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gemini78
view post Posted on 6/10/2010, 20:41




100 Years Of Phascination

Too often our beloved stories become so wrung with new concepts, remakes, and additions to suit the tastes of each generation, that any semblance of their original splendor becomes nothing more than a historical reminiscence. Such is not the case with “The Phantom of the Opera,” a story much bigger than its humble origins within the pages of a cheap, 1910 Gothic thriller.

It is a tale of romantic tragedy at its finest. A grotesquely disfigured musical genius is madly in love with Christine, an aspiring opera starlet. The young singer is in love with her charming beaux, Raoul, but finds herself at once enthralled and horrified by the man who gave her a first taste of sensuality. And a man with the face of a monster, who is so close to a long denied love and yet, is rejected and tormented because of his ugliness. Taking place in the Paris Opera House only heightens the melodrama.

The Phantom first appeared on the screen in 1925. Played by Lon Chaney, he was the embodiment of repulsion, his face little more than a warped scull, embedded with really nasty teeth. The film was intended to thrill, the Phantom portrayed as a predatory figure of horror. But in moments of almost pathetic, almost feline virility, Chaney manages to arouse in us a feeling of pity. However, in attempting to disturb, the film skims over the enthralling qualities that drew Christine and Leroux’s readers to the Phantom in the first place. It is undoubtedly melodramatic, but lacks passion.

In 1988, after several uneventful remakes of the film, “The Phantom of the Opera” opened on Broadway as a musical adapted by Andrew Lloyd Webber, starring Michael Crawford as the Phantom and Webber’s then wife, Sarah Brightman, as Christine. The story leapt to life as if it had been waiting for a commanding soundtrack and multi-million dollar production fee to put the wind in its sails. Crawford was mesmerizing, alluring, tender, and frightening. He requested that the costume designer make his sleeves shorter to create the illusion of elongated hands, which he moved with a haunting grace, sweeping with music, twirling a cloak, caressing Christine’s gentle body.

The show rapidly and rightfully became a cultural phenomenon. As the chandelier made it’s infamous, electrifying sweep from ceiling to stage at the end of act one, audiences literally clung onto their seats in a moment of breathless, thrilling terror. The theater was where the Phantom was born, and where he belonged.

Of course, it was only a matter of time before stage became screen once more. In 2004 Joel Schumacher’s rendition of the musical hit the cinemas. Emmy Rossum, a young ingénue not unlike Christine, played the Phantom’s love interest. Gerard Butler was cast as the Phantom of the new era: rock-star voice, Gothic Belle Époque underground bachelor pad, swarthy wardrobe, and devastatingly sexy in every way. With the advent of the stage production, every conscious woman in America was already dead gone on the dark appeal of the Phantom. Making the face beneath the mask ugly may as well have been a matter of formality.

Not bad for someone hiding from a world that hated him.

http://celluloidkitchen.blogspot.com/2010/...ascination.html
 
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gemini78
view post Posted on 27/4/2011, 20:33




Memorable Voices in Movie Musicals

Gerard Butler in The Phantom of the Opera. Who knew that Gerard Butler, who is perhaps best known for his starring role in 300, had such a great voice? Butler plays the Phantom, probably the most important character of the film. His voice is so important to the film as a whole because oftentimes, the Phantom is heard rather than seen, and most of the key scenes featuring the Phantom involve him singing. Butler brings power and mystery to the role.

http://thecelebritycafe.com/feature/memora...cals-04-27-2011
 
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view post Posted on 6/10/2011, 10:45
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Datata ma bellissima intervista a Gerry :occhilucidi: (più miei commenti :P )

December 2004
Andrew Lloyd Webber's The Phantom Of The Opera: An Interview with Gerard Butler

By Wilson Morales

When word went out that "The Phantom of the Opera" would finally be made into a film, many wondered if the original Broadway star, Michael Crawford, would reprise his role. Surprising, Crawford didn't get the call. After all, he played the role over 15 years ago and is well into his 60s at this point. When Scottish actor Gerard Butler was cast as the new Phantom, tongues were wagging as in "Who's this guy?" Not many had heard of this little known actor. Butler had starred in less than successful films such as "Reign of Fire" and "Timeline". Nevertheless, the guy can sing. It takes a lot to convince Andrew Lloyd Webber that you can carry his film to success and Gerard is making an effort to do so. In speaking with blackfilm.com, Butler goes over the task of wearing the mask throughout the film and playing the Phantom of the Opera.

How do you relate to someone like the Phantom who has such a grotesque physical deformity?

