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The Broadway production of Andrew Lloyd Webber's THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, directed by Harold Prince, welcomes a new leading man tonight, February 9, 2015. The longest-running show in Broadway history, and one of the most successful stage productions of all-time, PHANTOM ushers in Broadway star James Barbour in the title role.
Having last year surpassed 11,000 performances -- an unprecedented feat achieved by no other Broadway show -- the New York production of PHANTOM celebrated this milestone on January 26 at The Majestic Theatre (247 West 44th Street), the musical's home for all 27 record-breaking years.
Barbour has starred on Broadway in Carousel, Beauty & the Beast, Jane Eyre (Drama League nomination), Urinetown, Assassins and A Tale of Two Cities, for which he received Drama Desk, Drama League and Outer Critics Award nominations for Best Actor in a Musical. He made his Broadway debut in 1993 in Cyrano - The Musical and also appeared in the national tour of The Secret Garden, as well as opposite Jeremy Irons in Camelot. Most recently, Mr.Barbour received the LA Ovation Best Actor Award for playing Jean Valjean in LES MISERABLES. In addition to numerous film and television credits, his many recordings include his solo albums The Gift of Christmas and his most recent release, the acclaimed Bring Me Giants, as well as the cast recordings of the shows in which he has appeared.
The actor is married to PHANTOM alumna Dana Stackpole, who has appeared as a member of the Ballet Chorus in both the Broadway and national touring companies.
He succeeds Tony Award nominee Norm Lewis. Lewis made history last May when he became the first African-American to star in the title role in the Broadway production. Barbour will become the 15th man to officially take over the role in the Broadway production. He follows (in order): original star Michael Crawford, Timothy Nolen, Cris Groenendaal, Steve Barton, Kevin Gray, Mark Jacoby, Marcus Lovett, Davis Gaines, Thomas James O'Leary, Hugh Panaro, Howard McGillin, John Cudia, Peter Jöback and Norm Lewis. In addition, there been five limited engagement replacements: Jeff Keller, Ted Keegan, Brad Little, Gary Mauer and Laird Mackintosh.
Barbour will join Julia Udine as Christine and Jeremy Hays as Raoul. The musical co-stars Laird Mackintosh (Monsieur André), Tim Jerome (Monsieur Firmin), Michele McConnell (Carlotta), Linda Balgord (Madame Giry), Christian Šebek (Piangi) and Kara Klein (Meg Giry). At certain performances, Kaley Ann Voorhees plays Christine.
THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA is produced by Cameron Mackintosh and The Really Useful Group, has music by Andrew Lloyd Webber and is directed by Harold Prince. Lyrics are by Charles Hart (with additional lyrics by Richard Stilgoe) and the book is by Richard Stilgoe and Andrew Lloyd Webber. The Phantom of the Opera has production design by the late Maria Björnson, lighting by Andrew Bridge and sound design by Mick Potter with original sound by Martin Levan. Musical staging and choreography is by Gillian Lynne. Orchestrations are by David Cullen and Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Based on the classic novel Le Fantôme de L'Opéra by Gaston Leroux, The Phantom of the Opera tells the story of a masked figure who lurks beneath the catacombs of the Paris Opera House, exercising a reign of terror over all who inhabit it. He falls madly in love with an innocent young soprano, Christine, and devotes himself to creating a new star by nurturing her extraordinary talents and by employing all of the devious methods at his command.
James Barbour (The Phantom of the Opera) was nominated for the Drama Desk, Drama League and Outer Critics Awards for Best Actor in a Musical for his portrayal of Sydney Carton in the musical version of A Tale of Two Cities, for which he also was awarded the Sarasota Magazine Best Actor award for the Asolo production of the same prior to Broadway. He starred on Broadway in various award-winning shows including Stephen Sondheim's Assassins (directed by Joe Mantello), Disney's Beauty & the Beast as The Beast, Carousel as Billy Bigelow, Urinetown as Officer Lockstock and as Edward Rochester in Jane Eyre, which also garnered him a nomination for the Drama League Award. His Broadway debut was in Cyrano - The Musical. He also appeared in the national tour The Secret Garden and starred opposite Jeremy Irons in Camelot. Most recently, Mr. Barbour received the LA Ovation Best Actor award for playing Jean Valjean in LES MISERABLES. He also starred as Daryl Van Horne in the musical version of The Witches of Eastwick and as Daddy Hogan in the opera Anna Nicole at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. Television credits range from pilots "Thee District," "Just Shoot Me" and "Flashpoint" to appearances on "Sex and the City," "Ed," "That's Life" and "Beauty and the Beast in Concert" for CBS. James was part of PBS's "Great Performances" tribute to Oscar Hammerstein and the mini-series "An American Experience: John and Abigail Adams," playing Thomas Jefferson, as well as a film version of "A Tale of Two Cities" aired on public television. On film, James was in Alchemy (Tribeca Film Festival and ABC Family) starring opposite Tom Cavanagh and Sarah Chalke, Adam Sandler's Eight Crazy Nights, Waiting for Lefty, The Tell Tale Heart and Twinkle Toes with Sally Kirkland. His voice can be heard on the recordings of A Tale of Two Cities, Jane Eyre, Assassins, Broadway in Concert and The Gift, as well as Frank Wildhorn's studio recordings of Dracula, Tears from Heaven, The Count of Monte Cristo and Excalibur. James has two solo CDs: A Gift of Christmas and his recent release, Bring Me Giants, which was voted in the top 10 by TheatreManiaalongside Tony Bennett and Barbra Streisand. He hosts TV's "James Barbour Now" on WITNation.com. His production company, Laughing Dog Media, creates and controls original content for VoiceAmerica.tv's new Internet TV network.
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