The Phantom Las Vegas Playbill. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
A tiny "VIP" under the barcode indicates VIP Experience ticket holders. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
The VIP evening includes:
- A backstage tour of the $35 million custom-built Phantom Theatre
- A private meet and greet with the Phantom
- Premium seating in the VIP Golden Circle Section of the Orchestra
- A complimentary Souvenir Program
For me, the $250 ticket price is a bargain when one considers that in New York City, premium tickets are offered at a similar price which only promises prime orchestra seats (sometimes the seats are actually not so prime). No extras are offered with the premium ticket purchase.
As the Vegas 'Phantom' is schedule to unfurl its splendor one last time when it closes on September 2nd, I was going to seize the opportunity for this unique experience before it disappears.
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Anthony Crivello, who stars as the Phantom, was kind enough to sign the show's Playbill and souvenir program insert. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
Pages from the Las Vegas Phantom souvenir program. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
Even after seeing the show just four weeks earlier last month while attending a conference in Las Vegas, I could see no wavering quality this evening in the performances or the production value. The musical remains thrilling at every turn. But I must repeat that the thrill-ride pace with which the show moves, one almost wishes it would slow down just one tiny bit so one could savor the beloved music by Andrew Lloyd Webber, the costumes and sets by Maria Bjornson, the new Vegas elements (sets and special effects) as well as the performances of Anthony Crivello as the Phantom, Kristi Holden as Christine and Andrew Ragone as Raoul and the supporting cast. The full house tonight gives the show a deserved standing ovation at the curtain call. (Click HERE for a review, with production photographs, of the April 19, 2012 performance.)
My guide this evening is Joshua and we immediately make our way across the Phantom stage to an elevator that takes us below the auditorium to meet Crivello whist his Phantom mask is removed. A few kind exchanges later, he signs both the show's Playbill and souvenir program and takes a moment to allow for a photo opportunity. Love the Phantom robe by the way.
Crivello comes to Vegas with some major stage credits including a 1993 Tony Award for best featured actor in a musical for 'Kiss of the Spiderwoman'. His role of Grantaire in the 10th Anniversary 'Les Miserables: The Dream Concert' is preserved on video.
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The Hopeful Traveler and Phantom actor Anthony Crivello. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
We head over to the room where all the numerous wigs made for the show are displayed. Most of these wigs are made with real human hair and originally manufactured in Paris. But to upkeep the hairstyle of each wig, the master wigmakers have taught their skill to the artisans who work the Phantom's Vegas wig room. Immediately one can see the evidence one reason why a stage musical or play is expensive to produce. The wigs are not only made for the actor playing the role but for each of their understudies. For a time-period piece such as the Phantom almost every actor is custom fitted for a wig including beards and mustaches for the men. Each wig can be worth thousands.
There is a bright blue wig that seems misplaced in the room and Joshua indicates that the wig is indeed used in the show by one of the ensemble members in the "Masquerade" sequence. The Phantom himself wears wigs but his are used to dramatic effect to reveal his disfigurement twice in the show.
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The Phantom Las Vegas wig room. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
The wig at center is used by the Phantom to reveal his disfigured face. The wig next to it shows the name of Michael Lackey who understudies the role of the Phantom. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
On display is an example of the candles that rise through tiny trap doors in the stage as the Phantom and Christine make their way across the lake in the Phantom's boat. Each candle is equipped with a dual filament that mimics flickering to give it the look of real candlelight.
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The guts of the theatre right beneath the Phantom Theatre stage. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
An example of the candles that rises through tiny trap doors in the stage. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
Not obvious but Joshua points out the trapdoor where Raoul falls through and lands on an air cushion after jumping from a great height off the travelator above the stage and through the smoke that replicates the mist of the lake beneath the opera house. It's precise stunt work that leaves very little room for error for Ragone who plays Raoul and his understudies.
It's difficult to imagine that all the custom built machinery in this room will be gone leaving a cavernous space once the show closes in a few months.