Gerard Butler: I used the physical deformity to a certain extent by conducting research into physical deformities, but I used a more internal thing. I think the physical deformity represented emotional deformities; things inside ourselves which don't allow us fully to be open to love or to be loved. It was more the effect of that deformity that I was focusing on and it was more of an interior journey into my own dark spaces. What I identified with was the effect of pain and loneliness and fear and vulnerability that he felt as a result of having this (deformity). Of course when you spend four hours in prosthetic make-up and you really are looking at yourself and you see how revolting you've become in a way, it obviously adds another strand and helps you appreciate (the reality of the deformity) a little bit more.
(rivoltante??Ma doveeee :sbav:)


What was the reaction towards you in the make-up?


GB: I was amazed and upset by the looks I got just walking around the studio. I wanted to say, "what's your problem? What are you looking at?' It illuminates the ugliness and the beauty that exists within each of us, and that's what this story represents to me.

What was the process of applying the grotesque make-up?

GB: It was sitting in that chair for hours and having my eyes glued and pieces of string attached down my back which they pulled on to pull my eye down (demonstrates by tugging his eye downward), and it would just stay open with a piece of metal. It got really dry as well and it was uncomfortable. Whenever they released it I was sure I was going to be left with these bits of skin hanging. I had alcohol in my eye from rubbing off the glue for my eyelashes. Three people were poking your face for hours on end. It was like torture. By the time I finished I was ready to bite somebody's head off.
(poverooooo)

What did wearing the mask do for your performance?

GB: I had to get used to wearing a mask and wearing a prosthetic and performing with those things while singing and expressing myself through stylized movement, while keeping it as human as possible so the audience could be closer to the horror of the Phantom. (Because of the mask) so much was said purely through the eyes. I didn't want to be flapping my hands about and be theatrical. I had to appreciate if it was uncomfortable for me to wear a mask then it was uncomfortable for him (the character) as well. There was a lot of bruising from the mask. It would get so sticky sometimes that when you pulled it off you felt like you were literally ripping your face and I'd be left with bruising down my face and along my check. I suffered for my art.
(e come sa recitare lui solo con gli occhi... :wub: )

What was the process in selecting the right mask?

GB: Choosing the right mask helps you to understand where (the character) is coming from. We went through many masks. It was very particular leather that as soon as you smudged it, you had to get a new one. There were a lot of pressing masks on my face and slipping masks on so we went through about fifty-five masks. I think I have a couple of them in my house somewhere. The mask was a whole other character to itself. I tried on hundreds of masks before we found the one that we finally wanted because we had ivory masks and wooden masks and plastic masks, leather masks. Then we have masks of different shapes that went a certain amount over your head or how far down the mouth, how much around the mouth did it come. What was the size of the eye? The big one was the facial expression (the mask gave). The leather was better than the ceramic but the eye-size on the wooden one was great so they had to transfer that to the leather mask. I had to wait for them to be made.

Q: What do you remember about the audition for composer Andrew Lloyd Webber?

A: I support the Celtic football team which was in the semi-final for the European cup and it was the first time they've been in for many years. I went to the game the night before (the audition) in Glasgow with all my crazy Glaswegian friends who screamed at the top of their lungs the whole night and I had to sit there and clap to protect my voice because I was singing for Andrew Lloyd Webber the next day in London. I wasn't nervous. I treated this whole thing as an interesting idea because it was kind of unusual that they came to me in the first place. In the moment of doing the audition it was exceptionally nerve-wracking when Simon Lee the musical director started playing the piano in a drawing room at Andrew's house and (the director) Joel (Schumacher) was sitting right in front of me with a big smile on his face because he so appreciated what I was going through. Andrew was sitting in the back with his arm clapped over his face. I suddenly thought, "what the hell am I doing here?' I had never had a singing lesson in my life and it was all new to me. My right leg started shaking and I honestly couldn't control it and Simon Lee started having a fit on the piano inhaling dramatically. I thought, "what's the matter with him, I'm one who was nervous!' He told me afterwards that he was trying to tell me to breathe because apparently I wasn't.
( :lol: )

What was it like living and breathing the music of the Phantom of The Opera?


GB: It had its pluses and minuses at the time. But if you abandoned yourself to that world and that character and that period surrounded by extras in the same period clothing and costumes and listening to that music all the time, you give in and you let that music become a part of your soul. Then you can live it and breathe it which is really what I was trying to do. I went from somebody who didn't sing to somebody who didn't speak. For the longest time all I was doing was singing. I remember I had serious problems expressing myself (by talking). (It was funny) to see the crew who were big heavy guys with tattoos who probably had bulldogs at home who were plasterers and carpenters with their butt cracks hanging out walking around (singing) "Past the point of no return!' and whistling (the song) Masquerade because you were hearing this music all the time. There's a lot worse music to have floating around in your head.

What was your singing experience prior to this role?


