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Lloyd Webber's Phantom of the Opera Sequel
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I loathed the source material and, am sorry to say, will not even bother to see the show as a result.



Also, last month the show went *dark* for 4 days to install significant changes in the plot, script, music, and staging. The show being seen now is very different from the show that opened last spring.

I wonder if it will be in movie format also. Not likely if it doesn't get better reviews!



I think that this will answer all of your questions (my 1-star review is there): The Phantom of Manhattan

I do know that many long time fans of the original ALW POTO despise LND.
I agree with you Paisley about LND. I think it ruins all that was so wonderful about POTO. I loved the idea that Erik would not harm Christine when they were alone in the lair, even though he loved her so much. To me, that shows REAL love and a REAL man. Too much today has to infuse sex into everything. They took away the beautiful purity of the movie and play. I also hated what they did to Raoul. And to the Girys. To make them into totally different people than the original was to me, a sacriledge. And gentle little Meg a murderer???No way. However, some of the songs are lovely, I will admit.

LND is quite different from TPOM. They're vaguely similar because TPOM was originally going to be the sequel, but ALW has said he just couldn't get the story to work- it didn't feel right. So he shelved the project and the guy he'd been working on it with turned it into the book most of this fandom seems to love to hate. Since returning to the project, ALW has scrapped a lot of what he felt didn't work with TPOM and found the story that feels right to him. Given that his original is ultimately his own version/adaptation of this wonderful multi-facted story, the fact that he's proud of the work he's done with LND is good enough for me.
That and the music rocks!

I totally agree with Vicki.I for one am very open minded.. would I see the sequel? sure..would I like it? who knows..Im like Vicki I would be absorbed in the characters,music, and it wouldnt change how I feel about the original version. Some of us can look beyond certain things and just enjoy whats in front of us..and your right Vicki we do need to respect each others opinions in the POTO group..what maybe good for one is not always good for other..but lets not spoil it for those who have yet to make their own decision.Lets offer our thoughts & opinions in a respectable manner.

Last Updated: Tuesday, March 17, 2009 | 9:59 AM ET Comments4Recommend9CBC News
Andrew Lloyd Webber has said he wants to premiere the sequel to his massive hit The Phantom of the Opera in multiple cities around the globe, but Toronto could be the musical's "tryout" city, according to a report by industry publication Playbill.
Citing leaked casting notices for the British theatre mogul's musical Love Never Dies, Playbill.com reported that Webber has nabbed Tony Award-winning choreographer Jerry Mitchell for the project and that rehearsals are tentatively set to begin this August, in preparation for an October opening.
"Due to the ambitious nature of this production, which will premiere in London and New York in the same season, exact opening dates and cities cannot be confirmed at this time. However, it's confirmed that rehearsals will take place in London prior to an out-of-town tryout, probably in Toronto, before opening on Broadway," read the leaked notice.
Leading Toronto theatre company Mirvish Productions, currently running Lloyd Webber's The Sound of Music revival, would likely be the local partner, but the company has declined comment.
Sequel set a decade later, across the Atlantic
Love Never Dies is set in Coney Island about a decade after the tumultuous events of the Paris-set The Phantom of the Opera.
In the sequel, a mysterious Maestro invites now-famous opera singer Christine Daaé to perform a special, one-off concert at the New York-area park. She travels there with her husband, Raoul, and her son, Gustave.
"[T:]heir subsequent meeting with the Maestro brings the cataclysmic events of 10 years earlier at the Paris Opera crashing back into all their lives," the casting notice said.
Ben Elton, who created the musical We Will Rock You and collaborated with Lloyd Webber on The Boys in the Photograph, is the librettist for Love Never Dies. Director Jack O'Brien and lyricist Glenn Slater have also signed on.
Iranian-born, Toronto-raised actor Ramin Karimloo, currently portraying the Phantom in London's West End revival, is rumoured to be a frontrunner being considered to star in the upcoming sequel.
Since its 1986 debut, Lloyd Webber's The Phantom of the Opera has been seen by millions of people in more than 100 countries around the globe.
The Phantom of the Opera's original Toronto run was a watershed moment in the city's theatrical evolution. It helped usher in an era of blockbuster musicals, played for a solid 10 years and toured across Canada.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/theatre/story/...