David10086 said: "This doesn't count as "boooing" but this is one of the strangest experiences I sat through in a theater...
When I was a paid subscriber to the Broadway musicals playing my city in the 1990s, one of the musicals had canceled my city just a week or two before it was supposed to start (can't recall the musical or the reason why, but everyone was disappointed). I believe it was during the 1994-95 touring season.
Anyhow, the show which replaced it was a revue called "The Music of Kander and Ebb" , consisting of three men and three women (if I remember correctly). All dressed in red and blue - red gowns for the women, blue tuxes for the men. And they just stood there (or sat on stools) the whole night and sang - solos, duets, trios, etc. Nor orchestra to back them up - just a solo piano player on stage. It was horrible.
From the third row where my friend and I sat, you can see their attire didn't fit them well - some of the females were way too big to be squeezed into these dresses, while some were too thin. Same with the tuxes. And for most of the songs, they sang off-key and some couldn't remember the lyrics, so it was obvious they ad-libbed. There was absolutely no reaction at all from the audience after Act 1 - though about 2 / 3 of the audience left at intermission. The rest of us stayed for more torture. The performers were acting as though they really enjoyed themselves on stage - laughing with each other and making 'jokes' with one another and to the lifeless audience.
When the show was finished, the audience just sat there - kind of stunned of what we witnessed. There was a small smattering of light applause, and that was it - most of us sat still staring at the performers. You can tell that they were perplexed, too - a fairly empty house and no applause at the end. Just us staring at them, trying to figure out what we just saw, and then gawking back at us wondering if we were all comatose. Some of them did a slight bow and they walked off the stage. In the meantime, the audience filed out in silence - as though we were leaving a funeral.
Let's just say the local theater critic's review for this show was 'less than kind'."
As an orchestral performer who has accompanied many similar types of tribute performances made up of vocalists, I must say what a sad story this is, and it's surprising it got 9 "likes." Even if the audience didn't enjoy the performance, polite applause is appropriate and civilized when someone has performed for you, even if you didn't enjoy it. And the description of how the clothes fit is just cruel.