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The Paris Opera rooftop backdrop rests below stage. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
The backsides of a couple of the candelabras sits below stage. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
Joshua reveals a night when Sierra Boggess, who was one of the original Las Vegas Christines, tripped in a fog cloud after a trapdoor malfunctioned and didn't close. A stage manager stopped the performance for safety. She had broken two front teeth and was sent to the hospital for emergency care. An understudy resumed the role for the remainder of the show.
Though the role had this unfortunate moment for Boggess, it was in this show where she was discovered and soon landed the lead role in Disney's Broadway production of the film "The Little Mermaid" and chosen by Lloyd Webber to play Christine in the London production of the 'Phantom' sequel called 'Love Never Dies.' The exposure eventually led to her returning back to the original 'Phantom' but not to play Christine on Broadway or in Vegas but in the celebration performances of the show's 25th anniversary at Royal Albert Hall in London which was beamed across the world to movie screens and is currently available on DVD, Blu-ray and iTunes.
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Over 100 effects are automated and controlled by this system under the theatre stage. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
The spike points reveals where Raoul's cage of doom is hidden below stage. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
The stunt work at 'Phantom' is part of what makes the show 'spectacular'. A set of stunt men perform such feats as swinging from the chandelier above the audience, playing a hanged victim of the Phantom (in the original a dummy is used) and to playing the Phantom costumed as Red Death to walk down to steep "Masquerade" staircase. The Red Death mask blinds part of the performer's eye sight and for safety purposes, stunt men play this moment in lieu of the actor playing the Phantom.
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The Phantom's gondola. (photo: TheHopeful/Traveler) |
Detail of the Phantom's gondola which is radio controlled. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
Sitting in the the Phantom's boat. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
Other Vegas changes in the Phantom's lair include the Christine-bride doll. In the original version audiences see it after the glass has been broken. But here the doll bursts through the glass case when Christine sees it making the scene that much more dramatic.
Making use of the deep stage at the Venetian, the Phantom's lair has three arches in lieu of one as seen in other productions. Recognizing this aspect of the stage, other moments in the show had to be rethought including using a wider version of Christine's father's tomb.
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The souvenir program includes photos of the opera house facade used to link the former two acts of the show. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
The opera house staircase is neatly folded again the back of the Phantom Theatre stage hidden behind curtains. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
The facade gives the feeling of entering the opera house form the outside and also serves the purpose for placement of the opera house staircase. In the original the entire task is tackled at intermission where the staircase is set into a fixed position and revealed by huge drapery. In Vegas once the opera house facade falls away, the grand staircase is seen rotating towards the audience filled with the masked revelers. This gilded staircase weighs 18,000 pounds.
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Mannequins stand at each end of the "Masquerade" staircase. The one in the tuxedo slides across the length of one of the steps during the number. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
One of the detailed costumes worn by the staircase mannequins. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
I think fans of the show would love the opportunity to stand on the "Masquerade" staircase and I feel lucky to have the chance. Though the staircase is folded against the back of the stage, the first few steps are accessible and the mannequins on these steps in full view.
We encounter actor Michael Lackey who plays the auctioneer in the musical's opening scene and is the standby for the Phantom. Joshua reports that Michael is ready at any moment to assume the role of Phantom if Crivello is indisposed or cannot finish playing the role during a performance.
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The Hopeful Traveler among the costumed mannequins on the "Masquerade" staircase. |
The elephant used in the "Hannibal" opera within the show. (above photos: TheHopefulTraveler) |
Suspended above is Christine's dressing room set. I can just make out her dressing table, door and full-length mirror. We walk to the reverse of the set and see a cutout in the mirror which slides into place as the stage is filled with smoke so she can walk through the mirror and join the Phantom on a journey to his lair.
We walk to center stage where we can view the opulent interior of the Phantom Theatre from the perspective of the actors. Joshua comments that on many of the tours he's conducted, this is where the guests like to spend most of their time and take the most photographs. From this angle one can see the entire auditorium of 1,800 seats on two levels and the massive pieces that comprise the opera house chandelier.
This auditorium was designed with such care so it extends the experience of the live production once guests enter the theatre. It give the impression of being inside a Paris opera house done in ornate draperies, faux gaslights and romantic sculptures.
