If you 'have left things late' and are trying to cram the Act in that is why you are bored. No break. No relaxation.
If you have scripts then you must be well prepared so take a couple of days out NOW. Go away if you can.
For the Future, you need a rehearsal schedule which is worked out to enable you to have time in between rehearsals. Then you adhere, pretty strictly, to this schedule.
Marc Oberon use to rehearse 10 hours
a day! which, when coaching his Act I told him was far too much.
The brain needs to 'cool down' to have a complete 'change of scene'.
I am glad you are using a 'theatre director' BUT avoid the 2 magicians!!
And I mean like the plague.
Otherwise you will get just the magic angle and WORSE:
You will meet the 'This is the way I do it' or 'I always do this ---'
NOTHING to do with How You work.
Also : NEVER mix girl friends with Magic. It is an obsessive Art, often, because we rehearse alone, a solitary Art. We love it, are passionate about it: Layfolk may enjoy it but that is where (with a very, very few exceptions) their tolerance of 'take a card', write this down etc ...ends!
DO YOU know your handlings, moves & sequences?
If so you can ( and I hate this but it may save your sanity) improvise the actual patter. JUST This Time.
The Director, if he is competent, will fix the rest.
However, for the future, do call him in well..and I mean well beforehand.
If the answer is 'Yes' to the 'DO YOU' question,then do go away for 2 days.

Relax

and AVOID all contact with Magic.
The Great Art of performing is to make it LOOK LIKE it is being done/spoken for the FIRST TIME.
It takes a while to absorb & accomplish this.
Allen Tipton

Began magic at 9 in 1942. Joined Staffs M.S at 13. Nottm.Guild of M. (8 times President. Prog Director 20years)IBM. Awarded Magician of Month 1980 By Intern. Pres. IBM for reproducing Dante's Sim Sala Bim. Writes Dear Magician column for Abra. Mag.