2021 now looking bleak for potential U.S. theater reopening
Posted: 10/29/20 at 2:45pm
Next Fall or Winter is still very possible.
Posted: 10/29/20 at 3:02pm
Sutton Ross said: "Next Fall or Winter is still very possible."
And with more breakthroughs with treatment, I think this is becoming a more obtainable target date.
Posted: 10/29/20 at 4:18pm
Remember that Coronavirus is a family of viruses that cause illness in people. There are 7 currently known types including the current COVID-19 and SARS and MERS from recent smaller scale epidemics.
The scientists say that the vaccines being developed so far have worked against mutated variants but that might not always be the case.
Study link
the vaccine might end up being like like the flu jab. In that it will protect us from the one specific strain of virus but people still get ill if they catch a different one. I E, not a magic bullet.
Updated On: 10/29/20 at 04:18 PM
Posted: 10/29/20 at 4:55pm
I don't think the goalposts have moved; I just think that some of the wishful thinking has dissipated. I think there may well be SOME theatre by next fall/winter, but as has been the case all along, Broadway will follow well behind that for a large number of reasons including the size of the venues and the facts that social distancing is not economically viable and that tourism (on which Bwy is heavily dependent) is going to trail.
Posted: 10/29/20 at 5:47pm
Posted: 10/29/20 at 8:46pm
Posted: 10/29/20 at 9:20pm
@Wesman702 Our individual optimism/pessimism doesn't really matter. Broadway is not reopening with social distancing, mask wearing, or other virus precaution steps. It can't. Like all other viruses, this one will pass, whether due to a vaccine or other effective treatment or because it just gets bored. Then we will come back. I think that might happen later next year, for non-tourist-dependent shows, and then maybe in spring 22 for something approaching "normal" with the caveat that it will be a new normal. As rehearsed previously, we are likely to have non-Broadway theatre well before Broadway reopens, and we will wear masks and socially distance as we are doing now. Lots of folks are wearing masks more than 2.5 hours already, including the ones who will save your life if you get sick, and the ones who will sell you food and medicine etc etc etc
Posted: 10/29/20 at 10:21pm
"Our individual optimism/pessimism doesn't really matter."
And yet, this seems to be the only issue that influences the discourse and public health policy in this country. Asking about real numbers is a "nasty" question.
Posted: 10/29/20 at 10:38pm
FindingNamo said: ""Our individual optimism/pessimism doesn't really matter."
And yet, this seems to be the only issue that influences the discourse and public health policy in this country. Asking about real numbers is a "nasty" question."
My comment was directed to Broadway reopening only. I'm not sure I correctly understand what you're saying but if I read it the way you intended it, then I of course agree. Pointedly, we have a very different discourse and public health policy in New York, where it's all about the numbers, but alas the state seems like it is lost in a world gone mad.
Posted: 10/29/20 at 10:48pm
I was probably unclear and making a connection only obvious in my misfiring brain.
Posted: 10/29/20 at 11:18pm
A misfiring brain is better than no brain at all.
Posted: 10/30/20 at 1:57am
Posted: 10/30/20 at 8:40am
I think we're looking at a big murky stretch of time in the near future where the powers that be will say "Going to the theatre is still not as safe as it used to be, but you may go if you are willing to follow guidelines and assume a certain level of risk."
Posted: 10/30/20 at 9:09am
KKeller6 said: "I don't think there's any question that Fauci recently discussed pushing the timeline back for " feeling comfortable" about going to a theatre."
I think there are two things at play here, the epidemiology (on which Fauci is expert) and the subsequent psychology (on which he is making a guess just like everyone else). As rehearsed, for Broadway, the extra layer of "normalcy" depends on the tourist lag and the overall economic condition that feeds that market. The "powers that be" (the state, the unions, etc) are not going to allow Broadway to reopen until it is safe and as also rehearsed "guidelines" and Broadway don't mix.
Posted: 10/30/20 at 9:26am
Posted: 10/30/20 at 9:50am
It’s a far smaller than usual audience of pre-screened front-line workers & invited groups who arrive together. B’way would have a tough time surviving with only 1/3 of the seats filled for social distancing.
Posted: 10/30/20 at 9:50am
Alex Kulak2 said: "It makes me wonder how SNL has been managing to have a live masked studio audience. Are SAG and the TV unions more lenient?"
They are operating under the state's film/tv protocol. Everyone in the "audience" is paid to be there. There is nothing to compare with AEA because there is (with very limited and ad hoc exceptions) no Equity protocol, nor could there be, since having an audience is verboten. Needless to say, there is no model pursuant to which live theatre can proceed with a paid audience.
