kafein wrote:We are heading down to see the Tut tomorrow. Can anyone advise about how long it is (with the audio tour) and how early you went prior to your ticket time? We have Will Call Tickets and I am bringing an elderly couple along and want to have things go as smoothly as possible.
The audio tour is 35 minutes total, not including the time for stopping and looking at things and moving from gallery to gallery. I think it's well worth the $6. Here's an excerpt from something I wrote elsewhere:
For the fullest experience of "Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs," you will want to spend an extra $6 to rent the audio tour. It's the next-best thing to a privately conducted tour.
Through headphones, the slightly sibilant tones of Egyptian actor Omar Sharif pilot you through the galleries, with in-depth commentary on 20 of the items displayed, as well as remarks by Zahi Hawass, Secretary General of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities; National Geographic's Terry Garcia and exhibition curator David Silverman. Fascinating sidebars also explain ancient funereal rites and discuss details about Tut's tomb.
Although the exhibition has excellent, well-positioned signs describing what's displayed, it's sometimes difficult to see them in crowded galleries. The audio tour also provides much more detail than the brief placards.
With 20 numbered segments, the tour allows you to start, stop, and replay at any point, so you can explore the exhibit at your own pace. It is also available in a Spanish version narrated by Jorge Ramos.
The audio tour is included in the $50 admission fee should you sign up for one of the premium "Tut at Twilight" evenings on selected dates throughout the exhibition. These after-hours showings have limited admission for a less-crowded Tut experience, allowing closer looks at the artifacts.
Possibly the best souvenir of the show is the official companion book by Hawass, a lavish, coffee-table-sized volume filled with photographs of artifacts in the exhibition and elsewhere, historical images and scenes in the Valley of the Kings as well as engaging, lucid text about Tut, his life and times and the significance of the objects meant to carry him into the afterlife. The book, also called "Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs," is $35 in the exhibition gift shop, or $49.95 together with a Sharif-narrated CD.
Of course, you could get a chocolate pharaoh's head instead.
Kafein, I attended a preview, so I can't answer your ticketing questions or comment on how it is under crowded conditions, but I will say, in reference to your elderly couple, that there benches throughout the exhibit so you can sit down, and you'll definitely want to take your time because there are lots of things worth looking at closely.
For example, the gold handle of an ostrich-feather fan that depicts a humorous hunting scene with Tut shooting at some rather cartoony ostriches while being chased by an animated ankh.