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- <text id=93TT1037>
- <title>
- Mar. 01, 1993: Phantom Mania
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 01, 1993 You Say You Want a Revolution...
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THEATER, Page 58
- Phantom Mania
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Lloyd Webber has the big Broadway hit, but half a dozen other
- masked men are stalking the provinces
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD CORLISS--With reporting by William Tynan/New York
- </p>
- <p> He is a figure of power and poignance, horror and mystery.
- He dwells in the fetid cellar of the subconscious; from those
- depths rises the music of passions we hardly dare attend. He
- is the Id aching for the Ideal, loathsomeness wanting to be
- loved, unknown fear reaching up to touch or break our hearts.
- He is every teacher who fell in love with a beautiful student,
- every middle-aged man who has a star-struck boy's swoony soul.
- He is kin to Pygmalion, Cyrano, Quasimodo, Dracula, the Elephant
- Man and King Kong--artists isolated in their genius, Beasts
- pining for Beauty.
- </p>
- <p> Quite a rich story, The Phantom of the Opera. Gaston Leroux's
- 1911 novel about a deformed, love-sick masked man haunting the
- Paris Opera has inspired half a dozen movies, from Lon Chaney's
- silent classic to Brian De Palma's rock-'n'-roll Phantom of
- the Paradise. But Leroux's theme--of ripe passions that can
- be spoken only in song--suggests an apter venue than cinema.
- Mightn't The Phantom be the source for a passable Broadway-style
- musical?
- </p>
- <p> Or seven?
- </p>
- <p> Andrew Lloyd Webber created a phenomenal hit. The composer's
- lush, legerdemainic Phantom of the Opera has played to SRO houses
- since it opened in London (October 1986) and on Broadway (January
- 1988), with Michael Crawford as the Phantom and Sarah Brightman
- as his beloved Christine. The Los Angeles company will conclude
- a record-breaking four-year run this summer.
- </p>
- <p> Audiences around the world gawk at the production's snazz and
- scope: lightning bolts, trapdoors, a musician's tomb that is
- bigger than Grant's. They bathe in the show's warm melody and
- soap-opera suds. They thrill when Christine kisses the unmasked
- Phantom and, by this display of courage and tenderness, wins
- her freedom from his spell. "There's something about the title
- and the mystique surrounding the show," says Cameron Mackintosh,
- producer of Phantom as well as Cats, Les Miserables and Miss
- Saigon, "that makes people desperate to see it--not once,
- but many dozen times."
- </p>
- <p> Fine, but why are there so many different Phantoms? Most musicals
- that play the larger theaters are tours or revivals of Broadway
- hits. "Original" hits are rare; and these days they all seem
- to be Phantoms. In 1989 Ken Hill's version recouped its $1 million
- investment in an amazingly quick eight weeks and has since toured
- profitably. Another Phantom, by Maury Yeston and Arthur Kopit
- (Broadway's Nine), ran for a boffo year in Chicago, has been
- playing for seven triumphant months at the Westchester Broadway
- Theater in Elmsford, New York, opened this month in Kansas City,
- Kansas, and St. Petersburg, Florida, and is due in six other
- cities. The show may never play Broadway, but who needs Broadway
- when Phantom Mania grips the land?
- </p>
- <p> Let us count the plays:
- </p>
- <p> Ken Hill's Phantom of the Opera. First produced in England in
- 1976, this comic melodrama had a book by Hill and a score by
- Ian Armit. In 1984 Hill dropped the original music and wrote
- new lyrics to arias by Gounod, Offenbach, Verdi, Mozart and
- Donizetti. Lloyd Webber considered producing an embellished
- version of it, then decided to do his own. Thank heavens. Hill's
- backstage farce is a kind of Noises Off without the wit, and
- the cast plays it as hammy gaslight farce--a penny dreadful
- that at today's prices plays like a $32.50 dreadful. It alights
- this week in Indianapolis and Kansas City, Missouri.
