All tickets 100% authentic and valid for entry!
Always...Patsy Cline
Always...Patsy Cline has gained a lot of success and victory across the United States, including a greater success at the run-off Broadway. It is one of the most highly produced musicals in America, according to American Theater Magazine.
Always...Patsy Cline is enjoyed internationally by audiences across Australia, Canada, and the UK.
Always...Patsy Cline is more than just a tribute to the legendary country singer who encountered a fatal end at 30 in a plane crash in 1963.
The show is based on a real story about Cline's friendship with a Houston fan called Louise Seger, who had befriended the star in the Texas honky-tonk during 1961 and continued correspondence with Cline until her death.
The Plot
Seger became an instant and avid fan of Cline, who was constantly hounded by the local disc jockey playing the records of Cline on the radio when they initially heard about Cline at the show of Arthur Godfrey in 1957.
It was in 1961 when Cline went to Houston for a show, and Seger and her friends arrived about 30 minutes early and coincidentally met Cline, a solo traveler.
Both the women struck up a bond of friendship culminating in Cline spending the night at the Seger's house with a friendship that had lasted till the untimely death of Cline in a 1963 plane crash.
The relationship started as the fan worship evolved into mutual understanding, as it is the type of relationship that several fans would like to have with their heroes.
Both the women had chatted about their common concerns over a pot of stronger coffee. When Cline finally left for Dallas for her other job, both women exchanged telephone numbers and addresses.
Seger had never expected to hear from Cline once more; however, soon after she left, Seger had received the first of several phone calls and letters from Cline. The relationship of a pen pal offers a greater plot of this show.
The play aims at a fateful evening at the Esquire Ballroom of Houston while Seger had heard about the death of Cline in a plane crash. Seger supplied a narrative while Cline was floating in and out of singing the right tunes that made her prominent.
It is a show that combines sadness, reality, and humor. It offers the fans who keep in mind remembering Cline while she was alive a chance to look back while offering their new fans the idea of whatever her seeing was like and whatever she meant to her original fans.