Jump to content

The Phantom of the Opera (1986 musical): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Line 22: Line 22:
Gee, i was just having fun (hehe)
Gee, i was just having fun (hehe)


Hit the deck!!! (plane flies overhead dropping whistling bombs)
==Casting==
The original casts of the major productions of ''The Phantom of the Opera'':<ref>[http://phantom-media.info/index.php?option=com_content&task=category&sectionid=7&id=37&Itemid=56 POTO Onstage], ''phantom-media.info'' - accessed 10 May 2009</ref>
{| class="wikitable"
! Character
! Original West End Cast
! Original Broadway Cast
! Original Las Vegas Cast
|-
| [[Erik (The Phantom of the Opera)]] || [[Michael Crawford]] || Michael Crawford || [[Brent Barrett]]/[[Anthony Crivello]]‡
|-
| [[Christine Daaé]] || [[Sarah Brightman]]/[[Claire Moore (singer)|Claire Moore]]† || Sarah Brightman/[[Patti Cohenour]]† || [[Sierra Boggess]]/Elizabeth Loyacano‡
|-
| [[Raoul, Vicomte de Chagny]] || [[Steve Barton]] || Steve Barton || [[Tim Martin Gleason]]
|-
| [[Carlotta Giudicelli]] || [[Rosemary Ashe]] || [[Judy Kaye]] || Elena Jeanne Batman/Geena Jeffries Mattox‡
|-
| [[Madame Giry]] || [[Mary Millar]] || Leila Martin || Rebecca Spencer
|-
| [[Meg Giry]] || Janet Devenish || Elisa Heinsohn || Brianne Kelly Morgan
|-
| Monsieur Richard Firmin || [[John Savident]] || Nicholas Wyman || Lawson Skala
|-
| Monsieur Gilles André || David Firth || Cris Groenendaal || John Leslie Wolfe
|-
| Ubaldo Piangi || John Aron || David Romano || Larry Wayne Morbitt
|-
| Joseph Buquet || Janos Kurucz || [[Philip Steele]] || John Paul Almon
|}

† The role of Christine Daaé is double-cast in most professional productions. The secondary actress performs the role twice a week (on Broadway, Tuesday and Thursday evenings).<ref>''The Phantom of the Opera'': opening night production credits. [http://www.ibdb.com/production.php?id=4491 IBDB.com.] Retrieved 2010-09-16.</ref>

‡ Three roles (The Phantom, Christine, and Carlotta) are double-cast in the Las Vegas production, with the two actors in each pair singing alternate performances.<ref name = "LV">Westley, Christine: "Phantom - The Las Vegas Spectacular. [http://www.theatermania.com/new-york/reviews/06-2006/phantom-the-las-vegas-spectacular_8515.html TheatreMania.com.] Retrieved 2010-09-16.</ref>

;Notable West End Replacements
* Phantom&nbsp;- [[Dave Willetts]], [[Martin Smith (actor/musician)|Martin Smith]], [[Peter Karrie]], [[Peter Polycarpou]], [[Simon Bowman]], [[Peter Cousens]], [[Mike Sterling]], [[John Owen-Jones]], [[Ramin Karimloo]], [[Scott Davies]]
* Christine&nbsp;- [[Claire Moore (singer)|Claire Moore]], [[Rebecca Caine]], [[Myrra Malmberg]], [[Rachel Barrell]], [[Leila Benn Harris]], [[Robyn North]], [[Gina Beck]]
* Raoul&nbsp;– [[Michael Ball (singer)|Michael Ball]], [[Robert Meadmore]], [[John Barrowman]], [[Simon Burke]], [[Clive Carter]], [[Simon Bowman]], [[Ramin Karimloo]], [[Oliver Thornton]]
* Carlotta&nbsp;– [[Julia Goss]], [[Margaret Preece]], [[Shan Cothi]]

;Notable Broadway Replacements
* Phantom&nbsp;– [[Robert Guillaume]],[[Steve Barton]], [[Mark Jacoby]], [[Thomas James O'Leary]], [[Hugh Panaro]], [[Howard McGillin]], [[John Cudia]], [[Tim Martin Gleason]], [[Gary Mauer]]

* Christine&nbsp;– [[Rebecca Luker]], [[Lisa Vroman]], [[Rebecca Pitcher]], [[Jennifer Hope Wills]]
* Raoul&nbsp;– [[Hugh Panaro]], [[Brad Little]], [[Gary Mauer]], [[John Cudia]], [[Tim Martin Gleason]]


