Sci-fi, comics, humor, photos…it’s all fair game.

Frozen Shows

November 30th, 2007 by Kelson. Posted in Entertainment and tagged for , , , ,

I ordered tickets for an upcoming production of The Phantom of the Opera (the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical) and something occurred to me: In all likelihood it’s going to be an exact replica of the 22-year-old London production (with a few concessions to the realities of touring). When did this start happening?

MasqueradeMost of the time when someone puts on a play that’s been done before, they take the script and do their own thing with the sets, costumes, and performances. This is generally true with older musicals as well; people generally aren’t worried about seeing the original staging of, say, The Sound of Music. But these days, when a big show goes on tour, audiences expect the same experience they’d get on Broadway or in the West End.

Les Miserables opened in London in 1985, went through some tweaks on the way to Broadway, and then every production worldwide for the next 10 years was identical save for cast and translations. They retooled the show for the 10th anniversary, and those changes stuck around until they decided to cut it so that they wouldn’t have to pay the orchestra overtime.

Same with Miss Saigon: opened in London, tweaked as it went to Broadway, then frozen until 2003, when it was retooled to make touring simpler (fewer sets on palettes, using a projection of a helicopter instead of a model on a boom, etc. And let me tell you, watching a show about the Vietnam War during the week leading up to the Iraq War was an odd experience.)

It’s probably been 10 years since I saw Phantom (not counting the movie, about which the less said, the better), but I’ll be surprised if it’s much different (aside from cast) than the last time. I’m sure that’s what the rest of the audience is looking for, after all.

Related Posts

  1. 2 Responses to “Frozen Shows”

  2. By Andrea on Dec 1, 2007

    When it’s a revival, they change stuff. Phantom, Les Mis, et al never stop playing somewhere, so they never have a chance to be revived - they’d need to die first. I’d like to see some different interpretations too (unless they’re crappy like Phantom movie).

  3. By Kelson on Dec 1, 2007

    Wavatar

    Great, now I’m thinking about zombie musicals. Though from the occasional reviews I’ve seen, it sounds like some of the long-running Broadway productions are pretty much on life support…

Post a Comment

Note: This post is over 11 months old. You may want to check later in this blog to see if there is new information relevant to your comment.