Johnny Oleksinski

Johnny Oleksinski

Theater
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‘Phantom of the Opera’ to close after 35 years on Broadway: sources

It’s over now, the music of the night.

“The Phantom of the Opera,” Broadway’s longest-running show, will close this winter, multiple sources told The Post. 

Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical plans to play through the holidays, and then cap off its storied run on Feb. 18. Sources told The Post there will be a large bash to celebrate its 35th anniversary.

“Phantom,” sources said, has struggled to recover since it reopened in October 2021 following the pandemic closure, and is losing some $1 million a month. 

Since its opening night on Jan. 26, 1988, the show, produced by Cameron Mackintosh and Lloyd Webber’s Really Useful Group, has played 13,733 performances over nearly 35 years. 

Broadway’s second-longest-running show, the revival of John Kander and Fred Ebb’s “Chicago,” is well behind in the race, having been running 25 years and playing 10,090 performances.

Lloyd Webber’s lush songs (with lyrics by Charles Hart and Richard Stilgoe), Harold Prince’s innovative staging, Gillian Lynne’s balletic choreography and the lavish set and costume designs by Maria Björnson are seared into the minds of generations of theatergoers.

“The Phantom of the Opera” has been playing on Broadway for nearly 35 years. Matthew Murphy
“The Phantom of the Opera,” Broadway’s longest-running show, will close in December. Matthew Murphy

“Phantom” first opened on Broadway with its original London stars, Michael Crawford as the masked romantic and Sarah Brightman as his beloved soprano Christine. The production won seven Tony Awards, including Best Actor for Crawford and Best Musical.

Ben Crawford currently plays the Phantom and Emilie Kouatchou is Christine Daaé.

A flop movie version, starring Gerard Butler and Emmy Rossum, was released in 2004.

Lloyd Webber also put on an unsuccessful sequel, called “Love Never Dies,” in London in 2010 that toured but never made it to Broadway.

John Riddle plays Raoul, Ben Crawford plays the Phantom and Emilie Kouatchou plays Christine in “The Phantom of the Opera” on Broadway. Avery Brunkus

“Phantom” continues to play in London at Her Majesty’s Theatre — soon to be renamed His Majesty’s Theatre following the death of Queen Elizabeth II — and recently had some of its original staging revised.

That could be a clue to the musical’s future. While this “Phantom” will close for good in February, it would not be shocking to see it return in a much cheaper iteration in a few years. Mackintosh pulled the same maneuver with London’s “Les Misérables” at what’s now the Sondheim Theatre. New director, slimmer set, more projections.

For now, the Shubert Organization will be pleased. The Majestic Theatre, the best musical house on Broadway, has finally been freed up after nearly four decades. The right show could be grossing $3 million a week there, rather than $1 million from “Phantom.”

Maria Björnson’s designs are seared into the minds of millions. Matthew Murphy

In fact, Shubert chair Bob Wankel wanted the Majestic for the upcoming musical “Some Like It Hot,” but was reluctant to give “Phantom” the boot. The theater that new show is currently going into, the Shubert, has about 350 fewer seats.

Lloyd Webber may be back to Broadway soon enough. The terrifically fun London Palladium revival of his “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” has New York in its sights after it plays Toronto’s Princess of Wales Theatre this winter. 

And a revamped Broadway version of the composer’s musical “Cinderella” at the Imperial Theatre will be announced as soon as next week.

For now, though, it’s time to pack up the chandelier.