There was even time for new-found friends to get an autograph from the stars before the stage was dismantled, the props cleared away and the cleaners moved in.
'I am sad that we are going,' said Ms Ranatip, 48, an unemployed office assistant from Bangkok who had camped out at Suvarnabhumi international airport for the past week along with thousands of People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) activists.
'But I am ready to fight for my king and my country,' she said. 'I will come back as soon as I am needed.'
The PAD ended its blockade of Suvarnabhumi and the mostly domestic Don Muang airport on Wednesday, a day after the courts effectively sacked the government by dissolving three parties that made up the ruling coalition and banning their leaders.
The PAD, a loose coalition of conservative and mostly urban monarchists, businessmen and militarists, claimed the ruling as a victory for removing Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat, who they say is a pawn of his brother-in-law, ousted former leader Thaksin Shinawatra.
The end of the eight-day airport blockade could not come soon enough for an economy already feeling the effect of the global financial crisis.
Hundreds of thousands of travellers have been stranded during what should be the begining of the peak holiday season.
But for the PAD activists packing up at the airport, it was all worth it.
'We had to make some sacrifice for the country,' said Mr Boonthap as he and his wife prepared to leave.
At 10 am (11am Singapore time), PAD 'security guards' abandoned a series of makeshift roadblocks leading to the airport, leaving behind barricades made of trolleys, cartons of water and old tyres.
Scores of cheap plastic motorcycle helmets - protection against possible attack from rubber bullets - were piled up, as well as dozens of shields seized from riot police who never had the stomach to storm the airport and remove the PAD by force.
By 11 am (12pm Singapore time) the crowd had dwindled to a few hundred.
With a last playing of the king's anthem from a makeshift stage mounted on the back of a truck, organisers declared the party over.
'Go home, but be ready in case you are needed,' one marshal barked hoarsely through loudspeakers.
'Remember, do not leave a mess. Tidy up as you go.'
Senior PAD leaders set up tables at which supporters patiently queued, seeking autographs for their yellow- t-shirts and scarves.
Elsewhere, 'security guards' in black bomber jackets gathered clubs, poles and sticks which they had stored among the crowd in case police tried to storm and disperse them.
Well-organised PAD workers in trucks collected blankets, mobile kitchens, plastic sheeting and boxes of plastic hand clappers that have become the ubiquitous symbol of the protest.
'We will store this in case we need it again,' one said. -- REUTERS