This is ungodly šš¤Ŗš¤¤
john cudia supremacyš£ļøā¼ļø
obligatory gifs pulled from the dregs of my hard drive!!
Also here he is making out with Marie Danvers:
And shoving the phantom:
I went to dinner and when I checked my phone a little later my best friend was live tweeting the Phantom boot I gifted him. Suffice it to say...I think I've converted my first person to the phandom.
I started him out with the 25th anniversary performance and then proceeded to give him comparative highlights of Hugh Panaro, Earl Carpenter, Davis Gaines and Norm Lewis to give him a sense of scope. Then built it out with others. Sprinkled in information about canon and the different Erik/Christine types and ranted a lot about hands and my personal tastes.
And then I gave him a Lucy St. Louis boot bc I suspected he'd like her and I asked him to share his thoughts afterward. Now his takes have me screaming because I've totally indoctrinated him.
"She was good, but I didn't like this Phantom. His ILY was weak! The hands weren't right. DO YOU WANT HER OR NOT BRO??" I warned him about the post-COVID fall off but now he's blaming me for setting him up with high expectations and declaring his allegiance to the 2000s era.
And he's already abbreviating POTO.
I'm so damn proud of myself (and him) lol.
āIt has to be said that Warlow put on a magnificent performance, providing Brightman with unstinting backing and support ā even if he did eclipse her in some parts. [ā¦] He lifted many of the duets, such as Amigos Para Siempre (Friends for Life) and All I Ask of You, above some of the original versions.ā (x)
Anthony Warlow singing an utterly swoon-worthy Raoul alongside Sarah Brightmanās Christine during The Music of Andrew Lloyd Webber concert tour in 1996
(And yes, I still canāt believe this exists. His āChristineā asdfghjkl)
I just watched Thomas Schulze's final lair. Send help.
This is absolutely brilliant and shows why Peter Karrie is one of the best to ever wear the mask.
From āPOTO: The Phantom of the Opera Magazineā, Millennium Edition (2000), published by Carrie Hernandez. (This btw is the greatest Phantom fan publication ever made, and if you ever see it on eBay you should snap it up. I donāt even have my copy because itās with Paul, who conducted this interview with Peter in 1994.)
Enormous thanks to @panto-of-the-opera for typing this interview up for me!
Peter Karrie, interviewed by Paul Day Clemens:Ā
Since falling under the spell of āPOTOā (the day the Original London Cast album (OLC) became available in the U.S.) Iāve seen many fine āĀ and a few brilliant ā Eriks but only two performers have ever made me feel I was in the actual presence of the Phantom himself. One was Michael Crawford ā yes, he really was that specialĀ (and you can forget the OLC which is but the palest shadow of what he was like on stage!) ā and the other is Peter Karrie.
Commanding, dangerous, elegant, chivalrous and heart rending with an unparalleled physicality and wealth of detail, Peter not only made the role his own, completely, but by some rare and strange alchemy, somehow managed to make me forget I was watching a performance at all.
Thrilled, hypnotized and deeply moved, it was not until visiting with Peter after the show that the full impact of his transformation hit me. How could this warm, funny, soft-spoken, down-to-earth guy possibly be the same man I was watching on stage not an hour before hand?
Therein lies the difference between craft ā albeit of a rare excellence ā and true inspiration. Dare I even say greatness?
Yeah, I dare. For Mr. Karrieās Phantom is simply one of the greatest portrayals by an actor in the musical theatre that Iāve ever had the privilege of experiencing.
I had the great pleasure of interviewing Peter at length in December 1994 in Toronto as he was getting ready for the Far East tour of āPOTOā and what follows here are never before published excerpts from the interview. ā Paul Clemens
Paul Clemens: Do you find that the role of the Phantom makes enormous demands on your voice, in terms of the wear and tear of doing at night after night? If you had a sore throat, for instance, would you be able to get through the show?
Peter Karrie: Yeah.Ā You learn I guess. All professional singers in theatre have to cope with colds and sore throats. Otherwise youāll be forever off ācause itās a breeding ground of germs. And you develop your voice for stamina over a period of time where youāre doing eight shows a week. You have to. You have to survive itā¦. So, basically, yeah.
You take the angel [scene] for instance where [the Phantom is] absolutely broken. Iāve had very, very bad laryngitis and Iāve sung that and it sounded great! Simply because youāre breaking down in your voice is all kinds of scuffed up and cracky, you can enact it. But the show takes horrendous wear and tear on the body. It really does. You end up playing mind games with the role.
PC: Thatās interesting. How so?
PK: Well, itās such a powerfully written piece for the actual Phantom. You have to portray a person whoās schizoid, psychotic⦠and it all sounds very grand and technical. But the actual emotion of it can cut only come from the inside. And so you continue fighting with it.
