
#Phantom of the opera broadway cast full
On the first full day of stage rehearsals at the Majestic Theatre, members of the company waited to show vaccination proof in an alleyway lined with trash cans leading to the stage door.īackstage, masked dressers who help actors quickly change costumes in the darkness of the wings were testing alternatives to the bitelights they had gripped in their teeth pre-pandemic. "It's curlier and frizzier and I love it," Kouatchou said. Later that week, Kouatchou got her first glimpse of one of the new Christine wigs designed to match her hair texture. A new doll, designed to be racially ambiguous, would debut on reopening night. The old, creepy Christine doll that stood in the Phantom's lair, her features unmistakably white, also was out. Now, as the Phantom begins making his terrifying presence known in Act One, a frightened ballet dancer turns to the heroine and sings: "Christine, are you alright?"īefore the pandemic and Kouatchou's casting, the lyric had always been: "Your face, Christine, it's white!" "But we wouldn't be able to have conversations like this and change things like this if it hadn't been for the pandemic." "The pandemic was terrible," Kouatchou said. "I didn't feel like I had a place in musical theater because I didn't see anyone who looked like me who sung like me," she said.ĬOVID-19 had both upended live theater and made space for progress. Still, she worried about stereotyping, that some would see a mismatch in her voice, an operatic soprano, and her appearance, which was not the sort of "petite white girl" who seemed to always get cast as a show's ingénue or heroine. "I could sing that role in my sleep," she recalled thinking.

She remembers being transfixed by Christine. "Phantom" was the first Broadway show she ever saw, on a trip to New York with her high school. Kouatchou, the daughter of immigrants from Cameroon, grew up in the Chicago suburbs.

Off in a corner of the studio, Kouatchou silently mirrored Picerno's every move. Picerno drew a scarf through her fingers as she danced and sang "Think of Me" in her bell-like soprano. 'THINK OF ME'Ī few days later, the cast practiced dance steps in a mix of street clothes and the bulkier parts of their 19th-century-style costumes. "Sing along! Help her!" the conductor urged the masked chorus, whose voices carried Picerno until she regained her composure. Picerno's singing dissolved in tears during the love duet "All I Ask of You." Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber had swung by the studio to deliver a pep talk to the cast before they sang through the familiar score. In the dark days of 2020, living back in North Carolina with her parents and claiming unemployment benefits, she said she "almost felt like a failure." She sang her part every day to keep it fresh in her mind until the singing made her too sad and she stopped.Įmotion again overcame her on the first day reunited with her castmates in late September. Picerno said she was happy to embrace whatever was needed to get back on stage. The entire company was required to be vaccinated and twice a week went to get their noses swabbed at a nearby theater lobby repurposed as a temporary coronavirus testing site. The actor, Emilie Kouatchou, would make her Broadway debut as an alternate for Picerno.įor the returning cast, there were tweaks to lyrics and staging to learn, making it more straightforward to cast non-white actors in principal roles. In August, "Phantom" producers announced they had cast the first-ever Black actor to play Christine since the show opened on Broadway in 1988. streets last year in outrage at the killing of George Floyd, a Black man, by a white police officer, newly unemployed Broadway workers pushed the industry to make overdue changes to increase racial diversity in theater companies.

Within a few weeks of the show going dark, COVID-19 had claimed the life of a beloved dresser, Jennifer Arnold, who had been with the show for more than three decades.Īfter protests filled U.S. Reuters watched as the "Phantom" company prepared for its return. Their return this fall is viewed as a test of the city's efforts to restore some new sense of normalcy. Now, after an unprecedented shutdown, the theaters are among the last workplaces to reopen. Word of the abrupt shuttering came during a "Phantom" matinee at the Majestic Theatre on March 12, 2020, as some cast and crew themselves were falling sick. The crowded Broadway theaters, vital to the city's tourism industry, were the first places closed by the New York government as the coronavirus began to ravage the state. "Hopefully, none of us have it, because if one of us have it, we all have it," she said.
