
It was a lot of fun and this huge auditorium belonging to the Beijing University was packed out. The audience loved it and, even though a translation was provided at the side of the stage, clearly had an excellent command of English cheering, clapping and laughing at this faced paced play.
But theatre-going in Beijing has its little quirks. Especially when it comes to finding your seat. Seats are numbered from the centre of the row with even numbered seats going out to the right and odd numbered seats going to the left. And the numbers are on the back of seats and each row doesn't line up with the row in front. What's all that about? Actually, this is less of a problem than you might think since many Chinese believe in sitting in the best empty seat they can find regardless of who it belongs to. So when you do find your seat, someone else is often in it. They move on graciously to the next best one they can find and so on. This bizarre seating ritual continues until - in a sold-out show like this one - everyone is finally sitting in the correct seat - generally by the interval.
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