
Granted, the music (composed by Lloyd Webber, with lyrics by Charles Hart and Richard Stilgoe, and book by Stilgoe and Lloyd Webber) remains the same, although the orchestrations by David Cullen and Lloyd Webber have been slightly updated. Unless you saw the most recent UK tour (2012 through 2013), this is a Phantom unlike anything you’ve ever experienced before.

Nor is it the Royal Albert Hall variation that aired on PBS a few years ago.
PHANTOM OF THE OPERA TICKETS HOUSTON MOVIE
Whether you’ve seen it on stage a dozen times, have only seen the movie (especially if you’ve only seen the movie) or somehow missed this phenomenon entirely, the re-imagined national tour that premieres in Houston this month holds massive appeal.Īfter all, this isn’t the same Phantom that you’ve seen in New York, London or dozens of other international cities, or on tour across the States. That’s me…) But some shows simply never get old, haunted by an unforgettable score that insinuates itself into moments of one’s own life.Īndrew Lloyd Webber’s Phantom is definitely one of those productions. Maybe you’ve seen it multiple times and own so many tasseled programs that you can’t remember which one goes with which performance.


Maybe you’ve seen this celebrated musical before. Long before Hamilton was the impossible-to-get ticket in New York, The Phantom of the Opera held that honor.