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Christine's dressing room set stored above the wings of the Phantom Theatre. Her dressing table, mirror and door can be seen even in the dim light standing beneath it. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
The reverse of Christine's dressing room set shows the a cutout in the mirror which the actress playing Christine uses to disappear smoke to meet the Phantom. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
If so much is said and written about the chandelier it is because the original pales in comparison. One has to admit that technology was far different in 1986 when the musical first opened in London and the advances today has allowed for this "light fixture on steroids" to become a reality. The Vegas chandelier looks great from almost every seat in the auditorium where the original is actually oval and only appears circular when viewed from certain angles. And when the Vegas chandelier crashes and the theater lights go dark, the moment will leave some gasping to catch their breaths.
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A wide view of the auditorium viewed from the stage. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
From this angle, the four pieces can be seen more clearly. At the start of the musical, one of the pieces rests on the stage. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
Once you can get passed the chandelier in pieces waiting to arrange themselves again for the next performance, the full splendor of the theatre comes into view: the golden baroque details of the three levels of side boxes filled with mannequins of 19th-century theatergoers representing the upper crust of the time dressed in period costumes; and the enormous 90-foot wide dome ceiling.
The ornate proscenium is hidden at the start of the show but is on full display at the end of the first scene. This is where another change was made from the original. The playing space on stage is now larger in area in this 'Phantom' by the movement of the opera boxes (especially the Phantom's Box 5) from stage right and left within the proscenium and incorporated outside of it into the theatre layout. Landings below the boxes provide additional spaces for the musical's action to be brought closer to the audience. It is on these landings where the tour begins and ends.
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According to the tour guide, this is the most popular spot for guests to take photographs. The is the Hopeful Traveler version. |
Those who remember that there is a reprise of the song "Notes" in the manager's office will notice this segment missing as well. However this change is borrowed form the 2004 movie version of "The Phantom of the Opera" that starred Gerard Butler and Emmy Rossum and directed by Joel Schumacher. The dialogue that was within the reprise of "Notes" is incorporated into the scene when the Phantom dressed as Red Death appears on the "Masquerade" staircase.
Also like in the movie, the crashing of the chandelier is moved from what was formerly the end of Act 1 to the end of the "Don Juan Triumphant" opera when the Phantom kidnaps Christine.
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But even if the costume appears only on stage for a few seconds and shrouded in darkness, all the fabrics, designs and details are lavish. Even Madame Giry who appears to mainly wear a plain black dress has a costume made of a fabric from France. Artisans from across the world has kept the show outfitted over the years including those who make the period costume elements: shoes, gloves, hats, wigs and jewelry. Some of the costume changes take mere seconds but with dressing rooms located downstairs a makeshift one is ready in the wings. An example is when Christine changes dresses from the one she wears for "All I Ask of You" to the "Il Muto" dress and wig that she wears at the mini-opera's curtain call.
Before the tour ends we take a last glance at the pit which houses a full 18-piece orchestra, the only one in view of the audience in a Las Vegas casino theatre. It is on a melancholy note as we discuss the number of people in the show who are already looking for new work once the show closes. The tour was an amazing pleasure aided by the informative guide Joshua. I offered a number of questions and he was always prepared with definitive answers.
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The Phantom Theatre orchestra pit. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
My guide this evening was Joshua who knew everything about the the Vegas Phantom. No question stumped him. (photo: TheHopefulTraveler) |
Once the show closes in September, the theatre will be renamed likely to be called the Venetian Theatre. There is talk that the musicals 'The Book of Mormon' or 'Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark' are candidates to replace 'Phantom'. Which elements of the uniquely designed Phantom Theatre will remain is being decided with the only confirmation that the chandelier will be set in a fixed position and become a permanent centerpiece of the venue.
Whatever new musicals arrive in the city be it here at the Venetian or elsewhere on the Strip, none are likely to match the opulence that was 'Phantom: The Las Vegas Spectacular'. This version of the 'Phantom' would have been brought to reality for 2,691 performances and six-and-a-half years by its closing date. It was a fantastic dream production while it lasted.
The Phantom Theatre box office. |
With the closing of 'Phantom' and the renaming of the theatre such decisions as the fate of the mask mosaic will have have to be determined. (above photos: TheHopefulTraveler) |
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