==Synopsis==
==Synopsis==

Revision as of 01:15, 25 June 2011

The Phantom of the Opera
Logo
MusicAndrew Lloyd Webber
LyricsCharles Hart
Richard Stilgoe (additional)
BookAndrew Lloyd Webber
Charles Hart
Richard Stilgoe
Basis1910 book Le Fantôme de l'Opéra by Gaston Leroux
Productions1986 London
1988 Broadway, Vienna, Japan Tour #1
1989 Los Angeles, Stockholm, Toronto
1990 Melbourne, Chicago, Hamburg
1991 US Tour #1
1992 US Tour #2
1993 San Francisco, Sydney, Scheveningen, Manchester
1995 Edinburgh, Basel, Singapore, Hong Kong
1996 Australia/New Zealand Tour
1998 UK Tour
Various international and sit down productions
AwardsOliver Award for Best New Musical
Tony Award for Best Musical

The Phantom of the Opera is a musical by Andrew Lloyd Webber, based on the French novel Le Fantôme de l'Opéra by Gaston Leroux.

The music was composed by Lloyd Webber, and most lyrics were written by Charles Hart. Additional lyrics were written by Richard Stilgoe. Alan Jay Lerner was an early collaborator, but withdrew due to illness after some initial work on a single song, Masquerade.[1][2] The central plot revolves around a beautiful soprano, Christine Daaé, who becomes the obsession of a mysterious, disfigured musical genius.

The Phantom of the Opera opened in the West End in 1986, and on Broadway in 1988. It is the longest-running musical in Broadway history after overtaking Cats in 2006, and the second-longest-running West End musical.[3]

Phantom won the 1986 Olivier Award and the 1988 Tony Award for Best Musical, and Michael Crawford (as the phantom) won the 1986 Olivier and 1988 Tony for Best Performance by an Actor in a Musical.[4] The show has been seen in 149 cities in 25 countries, and has played to over 100 million people.[5] With total worldwide box office receipts of over £3.5bn ($5.1bn), Phantom is the highest-grossing entertainment event of all time.[6] The New York production alone has grossed US $800 million, making it the most financially successful Broadway show in history.[7][8]

Gee, i was just having fun (hehe)

Hit the deck!!! (plane flies overhead dropping whistling bombs)

Synopsis

Prologue

At the Paris Opéra in 1911,[9] an auction of old props is underway. Lot 665, purchased by the elderly Raoul, Vicomte de Chagny, is a music box in the shape of a monkey; he eyes it fondly, noting that its details appear "exactly as she said." Lot 666 is a shattered chandelier which, the auctioneer says, has a connection to "the strange affair of the Phantom of the Opera... a mystery never fully explained." As the chandelier illuminates, reassembles itself, and slowly rises over the audience to its old position in the rafters, the years roll back and the theatre returns to its 1880s grandeur. ("Overture")

Act I

It is now 1881.[10] As Carlotta, the Opéra's resident soprano prima donna, rehearses for that evening's performance, a backdrop collapses without warning. The excited cast members believe the legendary Phantom of the Opera, or Opera Ghost, is responsible. The Opera's new owners, Firmin and André, try to downplay the incident, but Carlotta refuses to continue after raging that this has happened to her for years, and storms offstage. Madame Giry, the Opéra's ballet mistress, tells Firmin and André about the Opera Ghost and his demands, stating that he is to be paid a hefty salary and Box 5 is to be kept reserved solely for him. Meg, her daughter, insists that Christine Daaé, a Swedish chorus girl and orphaned daughter of a prominent violinist, has been "well taught", and could sing Carlotta's role. Rather than cancel the performance, the owners reluctantly audition Christine, and to their surprise, she is equal to the challenge. ("Think of Me")