GB: I sung in a rock band with no formal singing training. We're talking (singing) The Doors, a bit of Eric Clapton, Jimmy Hendrix and a lot of our own covers but it was more rock n' roll music. We were called Speed and we weren't signed. I was training to be a lawyer at the time. I was president of the law society at Glasgow University and my bass guitarist was my secretary of my law society; the lead guitarist and writer worked at the law firm that I worked.

What was the hardest part of the performance?


GB: The singing was the hardest. I came in as an actor, who sung that performance but always treated the lyrics as dialogue. But it was the emotional journey that he had to take and his feelings were more important than just singing a perfect song. When you see his dissension into madness and fury (by the end), that was five weeks solid of filming with only three or four hours of sleep. I was getting to bed about 10 P.M. so wound up and not getting to sleep by eleven and because I was putting the prosthetics on for five hours I had to be up at three in the morning.

Talk about that scene where he descends into madness and has to confront his nemesis played by Patrick Wilson.

GB: I loved the lair scene. It was the most powerful thing I ever did as an actor. That was six days back to back where I was in prosthetic make-up, not sleeping and coming on set with tears streaming, losing my mind. I know that inside me when I was looking into the eyes of Patrick Wilson it broke my heart. I almost killed him (by tightening the rope around his neck) and literally I was about to break his neck. He endured the lot in that scene and never bitched.
(ma noooo richiavamo di perdere Raul :o: XD )


When did the acting bug bite you?


GB: I was twelve years old and I was in (the musical) Oliver in the workhouse of Fagan's gang. It was a dream for me performing at the Glasgow Kings Theater and having my family come and watch me. I was in that because the (acting) bug hit me then. The bug came and went and then I was fifteen I was possessed after this dream that I had. I was living in this fantasy world which was inspired by a movie I had watched called Krull which is actually crap (but it wasn't then when I was fifteen). I went to my mom the next day and I said, "I have to be an actor.' And it (the bug) went away again when I was at school and I chose law, only to find that when I was training as a lawyer that it wasn't for me so I became an actor.

Was it hard to shake the character of the Phantom when the filming ended?

GB: Yes. It took me a good couple of weeks to get out of that space. I went straight away on a holiday and just relaxed. At the end I was exhausted. I literally said to my agents, "you know what, I don't want to work for a long time.' I needed some time off. I knew I'd just done one of the most amazing things that I will ever get a chance to do. Just to be part of a musical that's not your background and to pull it off and to think that we've done something that's really special.


www.blackfilm.com/20041217/features/gerardbutler.shtml
 
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gemini78
view post Posted on 7/10/2011, 21:18




E pensare che non mi rendevo conto quanto è logorroico :lol:

CITAZIONE
(It was funny) to see the crew who were big heavy guys with tattoos who probably had bulldogs at home who were plasterers and carpenters with their butt cracks hanging out walking around (singing) "Past the point of no return!' and whistling (the song) Masquerade because you were hearing this music all the time.

:eheh:

CITAZIONE
There's a lot worse music to have floating around in your head.

Ma Gegiooo, ma si dice cosìì?? :o: :o: Webber ti disconosce :P

CITAZIONE
I almost killed him (by tightening the rope around his neck) and literally I was about to break his neck. He endured the lot in that scene and never bitched.

Ma nooo, poveroo!

CITAZIONE
I thought, "what's the matter with him, I'm one who was nervous!' He told me afterwards that he was trying to tell me to breathe because apparently I wasn't.

:lol: :lol:
 
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view post Posted on 15/11/2014, 10:57
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Un articolo che rispolvera il ruolo di Gerry nel Fantasma...ripetendo una serie di luoghi comuni in proposito...


http://decider.com/2014/11/13/gerard-butle...m-of-the-opera/

One may think of many things to describe Gerard Butler: late-career matinee idol, romantic comedy buffoon, jacked Greek gladiator. But “musical theater anti-hero” might not make it into the top five descriptors. Yet, while most remember the Scottish actor’s star-making turn to be his role in the 2007 fantasy epic 300, his first shot at critical and commercial success as the lead role in Joel Schumacher‘s adaptation of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s blockbuster musical extravaganza, The Phantom of the Opera.
The film version of Lloyd Webber’s Tony-winning musical began its long development cycle almost immediately after the show gained international popularity. Originally, the show’s two stars, Michael Crawford and Sarah Brightman, were set to reprise their roles on film, but the film fell apart following Brightman and Lloyd Webber’s divorce. Director Schumacher was always attached, but the ’90s were a big time for him (he had two Batman movies to make, plus The Client and A Time to Kill) and he dropped out of the project before returning a decade later. By then, some big names were attached to the lead role, including John Travolta, Antonio Banderas, and Hugh Jackman. When none were available, they called upon Gerard Butler, who had so far had a single lead role (in Dracula 2000) and no professional singing experience.
For the role of Christine Daaé, the object of the Phantom’s desire, producers eyed Katie Holmes. Anne Hathaway eventually landed the role, but dropped out to shoot The Princess Diaries 2. Her replacement was the terminally boring Emmy Rossum, who by then had been featured in Mystic River and The Day After Tomorrow. (I also like to think of her as the poor man’s Jennifer Love Hewitt). Patrick Wilson, who had received a Tony nomination for his role in The Full Monty on Broadway but had only been in two movies (one being a meaty role in Mike Nichols’ Angels in America), was cast as Raoul, Christine’s suitor and the Phantom’s romantic nemesis.
The film’s mediocrity isn’t surprising given the musically inexperienced and generally unrecognizable cast. Plus, the source material itself is kind of crappy — it’s two-and-a-half hours of music that is, at its root, a variation on a single pop-musical hit that reached saturation in the ’90s with its inclusion in numerous ice-skating routines. Plus, the story is a little uncomfortable. A creepy, moody guy who lives in a basement and stalks the pretty young woman to whom he serves as an unsolicited opera tutor, only to kidnap her and try to murder her boyfriend when she puts him in the Friendzone? It’s basically Men’s Rights Activism: The Musical.