Posted: 10/31/20 at 2:32pm
jpbran said: "It’s a far smaller than usualaudience of pre-screened front-line workers & invitedgroups who arrive together. B’way would have a tough time surviving with only 1/3 of the seats filled for social distancing."
A month or so ago I looked into tickets for SNL (Ticketing is closed now) and there was a stipulation for the groups. From what I remember they had to be people who lived together. Family or people quarantining together. (With proof I think) And I think it was in groups of 4 or 6. You couldn't get a single ticket.
Updated On: 10/31/20 at 02:32 PM
Posted: 11/9/20 at 6:04pm
Genuinely positive news from Pfizer today concerning their coronavirus vaccine sent the markets skyward today. Of course still a long way to go and all the usual caveats, but this caught people's attention.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2020/11/09/pfizer-coronavirus-vaccine-effective/
Posted: 11/9/20 at 8:42pm
OlBlueEyes said: "Genuinely positive news from Pfizer today concerning their coronavirus vaccine sent the markets skyward today. Of course still a long way to go and all the usual caveats, but this caught people's attention."
Indeed, and coupled with the arguably even more significant authorization of the Eli Lilly's antibody therapy. All of this against the backdrop of the horrific explosion of new cases hospitalizations and deaths. I expect New York and the rest of the Northeast will be back in essential worker mode soon. That said, I think the theatre timetable on this is about on the same track discussed above, with Broadway realistically pushed to the Spring of '22 with maybe rare exceptions.
Posted: 11/9/20 at 9:46pm
Posted: 11/10/20 at 12:39am
As the infection rate nears three percent of those tested in New York City, the Mayor is talking about imposing restrictions and targeting certain zip codes for more intensive testing. Although we have been hearing a lot about all the record new cases being reported in the U.S., far exceeding the number of new cases back in March and April, the press is being a little disingenuous. The country is suffering from less than half the daily deaths as was the case in March and April. In addition, the new cases have been greatest in virgin areas of the country, including smaller cities and sparsely populated rural areas. The pandemic has yet to double back on an area already hard hit and reproduced anything like the original death rate.
These results have been confirmed by the experience of Italy. The first wave of infections brought northern Italy to its knees, with a number of deaths approaching horrific. The second wave is mostly doing its damage to the south of the country. The Lombardy region of northern Italy, which had a third of all cases in the spring, has a sixth of the new cases now. And tellingly, the number of people in intensive care in Italy is only a seventh of what it was during the worst periods of spring.
So will New York be forced to go through another disastrous round of COVID-19? We don't know, but there is some evidence that it will not.
Posted: 11/10/20 at 3:49am
HogansHero said: "OlBlueEyes said: "Genuinely positive news from Pfizer today concerning their coronavirus vaccine sent the markets skyward today. Of course still a long way to go and all the usual caveats, but this caught people's attention."
Indeed, and coupled with the arguably even more significant authorization of the Eli Lilly's antibody therapy. All of this against the backdrop of the horrific explosion of new cases hospitalizations and deaths. I expect New York and the rest of the Northeast will be back in essential worker mode soon. That said, I think the theatre timetable on this is about on the same track discussed above, with Broadway realistically pushed to the Spring of '22 with mayberare exceptions.
"
How much of the USA do you anticipate will have had a vaccine by July 2021?
Posted: 11/10/20 at 9:05am
@OlBlueEyes Everything you say is accurate. I just want to add one thing about the early death rate, which is that it was hugely affected by nursing home deaths, something that will not happen again. When you add that to the advancements in medical knowledge (beyond the vaccine but including other treatments which are expanding exponentially, especially at the critical care level as well as far more acute diagnostic savvy), it appears we will have less severe (but still sad and horrific) statistics from the second wave.
@golbinau I have not seen anything that reliably answers that question but what I have seen suggests it will not be broad enough by then to translate into herd immunity, and that's even with aggressive efforts by a new administration (that will undoubtedly have this in the rear view mirror sooner than the current one would). Also worth mentioning, because it is hard to fully appreciate from the outside, is that New York is really a bubble within the US, with much lower current statistics, an aggressive protocol for those arriving from other parts of the country, and its own vaccine timetable (within the context of products becoming available generally of course). This latter could mean that the NY region will be prepared to have theatre again by July, but not at the Broadway level where tourists are (with few exceptions) essential.
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