Michael Crawford and Sarah Brightman performing the title song

Backstage after her triumphant debut, Christine confesses to Meg that only she knows the identity of her mysterious teacher - the mysterious "Angel of Music" that her father promised to send to her after his death ("Angel of Music"). The new patron, Raoul, the Vicomte de Chagny, finds Christine, who he remembers befriending in his childhood, in her dressing room. She and Raoul reminisce together and she confides to him that the Angel has in fact visited her and taught her to sing ("Little Lotte"). Raoul does not believe her, but insists despite her protests that she joins him for dinner. After Raoul leaves, a booming voice announces his displeasure at Raoul's presence. Christine beseeches the Angel to reveal himself to her at last, and the image of the Phantom of the Opera appears in her dressing room mirror. He guides Christine through the mirror as Raoul overhears them and he enters the room just as they disappear to his shock ("Angel of Music/The Mirror"). The Phantom spirits Christine away to beneath the Opera House. ("The Phantom of the Opera") They cross a subterranean lake to his secret lair deep beneath the Opera House, an eerie place containing a pipe organ and dozens of candles. The Phantom explains that he has chosen Christine to sing his music and urges her to forget the life she knew before ("The Music of the Night"). He shows Christine a life-sized doll in her image, clothed in a wedding gown. She faints, and the Phantom puts her to bed, once again restating his feelings for her.

As the Phantom composes music at his organ, ("I Remember...") Christine awakens to the sound of the monkey music box. She slips up behind the Phantom, lifts his mask, and beholds his face. The Phantom rails against her curiosity, then ruefully expresses his longing to look normal and to be loved by Christine ("Stranger Than You Dreamt It"). After Christine hands him back his mask, he brings her back to her dressing room.

In the Opera House, Joseph Buquet, the Opéra's chief stagehand, who (like Mme. Giry) inexplicably knows a lot about the Phantom, regales everyone with tales of the "Opera Ghost" and his terrible Punjab lasso ("Magical Lasso") to the ballet girls. Mme. Giry warns Buquet to exercise restraint. In the managers' office, Firmin and André receive notes from the Opera Ghost instructing them how to run the opera his way to their chagrin. Raoul rushes in demanding to know where Christine is and shows them a note he was given from the Phantom, warning him to stay away from Christine. Carlotta also enters with a note saying that Christine has taken her place for good, believing Raoul has written it. Madame Giry delivers another note from the Phantom: he demands that Christine replace Carlotta in the new opera, Il Muto ("Notes..."). Firmin and André assure the enraged Carlotta that she will remain the star, ("Prima Donna") but during her performance, disaster strikes ("Poor Fool, He Makes Me Laugh"). The Phantom reduces Carlotta's voice to a frog-like croak. The managers send the ballet chorus out to entertain the audience as they prepare Christine to continue in Carlotta's place. The backdrop lifts during the dance to reveal the corpse of Buquet, hanging from the rafters by the Punjab lasso.

In the ensuing melee, Christine escapes with Raoul to the roof, where she tells him about her subterranean rendezvous with the Phantom. Raoul is skeptical ("Why Have You Brought Me Here?/Raoul, I've Been There"), but swears to love and protect her always ("All I Ask of You"). The Phantom, who has overheard their conversation, is heartbroken. He angrily vows revenge against them ("All I Ask of You (Reprise)"), and the Opera's mighty chandelier crashes to the stage as the curtain falls.

Act II

("Entr'acte")

Steve Barton and Sarah Brightman in the final scene

Six months later, in the midst of the gala masquerade ball ("Masquerade"), the Phantom makes his first appearance since the chandelier disaster in the guise of the Red Death. He announces that he has written an opera entitled Don Juan Triumphant. He demands that it be produced immediately ("Why So Silent?"), with Christine, who is now engaged to Raoul, in the lead role. He then seizes Christine's engagement ring and vanishes. Raoul demands that Madame Giry tell him about the Phantom. She tells him about a traveling fair that came to Paris one day, and the main attraction was a hideously deformed man trapped in a cage, who was a brilliant musician, magician, and architect, who once built a maze of mirrors for the Shah of Persia. Shortly after his arrival, he escaped. Madame Giry says she believes the Phantom to be this same man, before fleeing.

Raoul hatches a plan to use Don Juan Triumphant as a trap to capture the Phantom. ("Notes/Twisted Every Way") Christine, torn between her love for Raoul and her reluctance to see the man who inspired her voice, initially refuses to be a part of his plot, but has no choice. She visits her father's grave to try to ease her mind ("Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again"). The Phantom appears and again attempts to seduce Christine into coming with him ("Wandering Child"), but Raoul arrives to protect her. The Phantom tries to goad Raoul into trying to attack him as he shoots fireballs from his staff at him ("Bravo, Monsieur!"). Christine barely manages to keep Raoul from being killed and they flee together. The Phantom declares war upon them both.