- </p>
- <p> Phantom. Yeston (music and lyrics) and Kopit (book) completed
- their version in 1985, but when Lloyd Webber announced his Phantom,
- they found it tough to raise money. Kopit and Lloyd Webber briefly
- discussed collaborating, but their visions of the Phantom didn't
- mesh. The Yeston-Kopit version was dead for nearly six years,
- then miraculously resurrected at Houston's Theater Under the
- Stars. Yeston's melodies often skim the roiling emotions Lloyd
- Webber's music swims in, but they are sophisticated show tunes,
- operatic and operettic by turns. Kopit balances the Phantom-Christine
- romance with an All About Eve rivalry between Christine and
- the diva Carlotta, then a Star Wars father-and-son relationship
- in Act II, when the play finds its heart. The production is
- suave, intimate--a glittering bauble to Lloyd Webber's grand
- chandelier.
- </p>
- <p> Drury Lane's Phantom of the Opera. Book by David Bell (who directed
- the premiere), music by Tom Sivak, with additional airs by someone
- named Tchaikovsky. Commissioned in June 1991, the show was written,
- rehearsed and opened by September at the Drury Lane Oakbrook
- Theater in suburban Chicago. This version, which imagines that
- the Phantom is the brother of Christine's ordinary beau Raoul,
- stresses the spectacle and italicizes the sexuality. Christine
- not only kisses the Phantom after he has removed his mask, she
- also helps him remove his shirt. The production has flourished
- in regional theaters; a new edition starts touring in April.
- </p>
- <p> The Hirschfeld Phantom of the Opera. Commissioned by Abe Hirschfeld,
- the New York City real estate magnate, this version was written
- by Bruce Falstein, with some decent songs by Lawrence Rosen
- and Paul Schierhorn. It opened in February 1990 at the Clarion
- Castle, Hirschfeld's Miami Beach hotel, and played for four
- fat months. This Phantom is a dream creature, the spirit of
- Christine's musical and romantic ambition; he tells her, "I
- am whatever you want me to be." A videotape of the show was
- briefly released as a movie in 1991, but neither the play nor
- the film has been seen since.
- </p>
- <p> John Kenley's Phantom of the Opera. A play with music (most
- of it adapted from Gounod, with new songs by David Gooding)
- that was commissioned by summer-stock impresario John Kenley,
- it toured the U.S. in 1989-90.
- </p>
- <p> The Pinchpenny Phantom of the Opera. "An affordable musical"
- by Dave Reiser and Jack Sharkey (authors of Jekyll Hydes Again!
- and "Not the Count of Monte Cristo?!"), this musical farce is
- designed for threadbare theater groups with a taste for tastelessness.
- "Welcome to the opera!" the opening number announces. "Where
- gals with lung disease/ Can hit high Cs with ease!/ Their doom
- is sure to please/ The connoisseur!"
- </p>
- <p> Connoisseurs of musicals know that the story has limitations.
- The Phantom can sing only one kind of song to Christine: I-adore-you-and-you-abhor-me.
- Poor pastel Raoul can never be much more than a Parisian Freddy
- Eynsford-Hill. And yet--in the magnificent Lloyd Webber version,
- the appealing Yeston-Kopit or even the lame Ken Hill--the
- story works. The Phantom and Christine sing their volcanic sentiments
- in a plot as spare and potent as legend.
- </p>
- <p> "All these little Phantoms are springing up," says Hill, "purely
- because of the enormous success of Andrew's show." Yet very
- few theatergoers attend other Phantoms in the belief they're
- getting the Lloyd Webber. "People are coming to our show," Kopit
- says, "not because they can't get tickets to the Webber version,
- but because of the Phantom story. There is something dreamlike
- and mythic in the story of an innocent girl and a dark, foreboding,
- romantic figure who gets her under his power. We can identify
- both with the girl and with the deformed figure, who is perhaps
- not as ghoulish as he would seem."
- </p>
- <p> "There's a current fascination with disfigurement," Yeston says,
- "not only of the face but of the soul. The Phantom is the outsider,
- the Steppenwolf. In many ways he captures a central irony of
- our times: it's the one who has the imperfect appearance who
- has a kind of moral perfection." The superiority of the wounded:
- it is a metaphor that speaks--no, it sings--to every loser
- in love or in life.
- </p>
- <p> "What Andrew and I loved about the book," Mackintosh says, "was
- that it took itself terribly seriously." And so, for a few hours,
- do we take the Phantom. We live fully in his grandeur and pain.
- And when we leave, he keeps singing. The Phantom of the Opera
- is there, inside our minds.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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