I saw it on Friday night here in Tampa, FL and it was fantastic! I was invited to go by a girl who is a friend (but not a girlfriend, lol...not yet at least), and I was really reluctant at first because I'm not really a big fan of plays and I hadn't been to one in like 13 years. Well, after the play was over, I was blown away by how great it was! Suffice to say, if you only see one Broadway production in your entire life, make sure you see The Phantom of the Opera if it ever travels to your town. You won't be sorry!
Anyway, a question popped up in my mind as I was watching it: Why is The Phantom of the Opera considered a horror story? How did the Phantom himself ever become a horror icon in the first place? I asked the girl I was with this and she thought it was because the Phantom's character is a ghost. So I asked her, "If he's a ghost, then why did he keep demanding to be paid money every month? What would a ghost need with money?" She just shrugged her shoulders and said that he was a very weird ghost or something. So I shrugged my shoulders too and accepted it.
When I got home I wiki'd Phantom of the Opera, and it said that the Phantom himself was in fact not a ghost, but just a regular man who was born disfigured (so now the whole thing about he wanting to be paid every month in the story makes sense).
So now that I know he was a regular dude and not a ghost, my original question still stands as to how the story is considered a horror story? I mean, he's just a really miserable guy who falls in love with a woman and becomes jealous of the man she wants to marry. It seems like just a tragic love story to me. Not a horror story at all. So at what point did the Phantom become a horror icon, is what I'm wondering.
Anyway, a question popped up in my mind as I was watching it: Why is The Phantom of the Opera considered a horror story? How did the Phantom himself ever become a horror icon in the first place? I asked the girl I was with this and she thought it was because the Phantom's character is a ghost. So I asked her, "If he's a ghost, then why did he keep demanding to be paid money every month? What would a ghost need with money?" She just shrugged her shoulders and said that he was a very weird ghost or something. So I shrugged my shoulders too and accepted it.
When I got home I wiki'd Phantom of the Opera, and it said that the Phantom himself was in fact not a ghost, but just a regular man who was born disfigured (so now the whole thing about he wanting to be paid every month in the story makes sense).
So now that I know he was a regular dude and not a ghost, my original question still stands as to how the story is considered a horror story? I mean, he's just a really miserable guy who falls in love with a woman and becomes jealous of the man she wants to marry. It seems like just a tragic love story to me. Not a horror story at all. So at what point did the Phantom become a horror icon, is what I'm wondering.