Don Juan Triumphant debuts, with Christine and Ubaldo Piangi, the Opéra's leading tenor, singing the lead roles. During their duet, Christine suddenly realizes she is singing not with Piangi, but the Phantom himself ("The Point of No Return"). The Phantom presents Christine with a ring, singing a heartfelt reprise of "All I Ask of You", but she tears off his mask to expose his hideous face to the audience. The Phantom seizes Christine and flees the theatre as Piangi is found strangled backstage. A mob is soon in hot pursuit. Madame Giry tells Raoul about the Phantom's subterranean lair and leads him part of the way, reminding him to beware the Punjab lasso ("Down Once More/Track Down This Murderer").

In the lair, Christine is forced to don the doll's wedding dress. When asked if she is going to be the Phantom's next victim, he responds that the reason she won't return his love is because of his face, which even his own mother refused to love. Christine replies it's not his face but his soul that is distorted. Raoul finds the lair, but the Phantom captures him with his Punjab Lasso. He tells Christine he will free Raoul if she agrees to stay with him forever; if she refuses, Raoul will die. ("Final Lair") After Raoul begs Christine to not throw away her life for his sake, the Phantom insists that she choose, and Christine tries to beg her former Angel for mercy, she shows her decision by kissing the Phantom passionately. The Phantom, having experienced kindness and compassion for the first time, sets them both free. Christine returns the ring he gave her, and listens in pity as he tells her he loves her. She then forces herself to turn away, and leaves with Raoul. She sings one last reprise of "All I Ask of You" as the Phantom weeps in her wedding veil. He replies with a brief reprise of "The Music of the Night" before sitting on his throne and covering himself with his cape. The mob storms the lair, and Meg pulls away the cape, but the Phantom has vanished. Only his mask remains.[11]

Musical numbers

Instrumentation

The 27-piece orchestra is substantially larger than those used in most modern musicals:

A pre-recorded track, employing organ, synthesizers, synthesized drums, electric guitars, and bass guitar, supplements the live orchestra during the Overture, and during the title song, to prevent the noisy motorized props operating in the Journey to the Lair sequence from being amplified by the actors' microphones. The conductor and drummer listen to a click track on headphones to keep the live musicians synchronized with the track. Most of the Phantom's off-stage voiceovers are prerecorded, as is Christine's final note of the title song.

To reduce touring expenses, a downscaled orchestral arrangement was developed that included a third keyboard in lieu of the brass section, reduction of the woodwind section to three instruments, and a smaller string section. The smaller arrangement is also used in the Phantom - The Las Vegas Spectacular production.

Recordings

Cast recordings have been made of the London, German, Austrian, Japanese, Mexican, Korean, Polish, Dutch, Swedish, Hungarian and Canadian productions.[citation needed]

The recording of the 1986 original London cast, released by Polydor Records in 1987, became the first album in British musical history to enter the UK albums chart at #1.[citation needed] It was released in both a single CD Highlights From The Phantom Of The Opera and a two CD Phantom Of The Opera, both of which have been certified 4× Platinum in the US.[12] The album was also certified 3× Platinum in the UK.[13]

Recording of the Vienna cast and the Hamburg cast were certified Gold and 3× Platinum in Germany, respectively.[14]

Plagiarism

In 1987 the heirs of Giacomo Puccini claimed in a lawsuit that the climactic phrase in "Music of the Night" closely resembled a similar phrase in the sequence "Quello che tacete" from Puccini's opera Girl of the Golden West.[15] The litigation was settled out of court for an undisclosed amount.[16][17]

In 1990 a Baltimore songwriter named Ray Repp filed a lawsuit alleging that the title song from Phantom was based on a song he wrote in 1978 called "Till You." After eight years of litigation — including an unsuccessful countersuit by Lloyd Webber claiming that "Till You" was itself a plagiarism of "Close Every Door" from Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat[18] — the jury found in Lloyd Webber's favor.[19]

Roger Waters has repeatedly claimed in interviews that the signature descending/ascending half-tone chord progression from Phantom's title song was plagiarized from the bass line of a track on the Pink Floyd album Meddle called "Echoes."[20] He has never taken any legal action, but did add an insulting reference to Lloyd Webber in his song "It's a Miracle": "We cower in our shelters/With our hands over our ears/Lloyd-Webber's awful stuff/Runs for years and years and years/An earthquake hits the theatre/But the operetta lingers/Then the piano lid comes down/And breaks his fucking fingers./It's a miracle!".[21]

Much like Roger Waters, rock musician Rick Wakeman has claimed that the same descending/ascending half-tone chord progression was plagiarized from his 1977 track "Judas Iscariot" which appears on his Criminal Record album. Wakeman has never taken legal proceedings but did slate Webber at many solo shows where he performed "Judas Iscariot" in 2008 on his Rick Wakeman's Grumpy Old Picture Show tour.

