It seems that alcohol and theater started off hand in hand. Just picture Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors being performed in the 1500's, audience slugging down pints (and probably chewing on drumsticks and meat pies!) - seems accurate, right? Never has a want for alcohol overcome us mid-play, but it's probably not a bad idea in some cases. Apparently there are theaters in London that serve alcohol, a growing trend of mixing pub culture with playhouse art across the pond.
"The interest in blending a thirst for beer with the thespian arts has been a fixture of the London fringe theater scene since the 1970s and now scores of the capital's pubs do it.A pub in a former Birmingham stock exchange has become the latest creative outlet for budding playwrights, actors and established artists trying out new material.
Pub theatres stage anything from comedies, pantomimes and musicals dreamed up by promising new writers to established works like Shakespeare and Arthur Miller in often tiny rooms.
Enthusiasts say the intimate relationship between actors and the audience in confined spaces makes for an exciting experience. It also costs a lot less than a show at a theater in London's glitzy West End.
British film stars such as Hugh Grant and Rupert Graves used to tread the boards at the pioneering King's Head pub theater in London -- considered the granddaddy of the genre -- before going on to fame on the silver screen."
So let's get on it, New York. Big pints of beer during Shakespeare in the Park, hot toddy's for something a little more posh on a cold night, whiskey at a Tennessee Williams's play...and there's no way we're not drinking some red wine (out of the bottle, thank you) during the first ever production of Jack Kerouac's "Beat Generation" (supposedly happening this year at The Box). Then again, maybe we're not privy to some pub theaters that already exist here...?





While this post was directed towards plays and not movies, the concept still applies. NYC could use something like the Alamo Drafthouse for movies.
Started in Austin, the Drafthouse takes older cinemas, rips out every other row, put a narrow long table across it to hold your food and (especially) good beer. Some locations show current movies while others do art house flicks and film festivals. Another nice thing was not having to watch commercials prior to the films. There was always some locally produced eye candy to pass the time before the movie.
FAQ here:
http://www.originalalamo.com/downtown/frames.asp?b=../downtown/info.html
also here: http://www.drafthouse.com
Cheers!
I am all for people of all persuasions sitting together in a darkened room getting a good one on whilst experiencing live theatre. We need lots of that! Seriously, the communal aspect is terrific.
Of course they would have to check their cellphones at the door...
Oh...for a minute I got excited and thought someone might open a movie theater/pub in Williamsburg. (sigh) Anyway, before another entrepreneur thinks about opening a crap coffee shop, just remember there are many wildly successful movie houses that serve booze in other parts of the country, so why not here?
In Portland, Oregon, there are almost as many theaterpubs as there are multiplexes. The McMenamin's chain offers full menus and pitchers at most of their venues. Most theaters are set up like the Drafthouse, with seats and tables alternating. But at Kennedy School, they have huge overstuffed couches and chairs with end tables between them. At the Mission Theater, they even show television: football, presidential debates, and i've watched the Oscars there each year for the past five years.
Still, so long as you have a bag or backpack, you can turn any theater in New York into a theaterpub. I've even taken bottles of wine into theaters (be sure to get something with a screwtop, ask for a cup for water, and have a nice day). I've been doing this for years and I've never been harassed, the only time I was ever caught was when I snuck a pizza into a theater, and even that was after the show when I was too drunk to be discreet.