"Faulty Towers: The Dining Experience" at Sony Centre for the Performing Arts on March 18–April 5 (Up to 20% Off)
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Amenities

Interactive dining performance based on BBC’s popular Fawlty Towers sitcom has traveled the globe and earned rave reviews
The Deal
- One G-Pass to Faulty Towers: The Dining Experience
- Includes a three-course meal (soup, main, and dessert)
- When: select dates, March 18–April 5
- Where: the O’Keefe Lounge at Sony Centre for the Performing Arts
- Door time: one hour before showtime
- Full offer value includes ticketing fees
Ticketing Options
- $61.76–$85.76 for one regular dinner ticket (up to $107.20 value)
- $101.76 for one VIP dinner ticket (up to $127.20 value).
- Click to view the seating chart
How G-Pass Works: Your G-Pass will be ready to print 48 hours after the deal ends. Print the G-Pass and use it to enter the venue directly; you won’t need to redeem at will call. Due to security restrictions, G-Passes cannot be redeemed through the mobile app. Discount reflects the merchant’s current ticket prices - price may differ on day of event.
Faulty Towers: The Dining Experience
- The experience: a three-course dinner at possibly the worst-run hotel in England
- Your host: Basil Fawlty, the bristly hotelier made famous by John Cleese in Fawlty Towers
- Also attending: Basil’s domineering wife, Sybil, and less-than-bilingual waiter Manuel—all played by a cast that embodies the whip-smart comedic timing of the original actors
- What’s in store: fan-favorite setpieces from the classic britcom, crowned the “Best British Television Series of All Time” in 2000 by the British Film Institute
- What else: rampant abuse of Spaniards, more than a few mentions of the war, teetering towers of lies upon lies upon lies
- Where’s the stage: all around you. Theater producer and Fawlty Towers super-fan Alison Ollard designed the staging so that you play your own role in the show
Need to know info
About Faulty Towers: The Dining Experience
The largest soft-seat theatre in Canada, Meridian Hall is perhaps most famous for its overhanging marquee outside. The diagonal canopy and its snake-like rows of lights were restored to their original form in 2010, along with the facility’s wood, brass, and marble accents. Inside the lobby, York Wilson’s mural, The Seven Lively Arts, fills eyes with fractured, panoramic representations of various artistic media, from slanted musical staffs to menacing Greek theatre masks.