ログイン
詳細
hitogeniku

In 1986, Andrew Lloyd Webber's The Phantom of the Opera arrived on the West End stage at Her Majesty's Theatre. Fast forward 25 years and Phantom has achieved global success, millions of viewers, a film adaptation in 2004 and a musical sequel. Now viewers have the chance to experience this phenomenal show right from their own screens. Filmed at the Royal Albert Hall, this stunning performance brings the show to a bigger stage and celebrates its role as one of the biggest shows in theatre history, with speeches, performances and appearances by the original cast and some of the show's most notable Phantoms, including John Owen-Jones and Colm Wilkinson. Starring Ramin Karimloo and Sierra Boggess, Phantom tells the story of a deformed musical genius who lives in the catacombs of the Paris Opera House. Shunned by society, the Phantom seeks revenge in cruel and often violent acts. The Phantom is in love with chorus girl Christine Daaé and has been secretly training her to replace La Carlotta as the opera's reigning diva. However, when Christine is thrust into the spotlight, she is also reunited with childhood friend Raoul. Passion, obsession and chaos ensue as Christine finds herself torn between her love for Raoul and her strange pull towards the mysterious and dangerous Phantom

前へ次へ
The Phantom of the Opera at th
トーク情報
  • hitogeniku
    hitogeniku

    Andrew Lloyd Webber and Cameron Mackintosh did a clever thing all those years ago by releasing the songs to promote their up and coming new musical.

  • hitogeniku
    hitogeniku

    Watching this specially filmed staged adaptation to celebrate its 25th anniversary. It is clear that this is a spectacle for the theatre. It is so well presented.

  • hitogeniku
    hitogeniku

    Ramin Karimloo is the demented tragic Phantom. Sierra Boggess is Christine whose voice and beauty the Phantom becomes enchanted with.

  • hitogeniku
    hitogeniku

    Outside of the better known tunes, some of the songs might test your sensibilities. It really is a case of whether you like mock operatic musicals.

  • hitogeniku
    hitogeniku

    The bonus is at the end. Andrew Lloyd Webber pretending to be chummy to the audience. (If you want to see his true face, find a clip of him on the night the Labour Party won the 1997 election with a landslide. His miserable face was a picture.) Sarah Brightman shows the audience she can still reach the high notes after all these years.