Date: Fri 18-Dec-1998
Date: Fri 18-Dec-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: DONNAM
Quick Words:
Phantom-Cabaret-Stern
Full Text:
(rev "Phantom" @Downtown Cabaret Theatre)
THEATRE REVIEW: "Phantom" Is A Bit Murky, But Still Excellent
(with cut)
By Julie Stern
BRIDGEPORT -- For many people, the mention of a musical about the Phantom of
the Opera conjures up visions of Andrew Lloyd Webber and huge special effects
culminating in a bad thing happening to that chandelier that dominates the
stage for the entire evening.
In fact, Webber won the race to get to Broadway with his version, but
Bridgeport's Downtown Cabaret Theater is putting on an alternative
interpretation that was conceived a few years earlier by Arthur Kopit, in
collaboration with Maury Yeston. Titled simply Phantom , this vehicle is more
sophisticated musically, but less challenging technically, making it better
suited for small regional settings like Bridgeport.
Based on the Gaston Leroux novel of 1911, the plot centers on the mysterious
masked stranger, Erik, who lives underground in the catacombs beneath the
Paris Opera, pretending to be a ghost and threatening anyone who ventures into
his domain.
When Erik falls in love with a beautiful young amateur, he breaks his
self-imposed solitude to offer her the singing lessons that will train her
voice to the level needed for the operatic stage. But this exposure and her
subsequent success set in motion a chain of unexpected and tragic
consequences.
On one level of this work is reminiscent of what the French called "Grand
Guignol," based on the 18th Century puppet theater that featured gruesome and
macabre stories. The Phantom story could easily rely on cheap thrills and the
scary figure of the monster whose face is too hideous to be seen.
What makes the Kopit-Yeston effort worthwhile is that it turns this variant on
the Beauty and the Beast motif into a meditation on the sublime power of
music. It is the daily opportunity to hear music that leads the Phantom to
remain living in the bowels of the opera house.
The music alone is what makes his solitary imprisonment endurable. It is music
that leads Erik/the Phantom to Christine, and enables her in turn to see him
not as a monster, but as a kind and generous teacher.
Because the setting is an opera house, the music is operatic in scope. The
plot elements as well suggest the exaggerated passions that inspire the great
operas being performed on stage. Therefore the production, like an opera, is
heavily laden with melodrama and atmosphere -- in this case the world of the
Parisian stage and its hangers-on.
As Christine Daee, Kelli O'Hara makes a plausible transition from the modest
young ingenue eagerly hawking sheet music on the street outside the theater,
to a diva of genuine power. When she finally cuts loose with the confidence
the Phantom has given her, the audience breaks into spontaneous applause.
Also very strong is Verna Pierce in the comic role of Carlotta, the vain and
ambitious wife of the company's new owner-manager, whose plan to appropriate
all the lead roles for herself is clearly inappropriate, given the
dreadfulness of her voice.
As Erik, Jay Montgomery is somewhat less satisfying, not because his singing
isn't up to par -- he has a beautiful voice -- but his character lacks
definition. For most of the long first act he seems neither menacing nor
pathetic. Intended as a sympathetic hero, darting about the stage and playing
pranks on the hateful Carlotta, he almost made me think of Peter Pan.
In the second act, however, as the explanation of his mysterious circumstances
unfolds he emerges to a new more serious stature, especially in the rendition
of the William Blake song, "My mother bore me..."
In this act also, Eric Michael Gillett brings a strong stage presence to the
role of Erik's patron and protector, Gerard Carriere. What is unclear is the
depth of the love interest between Christine and Count Phillippe de Chandon,
who was responsible for sending her to the company, and who woos her
intermittently. This is less the fault of Peter Gunther, who plays de Chandon,
than that of the playwright, who seems to have been rather casual about
developing his loose ends and subplots.
The show isn't scary or spectacular in its special effects, but it is
definitely spirited, lush entertainment, with the Downtown Cabaret's typical
attention to detail and musical excellence. Gail Baldoni's costumes and Jeff
Modereger's set design are up to Bridgeport's usual high standards.
If the plot seems a little more "bland" Guignol than "Grand," this production
of Phantom is still an excellent idea for an evening at the theater.
(Phantom continues at Downtown Cabaret until February 14. Performances are
Friday through Sunday evenings. Call 576-1636 for curtain times and ticket
details.)
