Christine Daaé
Christine Daaé | |
---|---|
The Phantom of the Opera character | |
Christine Daaé (Mary Philbin) in the 1925 film The Phantom of the Opera, alongside Erik, The Phantom of the Opera (Lon Chaney). | |
Created by | Gaston Leroux |
Information | |
Occupation | Singer |
Family |
Madame Valérius (adoptive mother) Gustave Daaé (father, deceased) |
Spouse(s) | Viscount Raoul de Chagny |
Significant other(s) | Erik (The Phantom of the Opera) |
Nationality | Swedish |
Christine Daaé is a fictional character and the female protagonist of Gaston Leroux's 1910 novel The Phantom of the Opera and of the various adaptations of the work. Erik, the Phantom of the Opera falls in love with her.
Character history
Lifetime
Christine Daaé was born in a town near Uppsala, Sweden. Her mother died when she was six. Raised by her father, they constantly traveled to fairs where he played the violin and she sang. They were discovered at one of these fairs by Professor Valérius, who took them to Gothenburg and then to Paris, providing for Christine's education.
Christine was extremely close to her father, who told her Scandinavian fairy-tales; the tale of the "Angel of Music" was her favorite. Christine entered the Paris Conservatoire and trained for four years to become an opera singer to please her father and Mamma Valérius, the bedridden wife of the late Professor. However, by the end of the four years, she had lost her passion for singing.
When Christine arrives at the Opéra Garnier, she was described as "sounding like a rusty hinge", but one person found the beauty hidden in her voice. When Erik, the Phantom of the Opera began to tutor her, he told her that he is the "Angel of Music" of whom her father had spoken. She believed him, and he inspired her soul back into her voice. Christine debuted at a gala at the opera in place of the singer Carlotta, who had fallen ill. Christine's singing was described as "seraphic".
Christine became torn between her loyalty and sympathy for her mentor, Erik, and her love for her childhood friend Viscount Raoul de Chagny.
In the Lofficier translation of the novel, Christine's age is given as 15 years old. However, this is a mistranslation of a passage that says her heart was "as pure as that of a 15 year old". The evidence of Christine's childhood friendship with Raoul, and her studies at the Paris Conservatoire, put her age at 20.
Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical The Phantom of the Opera
Christine is a chorus girl, who becomes the object of obsession, passion and love for the mysterious Phantom of the Opera. He becomes her mentor, and with his help, she is chosen to replace the company's prima donna, Carlotta. When she falls in love with her childhood sweetheart, Raoul, the Phantom kidnaps Christine in a jealous rage and drags her down to his lair. She is forced to choose between the Phantom and Raoul, but her compassion for the Phantom moves him to free them both and allow them to flee.
2004 Film
The film version of the musical follows the musical's script closely, but Christine's age is reduced. Her gravemark says that she was born in 1854, and the beginning the movie shows the setting as 1870, so that makes her 15 or 16 years old.
Father's name
In the novel, Christine's loving father is named Daddy Daaé. In the musical, he is called Gustave, and in Sarah Brightman's music video version of "Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again", his name is Charles.
