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Article - 1990
Submitted by Cheryl Charles Dance is the mysterious man behind the mask in a starry new version of Phantom Of The Opera which premieres on Sky Movies this week |
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In 1911, the not-terribly-successful detective novelist Gaston Leroux, who admitted that most of his 63 novels were adaptations of Conan Doyle's plots, hit upon the Paris Opera House as the perfect setting for a story about a tortured, disfigured soul suffering from unrequited love in his novel Phantom of the Opera.
When the Paris Opera House was built in 1861, the whole of France was agog at its grandeur. The auditorium accounts for only a fifth of the building's total space and this, along with the fact that out of the 17 storeys only 10 can be seen above ground, and the existence of labyrinthine passages and a lake underneath the building gave the site
Hollywood has frequently returned to Phantom with versions starring Claude Raines and Herbert Lom, among others. Then the British stage played host to him when Andrew Lloyd Webber turned the tale into a hit musical. Now the race is on between film and TV companies to cash in on renewed interest in the story. The Lloyd Webber version is to be filmed and Nightmare on Elm Street's Robert
Meanwhile, Tony Richardson (Look Back In Anger, The Entertainer |
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© 1990 Bridget Freer |