Toronto Star

The ‘Phantom’ versus the pandemic

Lloyd Webber musical selling well in Korea as world watches and learns

- JENNIFER SCHUESSLER AND SU-HYUN LEE

“The Phantom of the Opera” has garnered plenty of superlativ­es over the years, including the longest-running show in Broadway history. But in recent months, it has also laid claim to a more unlikely title: pathbreaki­ng musical of the COVID-19 era.

As theatres around the globe were abruptly shuttered by the pandemic, with no clear path to reopening in sight, the world tour of “Phantom” has been soldiering on in Seoul, South Korea, playing eight shows a week. And it has been drawing robust audiences to its 1,600seat theatre, even after an outbreak in the ensemble led to a mandatory three-week shutdown in April.

The musical, with its 126member company and hundreds of costumes and props, is believed to be the only largescale English-language production running anywhere in the world. And it has remained open not through social-distancing measures — a virtual impossibil­ity in the theatre, either logistical­ly or financiall­y, many say — but an approach grounded in strict hygiene.

And it’s one that its composer, Andrew Lloyd Webber, is arguing can show the way for the rest of the industry, a point he is hoping to demonstrat­e to the world, as he prepares to turn the Palladium, one of seven theatres he owns in London, into a laboratory for lessons learned in Seoul.

“I don’t think we should just be sitting on our hands and saying, it’s all doom and gloom, we can’t do anything,” he said in an interview last week. “We have got to make the theatres as safe for everybody as we possibly can,” he said. And South Korea, he said, shows that it can work.

That the show, at the Blue Squarecult­ural complex in central Seoul, has gone on is a testament not just to the protocols in the theatre, but to South Korea’s rigorous system of test, trace and quarantine, which has kept the virus largely under control.

It was also a matter of sheer timing and luck, though it didn’t seem that way at first.

When the tour’s previous stop in Busan, South Korea’s second biggest city, wrapped up in midFebruar­y, the country was emerging as the latest epicentre of the pandemic.

The company mostly went home for a break to Britain, Italy, North America, Australia and elsewhere. Serin Kasif, vice-president of Lloyd Webber’s company, the Really Useful Group, and the producer of the tour, said she was fielding daily messages from company members anxious about whether to return.

On March 2, when Kasif flew to Seoul to begin preparatio­ns to open there, South Korea had the second-highest number of confirmed cases, and the pandemic had not yet fully hit Britain.

She contrasted the “overwhelmi­ng sense of fear” that developed in London with what she had experience­d in Seoul, with its clear government­al directives and local partners who had lived through previous epidemics like SARS.

“When I was speaking to our Korean partners, in lead-up to the decision to continue, one said, ‘The word “unpreceden­ted” keeps getting used, but it’s not unpreceden­ted here,’ ” she explained.

“Amazingly,” Kasif said, the entire company returned to Seoul. Matt Leisy, a Northweste­rn University graduate who plays Raoul, said that when he went home to New York during the break, friends were “freaking out” at the idea that he might go back to Korea. But he said he was reassured by the producers’ constant communicat­ion about safety protocols, as well as their videos of daily life in Seoul.

“It was quite scary leading up to us coming back,” he said. “Who knew we’d end up being in the safest place in the world?”

The protocols, which are mandated by the Korean Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, are strict, but they are not particular­ly space-age. Before entering the theatre, audience members are sprayed with a light mist of disinfecta­nt. Thermal sensors take each person’s temperatur­e, and everyone fills out a questionna­ire about symptoms and recent places they’ve visited, so they can be notified of any exposures they may have had through the country’s contract-tracing app.

There are hand-sanitizing stations throughout, and ubiquitous signs and announceme­nts reminding everyone that masks must be worn at all times. And in contrast to movie theatres, where alternatin­g rows or seats are left empty, no seats are blocked off (though the first row was removed).

Backstage, there’s a similar drill: no embracing, no handshakes, no inessentia­l physical contact. Reusable water bottles are forbidden, along with sharing food. Wigs, props and costumes are regularly sprayed or wiped with antibacter­ial cloths. Everyone must wear a mask, except for actors when they are being made up or go onstage, and some members of the orchestra.

Sharon Williams, the head of wardrobe, said that masks and “constant handwashin­g” aside, protocols for the 17-member costume department are not that different than they would be normally, beyond extra cycles of high-temperatur­e washing with antibacter­ial soap.

The crucial element, she said, is the whole company’s rigorous co-operation. “No one is saying ‘I’m not going to do it,’ ” she said.

As for the onstage action, Kasif said there have been no modificati­ons — and yes, Raoul and Christine still kiss.

Which isn’t to say the actors haven’t had nerve-racking moments. Leisy said initially he was “hyperaware” of all the saliva flying around the stage, especially in big numbers like the Act Two showstoppe­r “Masquerade.”

The run, which has been extended until August (after the touring production of “War Horse” set to follow in the same theatre cancelled), has not been without its bumps. In late March, about two weeks after the show opened, one of the show’s ballerinas said she wasn’t feeling well. She was tested, and the result — positive — was back by 9 a.m. the next morning.

Authoritie­s moved swiftly to lock down the theatre and check if all guidelines were being followed. A mobile testing unit was installed on the roof of the apartment building where the cast and non-local crew live, and everyone was immediatel­y tested both for active virus and antibodies.

All 76 members of the touring company were quarantine­d for 15 days in their apartments. The local employees were also tested, and quarantine­d at home.

The show reopened on April 23, and ticket sales have been about 70 to 85 per cent full since, Kasif said. Even in late May, when a spike in cases in the country led authoritie­s to close all public museums, galleries and entertainm­ent venues across greater Seoul until June 15, the seats were mostly full. (Publicists for the show declined to provide box office informatio­n.)

“We have got to make the theatres as safe for everybody as we possibly can.”

ANDREW LLOYD WEBBER COMPOSER

 ?? WOOHAE CHO THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Audience members leave after a showing of “The Phantom of the Opera” at the Blue Square culture complex in Seoul, South Korea, where its run has recently been extended.
WOOHAE CHO THE NEW YORK TIMES Audience members leave after a showing of “The Phantom of the Opera” at the Blue Square culture complex in Seoul, South Korea, where its run has recently been extended.

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