Films
Lon Chaney as Erik in the silent movie of 1925 The novel was filmed several times. The first film adaptation was made in Germany in 1915, with Nils Chrisander (1884-1947) as the Phantom of the Opera andAud Egede-Nissen (1893-1974) as Christine Daaé. Many critics consider the Filming of 1925, by Carl Laemmles Studio Universal Pictures, as the most successful. The role of the phantom played here Lon Chaney. The same studio tried in 1943 with a sound film of Arthur Lubin to follow this success. The film used to a large extent the still existing scenes of the silent film. Claude Rains played the phantom. In 1960, a Spanish society turned a very free adaptation of the subject under the title El Fantasma de la Operetta . In 1962 the British production company Hammer Films focused on the horror genre. Another film adaptation was made in 1974 by 20th Century Fox, who moved the event to New York and changed the story very much. This film was released as The Phantom of the Paradise. The 1989 version, with Freddy-Krueger star Robert Englund in the title role, focused on the potential for violence of the phantom. On the other hand, in the same year as a German-French-Italian-American co-production, a TV-Secondary was created, which put the melodramatic love story in the foreground and waived television rights on Splatter effects. The phantom embodied Charles Dance . In 1998 the famous Italian Horrorfilm director, Dario Argento, starred with Julian Sands in the lead role of the fabric, but was not particularly successful at Kinokasse. Finally, in 2004, Joel Schumacher produced a film version that inspired the musical of Andrew Lloyd Webber. Here played Gerard Butler , the role of the Phantom. Originally there was already a filming based on the musical in the early 1990s, with the main actors of the premiere: Michael Crawford as the phantom and Sarah Brightman as Christine. Brightman was married to Lloyd Webber at the time, but shortly before the planned pre-production the marriage was broken and the filming was canceled.
Popular movies
Year | Title | Genre | Original Title | Director | Title role |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1915 | The Phantom of the Opera | Silent Film - Drama | The Phantom of the Opera | Ernst Matray | Nils Chrisander |
1925 | The Phantom of the Opera | Horror movie, | The Phantom of the Opera | Rupert Julian | Lon Chaney sen. |
1937 | Ye ban ge sheng | Horror movie | Ye ban ge sheng | Ma-Xu Weibang | Menghe Gu |
1943 | Phantom of the opera | Horror, music | Phantom of the Opera | Arthur Lubin | Claude Rains |
1962 | The riddle of the eerie mask | Horror movie | The Phantom of the Opera | Terence Fisher | Herbert Lom |
1983 | The Phantom of Budapest | Horror movie | Phantom of the Opera | Robert Markowitz | Maximilian Schell |
1987 | The Phantom of the Opera | Cartoon | The Phantom of the Opera | Al Guest , Jean Mathieson | Aiden Grennell |
1989 | The Phantom of the Opera | Horror movie | Gaston Leroux 's The Phantom of the Opera | Dwight H. Little | Robert Englund |
1990 | The Phantom of the Opera | Drama Miniseries | Gaston Leroux 's The Phantom of the Opera | Tony Richardson | Charles Dance |
1998 | The Phantom of the Opera | Horror movie | Il Fantasma dell'opera | Dario Argento | Julian Sands |
2004 | The Phantom of the Opera | Musical film | The Phantom of the Opera | Joel Schumacher | Gerard Butler |
Free Adaptations
year | title | original title | Director | title role |
---|---|---|---|---|
1974 | The Phantom of Hollywood | The Phantom of Hollywood | Gene Levitt | Jack Cassidy |
1974 | The phantom in paradise | Phantom of the Paradise | Brian De Palma | William Finley |
1989 | Phantom Nightmare - Phantom of Death | Phantom of the Mall: Eric's Revenge | Richard Friedman | Derek Rydall |
1989 | Phantom of the Ritz | Phantom of the Ritz | Allen Plone | Joshua Sussman |
Basis
Several researchers claim the character Christine Daaé was based upon the real-life Swedish-born opera star Christina Nilsson, also known as Kristina Nilsson or Christine Nilsson.[1][2][3][4][5] This claim is unverified by any official source, but it is supported by several biographical similarities between Nilsson and Daaé. The most obvious is that Nilsson, like Daaé, was born in Sweden and trained in Paris.
Actresses
The first actress to portray Christine Daaé was Aud Egede-Nissen in the 1916 German silent version by Ernst Matray, Das Gespenst im Opernhaus or Das Phantom der Oper.
- Mary Philbin played Christine in the 1925 American silent version by Rupert Julian, The Phantom of the Opera.
- Susanna Foster played Christine DuBois in the 1943 Technicolor version, Phantom of the Opera.
- Heather Sears played Christine Charles in the 1962 version of The Phantom of the Opera.
- Jane Seymour played Christine in the 1983 TV movie version.
