Many faces of the Phantom
Young Chang
Ted Keegan guesses that he’s probably Phantom No. 14.
There was the most lauded of Phantoms, Michael Crawford. Then
there was Davis Gaines and his 2,000-plus performances in the title
role for “Phantom of the Opera.” And so many others.
“So I can’t worry about that,” said Keegan, who is the latest
Phantom for Cameron Mackintosh/Really Useful Theatre Company Inc.’s
production of the classic Andrew Lloyd Webber-Charles Hart-Richard
Stilgoe musical at the Orange County Performing Arts Center. “You
have to bring pieces of yourself to make it work. Each one of them is
different.”
Keegan has never even seen Michael Crawford’s Phantom, which was
acclaimed in the ‘80s. But the New York actor has his own strategy
for playing the famous role of a composer who is ashamed of his face,
wears a mask, spooks the performers at the Paris Opera House and
falls in love with an opera singer named Christine.
The Phantom, whose name is Erik, tries to make Christine love him
and lures her into his underground world. The ending to the love
story is famously tragic, with a bit of personal redemption that
renders the character more than just a haunting face.
Actor D.C. Anderson, who has been with the company on and off for
13 years in the role of opera house manager Monsieur Andre, credits
the story line, based on the book by Gaston Leroux, for creating such
a broad and lasting appeal.
“I think the combination of romance and mystery and a little
suspense -- I think those three together make the show an exciting
and appealing show across the board,” said the actor, whose local
experience includes performing in Garden Grove and Laguna Beach.
Keegan, who broke into Broadway in the role of Anthony in a
revival of “Sweeney Todd,” says the “larger than life” character of
the Phantom gives him the chance to let go as an actor.
“I think that first of all he is a human being, which a lot of
people tend to forget,” Keegan said. “I think he’s misunderstood. His
concepts and his realities are different from everyone else’s, pretty
much because of what his life has been.”
“Phantom” will run at the Center through Aug. 25.
Keegan, who’s claim to fame in the role is performing in front of
the largest “Phantom” audience ever at Madison Square Garden during a
1998 NBA All-Star game’s halftime, landed the part 2 1/2 years ago.
He had seen a production of the musical in Toronto and experienced
more than the average viewer would.
“It’s hard, in this business, not to go see a show and think, Is
there anything in this show I could do? It was one of those shows
where I thought somewhere down the road, I’m going to have an
association with this,” he said.
A couple of years later, he auditioned and was cast as the
understudy for the Phantom. More than two years now of playing the
title role and singing the famous “Music of the Night,” Keegan says
the part is one he never tires of because the character is so
layered, so off kilter, so intelligent and so able to “snap at any
second.”
“I believe the whole show is a transformation for him,” the actor
said. “In the end, he’s gone through a transformation that, to a
certain extent, even surprises him. Personally, playing the role is
an incredible journey to take every night. It’s about endurance,
creating something that honestly touches people.”
Keegan added that part of the chronic appeal of “Phantom” might be
its universal themes.
“Every one of us have had a time in our life when we felt alone or
left out, and so I think we can empathize with that,” he said.
“There’s history there. It’s something that has been a part of our
culture for so long.”
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