Ā [Note from Christine posting this in 2021 - Erik isnāt actually schizoid or psychotic (not that either areĀ ābadā things). I know this is pedantic of me to point out, but I pointed it out at the end of Ethan Freemanās interview from the mid 90s so Iāll point it out here too.]
PC: I imagine you found a core within the character of identification, something you had an understanding of and could feel a great deal of sympathy toward.
PK: Yes. You have to put yourself through the gambit of it. You have to be the Phantom emotionally for that time, and then it comes out quite naturally. You donāt have to think about it.
PC: Do you find, after all the times you played the role ā first in London and now in Toronto ā that the emotions are still immediate for you?
PK: Oh, yeah. But as I say, thereās wear and tear. When the mind gets tired then you find you get into problems.
PC: How do you keep the role fresh?
PK: There are all types of hand holds all the way along, from the time you start ātil the time you finish. I guess the majority of it is set in the rehearsal room where you rehearse at a certain level into a certain standard, and it becomes automatic. But each show will always be different because you have a different audience, different weather conditions, you have different musicians playing in the pit, you have different people youāre playing opposite. So you will always get a variation on the theme. And so that, coupled up with what youāve put together in rehearsal so you get a fairly high standard of performance every night, merges together. And so you do get a different show every night. But, as I say, itās a very wearing role. More so than Jean Valjean, where youāre virtually on stage for three and a half hours. But I find the Phantom far more draining.
PC: I can imagine. Whenever youāre on stage youāre at peak intensity and you run the emotional gamut. So that, combined with the vocal demands, must make for one walloping experience.
PK: Exactlyā¦. That, coupled with the exposure. Youāre so exposed on stage. Whenever the Phantom does appear, itās either him on his own, or itās him with Christine, and something powerful and moving is happening. He doesnāt appear with the chorus ā barring the āMasquerade.ā
PC: For that reason, a number of the actors who have played the role have complained about a sense of loneliness and isolation. I wondered if you felt that way about it?
Ā PK: No, I havenāt felt that. But Iāve always mingled with the rest of the cast and crew. I canāt abide all this keeping the door shut. So we open the door and play rock and roll music.
PC: Do you ever feel hampered by all the makeup involved?
PK: You get used to it. Totally. In fact, there are times when you forgotten youāve got the mask on in the wig lady has to ask you for it. And you think āWhat? Iāve already given it to you!ā
PC: Thatās right ā you wouldnāt be able to feel it, would you? Because itās actually touching the appliances rather than your face.
PK: You feel it slightly. You know, if you first put it on youād know itās there. But after a while⦠But the wire band āround the head lets you know itās there! And the edge of it catches you sometimes. But no ā it becomes part of you. And as for the lip which is built up top and bottom āround your mouth, you get used to that as well.
PC: Has it ever come loose during a performance?
PK: Oh, God yeah! Weāve had some great moments where itās been hanging off. Thatās a bit gross. And the bald capās come loose in the back, so you do the Second Lair with one hand ārounds the back of your head holding your bald cap in place? [laughs] Yeah, youāve got some good moments.
PC: How did you find the voice which is so distinctive?
PK: Well, that, once again came from the feeling inside. It was like once you had all that stuff on, and I discovered the walk, and kind of latched onto his intention, the voice just followed.
PC: Your interpretation of the line āYou try my patienceā is unforgettable. So chilling. I was wondering how that evolved.
PK: Well, I felt that was the climax of the man. That, literally, for me, is where he turns āround and heās at the actual peak of his hate, his frustration. I knew I had to find something which made that moment special. It was set to be special by the music and the way it was directed. That was the key to the man.
PC: Itās as if your voice came from some deep well ā as if it bubbled up from some deep, dark place.
PK: Thatās right! Thatās exactly how I felt it. And then when Christine kisses him itās like he canāt believe it. āIāve won!ā That euphoric feeling⦠āShe can suffer this face! I think Iāve got her! I think, yes, she does love me!ā And then, as he reaches out to touch her⦠a momentā¦. Heās taken in the scene of Raoul hanging as he went back to her⦠and then, all of a sudden, it struck a chordā¦. āHang onā¦.ā And then the realization hits him: āSheās just doing it for him. Sheās literally giving me her self to save him. She loves him⦠She can never love me the same as she loves him.ā And itās all a kind of mental game there. And youāve only got split seconds to get the audience in on it, so he has to be kind of demonstrative in his actions.
PC: After the kiss, there was a moment where you sort of winced, pulling away from her twice like a wounded animal, your right arm almost becoming spastic⦠there were so many levels, all going simultaneously.