Other productions

Phantom has been translated into several languages and produced in over twenty countries on six continents. With only two exceptions (Hungary, Poland), these productions have all been ”clones”, using the original staging, direction, sets and costume concepts.[22]

  • Argentina: The Argentine production premiered in March 2009 at Buenos Aires' Teatro Ópera and closed November 29, 2009 after 194 performances.
  • Australia: 1990 – 1998: Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide, and Perth; 2007 – 2009: Melbourne, Brisbane, Sydney, Auckland, Perth and Adelaide, both starring Anthony Warlow. Marina Prior starred as Christine in the original production. In the original Australian production, Rob Guest later took over the title role.[23] The final leg of the more recent tour was staged in Adelaide in an arena format featuring giant screens on either side of the stage that presented footage shot simultaneously with the performance.
  • Canada: The Toronto production of Phantom ran for just over ten years. The Music Box Tour (3rd U.S. National Tour) played dates across Canada in 2006 – 2007 including Calgary, Vancouver, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Toronto, Saskatoon and Ottawa.
  • Canadian International Touring Company: 11 March 1991 – October 1995 toured Canada, Hawaii, Alaska, Hong Kong and Singapore
  • Hong Kong: First tour – at the Hong Kong Cultural Centre Grand Theatre June to October 1995; Second tour – July 2006 to August 2006 at the Hong Kong Cultural Centre Grand Theatre.
  • Hungary: Madách Theatre, Budapest. This production, which began in 2003, featured original sets, costumes and direction, the first Phantom that changed the original staging.[22] The 500th Phantom, held on 20 September 2007 featured 4 successive sets of casts. After the final curtain 3 Christines and 4 Phantoms performed the title song once again.
  • Japan: Shiki Productions produced the show in 1988, the first production performed in a language other than English. It was still running at the Shiki Theater (四季劇場, Shiki-Gekijō) in Nagoya as of January 2010.
  • Korea: Opened in 2009 at Charlotte Theater in Seoul.
  • Mexico: Mexico City, premiered at Centro Cultural Telmex in December 1999, starring Juan Navarro as the Phantom.
  • Poland: Warsaw, premiere took place in March 2008 at Teatr Muzyczny Roma. It features original sets, costumes, and direction. Closed June 2010.
  • Switzerland: Performed in both English and German at the Musical Theatre Messe Basel in Switzerland for over a year in 1996 – 1997.
  • United States: Los Angeles (1989–1993), San Francisco (1993–1999)

A U.S. touring company commenced in 1991 in Los Angeles, and closed on October 31, 2010 at the Pantages Theatre in Hollywood, California. The closing-night performance was attended by many former cast- and crew-members, including Andrew Lloyd Webber and Sarah Brightman.[26]

A film version, starring Gerard Butler as the Phantom, Emmy Rossum as Christine, Patrick Wilson as Raoul, and Minnie Driver as Carlotta, was released in December 2004.[27]

The amateur stage rights are currently available to high schools and colleges.[28][29]

Phantom - The Las Vegas Spectacular

An edited production renamed Phantom-The Las Vegas Spectacular opened June 24, 2006 at The Venetian Resort Hotel Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, in a theatre built specifically for the show to resemble the Opéra Garnier in Paris.[30] The production runs 95 minutes, with no intermission, and was created by the original director and choreographer, Harold Prince and Gillian Lynne, with scenic designs by David Rockwell. The show features updated technology and effects, including advanced pyrotechnics and strobe lighting, and a much-heralded, re-engineered chandelier capable of reassembling in mid-air during the overture while the entire interior of the venue (not merely the stage) magically returns to its 1880s heyday.[31]

In addition to the intermission, almost 45 minutes' worth of material was eliminated, including most of the spoken lines within the libretto, dance sequences, and scenes (such as the Don Juan Triumphant rehearsal) which enhance the Phantom's back story but are not crucial to the overall plot. While most of the musical numbers were left intact, "Poor Fool, He Makes Me Laugh" and "The Point of No Return" were significantly shortened, engendering some criticism.[31] Other changes resembled many of the alterations made in the 2004 film, such as staging the chandelier crash at the plot's climax (during performance of "The Point of No Return") rather than mid-story (reprise of "All I Ask of You").[32] To assure continuity during a six-day-per-week performance schedule, the roles of The Phantom, Christine Daaé and Carlotta Guidicelli were double-cast.[33][34]