I guess the movie — and Gerard Butler in it — are supposed to be sexy? Searingly romantic? I can see the potential, possibly, but the wooden performance from Rossum paired with the masked Butler (who no one even knew anyway) did not make a very sensual combination. It had he opposite effect: it’s hilariously clunky and silly, a complete cinematic and musical misfire that fell flat.
I mean, even the dramatic reveal of the Phantom’s deformity is sort of a joke:

It was a modest success, doubling its budget at the box office, but the film is particularly unremarkable. While Butler came out of the experience unscathed thanks to the massive success of 300, the rest of its cast (including Minnie Driver, who once showed promise as the ingenue in Good Will Hunting and then sort of disappeared) went on to make rather forgettable career choices (although, I suppose, you could argue that Rossum’s role on Shameless is somewhat successful).
The point is: Gerard Butler may have hoped we’ve forgotten about this, but I never will.
 
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view post Posted on 20/12/2014, 16:19
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...A quanto pare sono già passati 10 anni dall'uscita del film e,se l'articolo sopra continua sulla scia delle critiche,questo che segue,invece,è un'apoteosi!

http://www.bustle.com/articles/52761-6-way...om-of-the-opera

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6 Ways Gerard Butler was an Unexpectedly Good 'Phantom of the Opera'

CAITLYN CALLEGARI
@___CAITLYNMARIE
4 DAYS AGO ENTERTAINMENT

Ten years ago, when I was in 8th grade, my guilt ridden chorus teacher bought us the Phantom of the Opera movie as a peace offering. It was in lieu of our class trip to Broadway, that was unceremoniously canceled for no apparent reason at all (still bitter about it). Like all insufferable 13-year-olds, we sat there, arms crossed, eyes rolled as he slid in the DVD and hid in the corner in fear of having sidekick phones, fanny packs, and Kangol hats being pelted at him. But thankfully, no awful, early 2000’s fashion abuse befell him because as it turned out, we were all enthralled by the musical. Who knew that a version of Phantom of the Opera, starring Gerard Butler of all people, would captivate a bunch of millennial tweens?

Now, I mention Butler not because no other notable people starred. The movie featured the likes of Patrick Wilson, Emmy Rossum, and Minnie Driver. I mention him particularly because he was made in the likeness of the non-Tom Selleck looking Brawny paper towel man. It was certainly a bizarre casting choice, that may have had a lot to do of being instantly smitten and caffeine riddled, but it was one that actually worked. So now, on the movie’s tenth anniversary, here are all the legitimate reasons why Butler was an unexpectedly good phantom:
The Uncovered Side of the Phantom’s Face? Smokin’


Like, COME ON.

He Brought a Surprising Vulnerability to the Role Despite Being a Burly Hunk of Man

Exhibit A:


Exhibit B:


Here’s my written apology for the PTSD this GIF of PS I Love You may have caused.

His Singing was Raw and Emotional


All about keepin’ it real.

His Unidentified Accent Made the Exhaustive Use of the Name “Christine” Seem Less Nauseating


Was it Scottish? Was it French? Scrench? Frottish?

5. He did his damnedest to bring an extra, less creepy dimension to one of the creepiest characters to ever exist…ever


Still creepy though. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

TBH, he Scared the *Bleep* Outta Me — As the Phantom Should


A red peacoat was never more terrifying.

Kudos, Butler. You can sing to me any time.

Images: lepetitehobbit/Tumblr; toloveakiwi/Tumblr; Giphy (2); Warner Bros.
 
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view post Posted on 20/12/2014, 17:31
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:entusiasmo: :entusiasmo: :applauso: :applauso: :felice: :felice: :occhilucidi: :occhilucidi:
 
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