And Meg is surprised and jealous to learn that Christine will be singing after her the following night. The conflicts of the plot are too dispersed to create a strong narrative. The plot is not based on the storyline in the original 1910 book by Gaston Leroux.
Raoul arrives and Christine asks Gustave to wait for his father backstage. She asks Meg to take Gustave back to the hotel so that she and the Phantom can have a private conversation. They have one final kiss and she dies in his arms. The Phantom of the Opera at the Royal Albert Hall [Blu-ray] Ramin Karimloo. On the balcony they recall that they thought their love had a chance of succeeding ("Once Upon Another Time").
Ten years after the events at the Paris Opera, the Phantom is now the mastermind of Phantasma, a Coney Island amusement park in New York. At Phantasma, The Phantom's performers Dr. Gangle, Miss Fleck and Mr. Squelch introduce the wonders of Coney Island ("The Coney Island Waltz"). Fleck reports that she passed Meg's dressing room, where she saw that the mirror was shattered, and Meg is now nowhere to be found. With Gary Oldman, Winona Ryder, Anthony Hopkins, Keanu Reeves. Love Never Dies aka Phantom of the Opera 2 is now out and having pre ordered it in october last year,i eagerly awaited the release of the latest offering from Andrew Lloyd Webber. He is joined by Meg, who tells him she swims each day to wash away the stress of working. Love Never Dies (2012) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.
Your recently viewed items and featured recommendations He upsets Gustave by refusing to play with him and storms out to find a bar, leaving Christine to explain his behavior to their son ("Look With Your Heart"). The Phantom has Meg hold Christine's body as he moves to comfort Gustave, who unmasks him without fear. After Gustave returns to bed, The Phantom threatens to abduct the boy unless Christine agrees to sing for him again. Unbeknownst to them, Madame Giry has overheard their conversation and is enraged, fearing that everything she and Meg have done for the Phantom over the years has been for nothing, as Gustave will be the sole beneficiary of his wealth and property.
But the lovers' reunion and the ending make it worth watching once. When Gustave goes to bed, the Phantom appears on the balcony and Christine faints in shock, having believed him dead. In their rooms, Raoul expresses disgust that their host would send circus freaks to receive them ("What a Dreadful Town!..."). And … Christine fears for her child's life, but Madame Giry assures her that Meg would never hurt Gustave. In the rehearsal studio for Phantasma, Meg is dismayed and hurt to learn that Christine has been assigned the "leading lady slot" in the show. The Phantom enters the room and tells Christine that Raoul's love is not enough and that she must sing for him and embrace her destiny ("Before The Performance"). Raoul encounters Madame Giry and discovers that the Phantom is the mysterious Mr. Y for whom Christine will be singing now ("Dear Old Friend"). After Gustave returns to bed, The Phantom tells Christine that she must sing for him again or she will return home without the boy. The lyrics also leave something to be desired. If Raoul wins the bet, the Phantom will pay his debts and Raoul can leave with Christine and Gustave.
Often these plays were little gems. In Christine's dressing room, Gustave helps his mother get ready for the show.
The Phantom surrenders Christine's body to Raoul, then moves to the edge of the pier and collapses to his knees in grief. ("Dear Old Friend"). That night, Meg performs a comedic burlesque routine about her choice of swimming costume ("Bathing Beauty"). After Madame Giry and Meg are dispatched to find help, Christine reveals to Gustave that the Phantom is his real father and the shocked boy flees ("Look with Your Heart" (Reprise)). ("Look with Your Heart" (Reprise)). The Phantom also leads Raoul to question Gustave's paternity ("Devil Take the Hindmost"). Giry recounts how she and Meg helped smuggle him out of Paris and to a ship departing from Calais, on which they escaped to America.