Concert production

The 25th Anniversary Concert

The 25th Anniversary Concert of Phantom of the Opera will be held at the Royal Albert Hall in London in October 2011. The show’s original choreographer, Gillian Lynne, will be staging the show and The Really Useful Group and Cameron Mackintosh Ltd are to produce. Details of the new production remain scant, but sources speaking to The Stage have claimed that it’ll be a “completely new production”.[citation needed] Love Never Dies (musical) stars Ramin Karimloo and Sierra Boggess have been announced to recreate the roles of The Phantom and Christine. Both actors previously played their respective roles in the original Phantom production; Karimloo in London at Her Majesty's Theatre and Boggess in the Las Vegas production at the Venetian.

Awards and nominations

1986 Olivier Awards:

1988 Tony Awards:[37]

2002 Olivier Awards

  • Audience Award for Most Popular Show (Winner)[36]

Sequel

See: Love Never Dies (musical)

A sequel, with a book by Lloyd Webber, Glenn Slater, and Ben Elton, and lyrics by Slater, was created in 2007-8.[38] It is titled Love Never Dies and is loosely adapted from the novel The Phantom of Manhattan, published in 1999 and written by Frederick Forsyth, who had collaborated with Lloyd Webber on the sequel years before. Directed by Jack O'Brien and choreographed by Jerry Mitchell with set and costume designs by Bob Crowley,[38] Love Never Dies opened at the Adelphi Theatre in the West End on 9 March 2010 with previews from 22 February 2010. It is the first time a musical sequel has been staged in the West End. The opening was delayed from its original date of 26 October 2009.[39] The first act was staged in 2008 at the Sydmonton Festival at Andrew Lloyd Webber's Hampshire country home.[40] Love Never Dies was originally scheduled to open on Broadway on 11 November 2010, but due to Lloyd Webber's postoperative complications after prostate cancer surgery, the opening has been postponed until Spring 2011.[41] In October 2010 the Broadway production was postponed indefinitely.[42] The Australian production is still scheduled to open in 2011.

