prices: La Traviata for a tenner (which is actually cheaper than the cheapest ON tickets) and Covent Garden cheapest prices at £25 - which is 90p cheaper than the cheapest tickets to see, for example, Dara O'Briain at the Birmingham Hippodrome, and £6 cheaper than the cheapest tickets to see Manchester United.
But, returning to the point, I doubt somehow that the BBC employees who criticise some of their salary-funders as "elitist" are more likely to be seen in the cheapest seats at Opera North than with "the well-heeled corporate types at the Royal Opera House".
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