PK: Heās coming to terms. All these thoughts are rushing through his head and heās off balance. Everything has shaken him and heās lost his faƧade of āeverything-under-control.ā
PC: And the body is breaking down.
PK: Thatās right. Heās been stripped of everything just by having to face himself ā and face the truth. That one clear moment where he realizes this is wrong ā this is all wrong ā this is not how it should be.
PC: And when the phantom cries āGO NOW AND LEAVE ME!ā ā you built each word into a series of escalating crescendos which was tremendously effective, I thought. Very powerful.
PK: Itās all the process of him actually coming to terms with himself. Itās as you say ā one after another, one after the other ā then finally sheās gone and heās leftā¦. This is after sheās given him the ring and sheās gone⦠And he looks⦠and he sees the empty throne. And he knows thatās all his life is.
PC: Thatās very moving. Do you ever find that the final words ā āItās over now the Music of the Nightā ā are difficult to get out with all the emotion youāre experiencing?
PK: I did at the beginning, yeah. Sometimes I used to get caught up in it, which is a dreadfully dangerous thing, ācause then everything tightens up and you get the proverbial lump in your throat.
PC: Itās sort of walking a bit of a tight rope, isnāt it?
PK: Yeah! [laughs] Thatās right. And then thereās a moment where I can get space to subdue all that and concentrate on doing the last bit. Thatās where heās got the veil in his hand and sheās in the boat cominā across the back singing with Raoul and I say āChristine I love youā very, very quietly, and very broken, and then I can take some breaths which calm it all down and get myself kind of poised for the last bit. āCause thatās gotta be kind of the statement: āYou alone can make my song take flight.ā That is the statement of release. Itās like a rhetorical statement ā you will always be the music of my life. And therefore I canāt change it.ā Itās that feeling heās got in his body. He bends over backwards. And then the final moment is where he turns around and wipes it clean. And he does it in a far stronger attitude than anything else he does⦠āItās over now the Music of the Night.ā
PC: Iāve read that you feel heās starting a new life at that point.
PK: Yes! Yes⦠When Iām walking to the chair, I let the veil just drop behind, and I think to myself āItās over. Now what else is there? There must be something else⦠Itās over.ā And you do it with such a final flourish ā the cape and everything ā youāre back in control of yourself. Youāve had the osmosis. Youāve come out of the one period of your life which actually threatened to ruin you, and youāre now standing on the threshold of another one.
PC: Oh yes. Itās wonderful to hear whatās going through your mind as youāre doing the scene. And the impact of that final scene is tremendous. Do you have a favourite scene in the show?
PK: That would be it.Ā āCause itās only six minutes long, that Second Lair. And in that six minutes you literally travel from one end of the emotional spectrum to the other. Itās a whole journey.
Ā MORE BELOW⦠Keep reading, itās a long interview, with plenty more thoughts and content about Phantom, including some really funny classic mishaps.
Keep reading
The way his evil laugh sounds like a wail/sob.
Looking upward during the portcullis sprawl like his soul is going to leave his body with Christine brushing up against his--
Panicking and considering CPR when Christine faints.
HANDS (see items 5-7)
Doing motions that make me squirm during STYDI of all numbers when most Phantoms are concerned with the crawl.
Clutching at everything--fabric, air, his own knees and legs--during PONR.
Balling up in a fist when Christine kisses him and then stationed like they're almost protecting his heart afterwards.
The way he slides his whole body up against Christine during PONR.
The way he slides his whole body up against Christine during the final lair kiss.
Laying ON TOP of Christine when he's spiraling during the final lair.
Turning his neck at a damn near 90 degree angle when Raoul arrives in the graveyard.
Cheekbones.
It was all intentional. Lawyer up.
āFloating, Falling ā¦ā
Earl Carpenter and Katie Knight-Adams, 2006, London. The iconic MOTN pose and some very dynamic acting from both!
Whoa Jon Robyns and Lily Kerhoas were such a good pairing, their voices mesh so well and their interpretations make sense together.
I'm ruined.
John Cudia + Jennifer Hope Wills
2006 U.S. tour
I think of Immersive Phantom as the random protein/granola bar stashed at the bottom of your purse or bookbag. If youāre super hungry between meals itāll tide you over, but youāre really just saving your appetite for your favorite restaurant and dessert after work.
And youāre also waiting for the place to release the dang cast listāI mean, menuāto see if Jordan Donica is on it.
I feel like an outlier bc I know immersive phantom is the hot thing rn but I'm actually more excited for the (vastly more accessible) U.S. tour and all the new phans it's going to bring in
Ari/lit-ari-ture. @Litlovers-corsetlaces account resurrected and dedicated to POTO and Jane Eyre content.
113 posts