Check out these holiday hotel deals

By Budget Travel
October 3, 2012

Budget Travel's Editor-in-Chief, Nina Willdorf, appeared on the Today Show this morning to discuss great hotel deals for the coming holiday week, including some for as low as $54 a night.

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Inspiration

London: A 2012 arts marathon worthy of the Olympics

A play starring Cate Blanchett, a production of "Romeo and Juliet," and a peace concert hosted by Jude Law are among the hundreds of events planned for a 12-week festival celebrating the London 2012 Olympics. The Cultural Olympiad will run between June 21 and Sept. 9, 2012. Book your tickets in advance, later next year. We'll let you know when the mix of free and paid performances become available. Oscar-winning Australian actress Blanchett will star in a new adaptation of "Gross und Klein," with the Sydney Theatre Company. A staging of "Romeo and Juliet" will be set in present-day Baghdad, with Sunnis and Shias instead of Montagues and Capulets. Other highlights include the screening of a series of short new films by Mike Leigh and other acclaimed directors, and art exhibitions by artists such as David Hockney, Lucian Freud, and Olafur Eliasson. Some events will be held outside of London. Actor Jude Law, for instance, will host a Peace One Day concert in Belfast, Northern Ireland. MORE FROM BUDGET TRAVEL London theatre: Once-a-year discounts available London: 5 best December values London: Rent a bike for nearly nothing

Inspiration

Does a disaster movie turn you on (or off) to a destination?

Much has been made of the many cringe-inducing moments—both of the predictably horrifying, arm-sawing variety and of the more surprisingly gruesome, extreme-close-up, contact-lens-insertion sort—in Danny Boyle's trapped-hiker film 127 Hours. But where some see a surefire way to lose their appetites for movie popcorn, the state of Utah sees a built-in marketing opportunity. The Utah Office of Tourism recently launched a series of five 127-hour (or roughly five-day) itineraries throughout the state, including everything from cross-country skiing and mountain biking to bird-watching and touring historic towns—and yes, even some hiking. All of which raises the question—does this make you want to see Utah more? Certainly, the state's unique and majestic natural beauty has long drawn both adrenaline-seekers and the adventure-averse, but does associating the landscape with Aron Ralston's tragic/heroic self-rescue increase or decrease its appeal? You tell me, BT reader: Are travel-disaster movies a selling point or a turnoff?

London theatre: Once-a-year discounts available

Hoping to catch a West End show during your winter stay in London? Perhaps a major musical, like Billy Elliot or Mamma Mia? You better book now. More than 50 productions—including opera tickets, for the first time—were put on sale yesterday until they sell out. Prices range from £10 ($15.50) to £35 ($55) at GetIntoLondonTheatre.co.uk. Here is a sampling of the hot shows. Discounted performances run from January 1 through February 18, but standard price performances are available on other dates. AN IDEAL HUSBANDVaudeville Theatre has revived Oscar Wilde's "An Ideal Husband," with the help of husband and wife team Alexander Hanson and Samantha Bond, acting together for the first time. The play, from 1895, follows a politician who has made a fortune from what we would now call insider trading. The script is Wilde, so cutting put-downs and high melodrama are on sumptuous display. (Vaudeville Theatre, 404 Strand, until Jan. 31.) ROMEO AND JULIET The Royal Shakespeare Company is famous for staging productions of classic plays, but it is less well known for its dance performances, which are equally well regarded. Opened last week, the RSC's balletic version of "Romeo and Juliet" stars Mariah Gale and Sam Troughton, who dance to choreography by Nureyev and music by Prokofiev. RSC has taken up residency for the near term at the Roundhouse Theatre, where the audience sits in a semi-circle around the stage. (The discounted performances are at London Coliseum, St Martin's Lane, from Jan. 11–13, 2011, but performances are otherwise at the Roundhouse Chalk Farm Rd.) A FLEA IN HER EAR Georges Feydeau's 1907 rollicking, old-style farce, directed by Richard Eyre, takes place in posh 1880s Paris. A woman suspects her husband of cheating on her and sets a trap to catch him at it. Hijinks ensue. Reviewers say this production by the Old Vic, the theater company run by Kevin Spacey, is superbly entertaining. (Old Vic, The Cut, discounts through Feb. 18; show runs until March.) MORE FROM BUDGET TRAVEL For theater tickets, is the Leicester Square discount ticket booth, TKTS, worth it? London's pop-up theatre London: 5 best December values How to keep a teenager entertained on a visit to London?