- Christina Collier played her in Ken Hill's camp-classical musical version in 1984.
- Sarah Brightman debuted the role in the 1986 Andrew Lloyd Webber musical.
- Patti Cohenour debuted the role in the 1986 Broadway production, alternating with Sarah Brightman. Cohenour was thus the first American Christine and went on to reprise the role for the First Canadian National Tour.
- Glory Crampton originated the role in the much revived Maury Yeston and Arthur Kopit 1990 musical Phantom.
- Jill Schoelen played Christine Day in Dwight H. Little's 1989 film version.
- Rebecca Caine debuted the role in the Canadian production (1989) and featured on the Canadian Cast album.
- Teri Polo took the role in the 1990 television miniseries version.
- American Janet Marie Chvatal performed the role in 1991-1992 in the German version of Das Phantom der Oper in Vienna, Austria.[6]
- Asia Argento played her in the 1998 film
- Claudia Cota played her twice in The Phantom of the Opera (musical 2000) by Morris Gilbert in Mexico and Player her on Phantom of the Opera (musical 2009) in Argentina by Harold Prince.
- Emmy Rossum played her in the 2004 film version of the Lloyd Webber musical.
- Sierra Boggess first played Christine in the 2006 version of the Lloyd Webber musical, Phantom – The Las Vegas Spectacular. In 2010 she originated the role in Lloyd Webber's sequel, Love Never Dies. She next played Christine in the 25th Anniversary concert, The Phantom of the Opera at the Royal Albert Hall, in 2011,on Broadway in 2013 and 2014, and in Paris to celebrate the show's 30th anniversary in 2016.
- Samantha Hill understudied the role during Boggess' tenure, and took over the lead on Broadway from 2012 to 2013.
- Kimilee Bryant played the role in the Lloyd Webber musical on Broadway (1994–95; 1998; 2009–2012 occasionally) and in the Swiss (in German; 1995–96), U.S. National Tour (1996–98) and Toronto (1999) productions.
- Gina Beck played the role in the Lloyd Webber musical in London.
- Sofia Escobar played the role of Christine Daaé, in The Phantom of the Opera at Her Majesty's Theatre in London, from 2010 to 2013.
- Jennifer Hope Wills played Christine in the Lloyd Webber musical on Broadway and on a Canadian tour of the musical.
- Julia Udine played Christine on Broadway in the Lloyd Webber musical from 2014-2016, after playing the role in the North American tour in 2013–2014.
- Ali Ewoldt has been playing Christine on Broadway in the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical since 2016. She is the first Asian-American actress to be cast in the lead role.[7]
References
- ↑ Jussi Björling Museum: Four Great Nordic Singers Archived 17 April 2004 at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ NYSL Library Notes: Status: In Cataloging Archived 3 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. (1 October 2008)
- ↑ Linton, Elizabeth Lynn. The Rebel of the Family p. 362, ISBN 1-55111-293-0
- ↑ Hollingsworth, Amy Gifts of Passage: What the Dying Tell Us with the Gifts They Leave Behind p. 38, ISBN 0-8499-1920-7
- ↑ Eriksson, Lill. Förtrollad av Fantomen för snart 100:e gången (Swedish) Eventnews.se
- ↑ Program book for the Vienna Production of Phantom of the Opera (November, 1990 / 2. Publication October, 1991) Programmbuch zur Aufführung des Musicals Das Phantom der Oper
- ↑ "Broadway's Phantom of the Opera Announces First Asian-American Christine | Playbill". Playbill. Retrieved 2017-01-19.
External links
- Leroux, Gaston; Wolf, Leonard (editor) (2004). The Phantom of the Opera. I Books. ISBN 0-7434-9836-4.
- The Phantom of the Opera free e-book, Project Gutenberg
- "Phantom of the Opera FAQ". How old are the Phantom and Christine?. Retrieved 2 October 2009.
- "Phantom Appreciation Society". a history of. Archived from the original on 20 December 2005. Retrieved 13 March 2005.