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Phantom of the Opera Sequel

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you've gotta
  be kidding me.
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thedustyphoenix
Crew

PostPosted: Fri Jan 02, 2009 3:02 am


I thought my dad was joking when he told me this but he brought me a newspaper clipping. According to the paper Gerard Butler and Hugh Jackman are both being considered for the role of the Phantom.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/28426152/#storyContinued

LONDON - A new "Phantom of the Opera" is coming to Broadway, and beyond. Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber told the Times of London on Sunday that “the button is pushed” on a sequel to the world’s most successful musical.

He plans to open “Phantom: Love Never Dies” at the end of 2009, with a historic simultaneous opening in three cities — on Broadway in New York, in London’s West End, and potentially in Shanghai. Such an opening would be groundbreaking.

“I don’t think you could do this if it wasn’t the sequel to Phantom,” he told the paper. “We’ve been into the feasibility of rehearsing three companies at once and opening very fast in the three territories. The one which really interests me [in the Far East] would be China … I think to open ‘Love Never Dies’ in Shanghai would be an enormous thing.”

The follow-up to “Phantom,” which debuted in 1986 with Michael Crawford in the lead role, will take place a decade after the original, with the story set on Brooklyn’s Coney Island.

“It was the place,” Lloyd Webber said. “Even Freud went because it was so extraordinary … people who were freaks and oddities were drawn towards it because it was a place where they could be themselves.”

And the Phantom, who disappears at the end of the original musical, will reunite with lost love Christine. The iconic roles have yet to be cast. “We are pretty clear who our Phantom is going to be — I can’t say who,” Lloyd Webber said.

“Phantom,” based on a French novel by Gaston Leroux, is the longest-running Broadway show in history and has out-grossed even “Titanic” — the most successful film of all time.

And it has gone off-Broadway as well — most recently, Gerard Butler and Emmy Rossum starred in a 2004 film adaptation.
PostPosted: Sat Jan 03, 2009 4:21 pm


Sequels like these are hardly ever a good idea...

Specially when the original author of the novel is dead and thus not going to be involved at all... neutral

x_Jamais vu_x


SilverKibaSan

PostPosted: Thu Jan 15, 2009 11:02 am


Ive never seen the remake.
PostPosted: Thu Jan 15, 2009 5:05 pm


It's the same guy who wrote the original musical script, though. I'm still wildly skeptical about how good it's going to be.

kittyfox_kumiko

Friendly Elocutionist


SilverKibaSan

PostPosted: Fri Jan 16, 2009 10:51 am


Aaaah
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