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    Theater Review

    Phantom of the Opera sequel leaves audiences yearning for the original

    Lindsey Wilson
    Jul 26, 2018 | 5:26 pm

    An old storytelling trick is to start in the middle of the action, and Love Never Dies book writer Ben Elton has embraced that advice with gusto. The sequel to Andrew Lloyd Webber's massive global hit The Phantom of the Opera begins not with a scene-setting ensemble number or an atmospheric introduction, but with the Phantom himself, wailing high about his lost love Christine and pounding away at another organ in another lair.

    It's an 11 o'clock number before most folks have even settled into their seats, and it might give you whiplash. This is especially true if you're not familiar with Sir Webber's original musical (which is still selling out on Broadway and in the West End decades after it debuted, and is opening Dallas Summer Musicals' new season this coming December). Instead of a Paris opera house, we're in Coney Island and it's a decade after the Phantom (Bronson Norris Murphy) mysteriously vanished after terrorizing his opera house and its staff.

    What's the masked man up to now? Running a revue amid the rollercoasters and the side show freaks, where his facial abnormalities now just blend in with the crowd and his obsessive, possessive, sometimes murderous urges seem to have mostly tapered off. Ferrying him to America were former ballet mistress Madame Giry (Broadway vet Karen Mason) and her daughter, Meg (a former Broadway Christine, Mary Michael Patterson), now headlining as an "ooh la la" girl but aggressively jockeying for leading lady status with lots of petulant whining.

    The fierce Madame Giry, as well, has undergone a personality change. Now she's more Mama Rose than imperious instructor, and both mother and daughter appear to harbor a bit of a crush on their masked employer.

    Oh, did no one tell you? The Phantom is now a straight-up sex symbol, a rom-com hero whom every female in this show not only lusts after, but will kill for. There has always been an undercurrent of dangerous sexuality to the Phantom, but here it feels like Elton threw up his hands, threw out every previous character description, and decided to start fresh (with some guidance from Frederick Forsyth's The Phantom of Manhattan), changing up ambitions, personalities, and even motives. Besides Love Never Dies, Elton's main musical credit is the book for the sci-fi Queen musical We Will Rock You — the absurd plot devices don't seem quite so bizarre when you keep that in mind.

    It's all to force a tepid love triangle once more between the masked man and the woman he loves to stalk, plus the Ken doll who waits for her. Christine Daaé, now the world's foremost soprano (played by New York City Opera's Meghan Picerno), has been lured to America to sing at Oscar Hammerstein's new opera house (a video recording of the Australia production that this tour is based on exists, and if "Hammerstein" is said even half as many times there as here, then everyone would be at serious risk of alcohol poisoning).

    She's accompanied by her husband, Raoul, the now-surly and detached Vicomte de Chagny (played sluggishly by Sean Thompson), and their cherubic son Gustave (Jake Heston Miller, a true highlight with an angelic voice; he alternates with Christian Harmston). We know Raoul is an alcoholic because every other line is "I need a drink" or "I need something stronger," and he appears to stay with his wife only to pay off his massive debts through her money-making voice. So when the Phantom seductively comes calling, there's never even a hint of "will she/won't she" tension — Raoul's out the door so quick it would make the contortionist's head spin twice.

    Slinking throughout the eerie fairgrounds — Gabriela Tylesova's elaborate set and costumes are Coney Island by way of Tim Burton — is a trio that functions less as narrators and more as distractions while the sets change. The gangly Stephen Petrovich (named, of course, Gangle), the rotund Richard Koons (dubbed Squelch), and the diminutive Katrina Kemp (the most engaging, as Fleck) are entertaining to watch, even if their purpose is entirely superfluous.

    But what of the music, you ask? Well, it's no Phantom of the Opera. Though the O.G. pairing of Webber and Charles Hart (who rewrote some of new collaborator Glenn Slater's lyrics) have churned out about 30 new songs for this melodrama, the audience only perks up when a familiar melody or chord from the original escapes — the others are that dull and derivative, or sound like a Saturday Night Live satire.

    ---

    Dallas Summer Muscials' presentation of the national tour of Love Never Dies plays at Music Hall at Fair Park through August 5. It then moves to Bass Performance Hall in Fort Worth from August 7-12.

    Mary Michael Patterson (Meg), Picerno (Christine), Karen Mason (Madame Giry), and Sean Thompson (Raoul).

    Mary Michael Patterson, Meghan Picerno, Karen Mason, and Sean Thompson in Love Never Dies
    Photo by Joan Marcus
    Mary Michael Patterson (Meg), Picerno (Christine), Karen Mason (Madame Giry), and Sean Thompson (Raoul).
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    Theater News

    Dallas' Second Thought Theatre gets collaborative for 2026 season

    Alex Bentley
    Feb 13, 2026 | 10:41 am
    Amphibian Stage presents Bull in a China Shop
    Photo by Evan Michael Woods
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    The 2026 season for Second Thought Theatre in Dallas will be relatively small - only three productions are scheduled - but it will be full of collaborations designed to build on relationships with theater companies from across Dallas-Fort Worth.

    Second Thought will open their season with a production that just started at Amphibian Stage in Fort Worth, Bull in a China Shop by Bryna Turner.

    Inspired by the real letters between Mary Woolley and Jeannette Marks spanning from 1899 to 1937, the story asks: what is revolution? What does it mean to be at odds with the world? How do we fulfill our potential? And how the hell do we grow old together? It’s a sharp, joyful play about chosen family and the way love becomes action.

    The production, running at Amphibian Stage through March 1, will regroup for a month before starting its run at Second Thought, April 1-18.

    “All of us at Second Thought have been fans of Amphibian Stage for years,” said Artistic Director Carson McCain in a statement. “Not only does our content align in mission and quality, but we align in the values of hospitality and artistry. Bull in a China Shop celebrates the queer joy that holds hands with the fight for the equality of women and the LGBTQ community.”

    The second scheduled show, running September 16-October 3, will be Dance Nation by Clare Barron, on which Second Thought will collaborate with The University of Texas at Arlington.

    A finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 2019, the play follows an adolescent dance troupe somewhere in middle America which is fighting for what will be the most important achievement of their entire lives - a national dance title.

    A coming-of-age story centered around perfectionism, performance, and perception of self, the play is for anyone who’s wondered if they would have excelled on Dance Moms or buckled under the pressure to be on top of the pyramid.

    The third and final show of season has not yet been announced, but it will involve a collaboration between Second Thought Theatre and Dallas’ Watering Hole Collective. It will run December 2-19.

    The two companies say they have a shared belief in Dallas artists and Dallas audiences - and what’s possible when they build together.

    “Both of our companies aren’t afraid of taking creative risks," said Co-Executive Directors Laura Salvie and Jenny Dang in a statement. "This collaboration is about pushing each other artistically and creating theatre that invites audiences in; not just to watch, but to think and feel together.”

    In addition to the three productions, Second Thought is continuing their writers-in-development program, Thought Process. Celebrating its third year, it will welcome eight new playwrights, who will work together throughout the year to create innovative new works.

    Season tickets, which are $75 for all three shows, are available online now at secondthoughttheatre.com. Individual tickets will go on sale at a later date.

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