Worth a try. I wouldn't be surprised if whoever you talked to was in fact, wrong, anyway. Every GA show I've been to has, at the very least, let people with mobility issues in first.
That said, I would guess that most of the people who wait in line before the doors open will want to be close to the stage where (I'm assuming) there won't actually be seats, so hopefully it won't be a huge hassle for you.
Who is GA anyway? I must have missed that part of the conversation.
General Admission sucks, especially compared to Colonel Reserved Seating.
I can't do that unfortunately. The concert is general admission and I need to be sure that I actually get a seat.
In my experience, and you can confirm this with the venue, there is usually an accessable section (with pretty good seats) set aside for the disabled person and some number of companions (usually 1).
This happens a lot with my Mother and one Sister at the theater. Sometimes we won't know until day-of that they'll need an accessable seat and the house staff escortst them to one. At GA concerts I've been to, if you show up day-of in a cast and tell them, they walk you and a friend to a section of chairs.
Me, I am fond of Enlisted Officer House Seats.
In all fairness, last night, I was holding a pizza leftovers box, and she was holding her laptop luggage, so that might have made things a bit awkward for the kiss.
The next time you see GGG greet her with a friendly kiss. Don't wait until the end of the date.