Yeston and Kopit had just finished the musical
Nine, winner of the
Tony Award for
Best Musical in 1982, when in 1983 they were approached by actor/director
Geoffrey Holder to write a musical based on Leroux's novel. Holder had obtained the rights to musicalize the novel in America from the Leroux estate, making
Phantom the only
Phantom of the Opera musical to do so. Holder planned to direct. Initially, Yeston was skeptical of the project. "I laughed and laughed.... That's the worst idea in the world! Why would you want to write a musical based on a horror story?.... And then it occurred to me that the story could be somewhat changed.... The Phantom would be a
Quasimodo character, an
Elephant Man. Don't all of us feel, despite outward imperfections, that deep inside we're good? And that is a character you cry for." In 1984,
British producer
Ken Hill revived his 1976 musical
Phantom of the Opera in
England. This was not a big threat to Holder, Kopit and Yeston, since their musical was intended to play on
Broadway. The real threat emerged when
Andrew Lloyd Webber's
The Phantom of the Opera became a smash hit in London in 1986. The novel was already in the public domain in Britain but would still be under copyright in United States for two more years, where Holder held the rights to it. Yeston had completed much of the score to
Phantom, and Yeston, Kopit and Holder were in the process of raising money for a Broadway production when Lloyd Webber revealed plans to take his musical to Broadway. Subsequently, Yeston's Broadway investors backed out. Yeston, Kopit and Holder reluctantly shelved their plans for
Phantom and went their separate ways for a time. Kopit rewrote the script outline of his unproduced musical
Phantom into a teleplay for a four-hour two-part miniseries entitled
The Phantom of the Opera and sold it to
NBC, with Yeston's blessing. It was filmed at the
Opera Garnier, and the only music used was opera music. It starred
Charles Dance,
Teri Polo and
Burt Lancaster and premiered on television in 1990. Kopit said, "I told Maury to hold on. Maybe someone would see the miniseries, think it would make a good musical we'd be ready." ==Productions==