The musical is set in 1907,[43] a decade after the end of Phantom.[43][44] (Note: According to the official announcement, the events occur approximately a decade after the events of The Phantom of the Opera. In reality, however, Lloyd Webber's original show was set in 1881,[10] meaning that the time period between the two stories amounts to 26 years.) Christine is invited to perform at Phantasma, a new attraction in Coney Island, by an anonymous impresario and, with her husband Raoul and son Gustave in tow, journeys to Brooklyn, unaware that it is the Phantom who has arranged her appearance in the popular beach resort. The musical received mixed reviews.[45][46][47]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Citron, Stephen. Sondheim and Lloyd-Webber (2001), Oxford University Press US, ISBN 0-19-509601-0, p. 330
  2. ^ Behr, Edward. The Complete Book of Les Misérables (1993),Arcade Publishing, ISBN 1-55970-156-0, p. 62
  3. ^ Smith, Tim (April 11, 2010) 'Phantom of the Opera’ at the Hippodrome The Baltimore Sun
  4. ^ "The Phantom of the Opera". {{cite web}}: Text "Awards" ignored (help); Text "The Show" ignored (help)
  5. ^ Leach, Robin. "Former Las Vegas star debuts in Phantom sequel in London". Las Vegas Sun, 23 February 2010, accessed 13 August 2010
  6. ^ "Phantom musical surpasses record". BBC News. 10 January 2006. Retrieved 23 April 2008.
  7. ^ Jones, Kenneth (25 January 2006). "Phantom turns 18". Playbill. Retrieved 23 April 2008.
  8. ^ Page, Elaine. "BBC Essential Musicals". BBC. Retrieved 23 April 2008.
  9. ^ http://www.reallyuseful.com/shows/the-phantom-of-the-opera/about-the-show/the-phantom-of-the-opera-a-synopsis
  10. ^ a b Phantom Las Vegas: Musical Numbers
  11. ^ Perry, George. "The Complete Phantom of the Opera". Owl Books, 1991, ISBN 0-8050-1722-4.
  12. ^ "American certifications – Phantom Of The Opera". Recording Industry Association of America.
  13. ^ "British album certifications – Phantom Of The Opera". British Phonographic Industry. Select albums in the Format field. Type Phantom Of The Opera in the "Search BPI Awards" field and then press Enter.
  14. ^ "Gold-/Platin-Datenbank ('Das Phantom der Oper')" (in German). Bundesverband Musikindustrie.
  15. ^ Hear the Opera Andrew Lloyd Webber Allegedly Plagiarized. SFist. Retrieved 2010-09-10.
  16. ^ Follow the Girl of the Golden West Posse. Opera Australia Retrieved 2010-09-10.
  17. ^ Lloyd Webber, Superstar (December 1, 1996). Washington Post Retrieved 2010-09-10.
  18. ^ Andrew Lloyd Webber Loses Round in Battle Over Allegedly Stolen Song (December 5, 1966). Seattle Post-Intelligencer Retrieved 2010-09-10.
  19. ^ Lloyd Webber Wins Phantom Battle. BBC News Retrieved 2010-09-10.
  20. ^ "Who the hell does Roger Waters think he is?". Q magazine. November 1992. Retrieved 20 November 2009.
  21. ^ It's a Miracle Lyrics Roger Waters Online
  22. ^ a b "Official website of the Hungarian production". Theater Madách. Retrieved 23 April 2008.
  23. ^ "Australian Broadcasting Corporation The world Today".
  24. ^ "Official website of the German production". Retrieved 23 April 2008.
  25. ^ Yong, Yvonne (3 October 2006). "Phantom of the Opera set to return to Singapore". Channel NewsAsia. Retrieved 23 April 2008.
  26. ^ "Phantom" To Close at Pantages. neontommy.com Retrieved 2011-01-27.
  27. ^ The Phantom of the Opera (2004) at IMDb, accessed 31 January 2008
  28. ^ "PHANTOM OF THE OPERA Now Available to High Schools and Colleges". The Rodgers & Hammerstein Organization Theatricals Division. 3 June 2010.
  29. ^ "The Phantom of the Opera Sypnopsis". The Rodgers & Hammerstein Organization Theatricals Division.
  30. ^ "Phantom: The Las Vegas Spectacular official site". Really Useful Group/Mackintosh Ltd. Retrieved 23 April 2008.
  31. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference LV was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  32. ^ McKenzie, Kristine (3 October 2006). "Phantom: The Las Vegas Spectacular show review — Beloved show lives up to new name". LasVegas.com. Retrieved 23 April 2008.
  33. ^ "Las Vegas Spectacular Performance Schedule".
  34. ^ "Casting Announced for Vegas Phantom, Barrett and Civello Play Title Role".
  35. ^ "OLIVIER AWARDS 1986". westendtheatre.com. Retrieved 19 July 2010.
  36. ^ a b c "The Laurence Olivier Awards: full list of winners 1976-2008" (PDF). officiallondontheatre.co.uk. Retrieved 19 July 2010.
  37. ^ "The Phantom of the Opera Tony Award Info". BroadwayWorld.com. Retrieved 19 July 2010.
  38. ^ a b "Love Never Dies: The Show - The Creative Team". LoveNeverDies.com Official Site. Retrieved 19 July 2010.
  39. ^ Bamigboye, Baz. Watch out for... Daily Mail. 3 April 2009.
  40. ^ Lloyd Webber Hopes to Open Phantom Sequel Simultaneously in Three Cities Playbill. 29 December 2008.
  41. ^ Gans, Andrew (6 April 2010). "Love Never Dies Postpones Broadway Opening to Spring 2011". Playbill.
  42. ^ Love Never Dies Scraps Plans for Spring Broadway Run
  43. ^ a b "Phantom Sequel, Love Never Dies, Now Due in London and on Broadway in March 2010". Playbill. 18 May 2009.
  44. ^ "Love Never Dies: The Show - Background". Love Never Dies (official site). Ten years after the mysterious disappearance of The Phantom from the Paris Opera House... {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  45. ^ "Love Never Dies sees mixed reviews". CBC News. 10 March 2010.
  46. ^ "Broadway debut of Love Never Dies is postponed". BBC News. 7 April 2010.
  47. ^ Healy, Patrick. "Broadway Opening for 'Love Never Dies' Is Delayed Until 2011". NY Times. Love Never Dies" drew mixed reviews from critics in London