United Kingdom A
25th-anniversary stage performance was held in London on 1 and 2 October 2011 at the
Royal Albert Hall and was screened live in cinemas worldwide. The production was produced by Cameron Mackintosh, directed by Laurence Connor, musical staging & choreography by
Gillian Lynne, set design by Matt Kinley, costume design by Maria Björnson, lighting design by Patrick Woodroffe, and sound design by Mick Potter. The cast included
Ramin Karimloo as the Phantom,
Sierra Boggess as Christine,
Hadley Fraser as Raoul,
Wynne Evans as Piangi, Wendy Ferguson as Carlotta,
Barry James as Monsieur Firmin, Gareth Snook as Monsieur Andre,
Liz Robertson as Madame Giry, and Daisy Maywood as Meg Giry. Former West End Phantom
Earl Carpenter played the Auctioneer. Lloyd Webber and several original cast members, including Crawford and Brightman, were in attendance, as well as
Colm Wilkinson and
Anthony Warlow who originated the role of the Phantom in Canada and Australia respectively. A DVD and Blu-ray of the performance was released in February 2012, and it began airing in March 2012 on
PBS's "Great Performances" television series. In November 2019, the co-producers of
The Phantom of the Opera, Mackintosh and Lloyd Webber's
Really Useful Group (RUG), announced that the show would again tour the UK and Ireland, but this time with a return to the original production rather than the 2012 production. Although this announcement stated that the tour would be an "exact replica" of the musical on Broadway and in the West End, alterations were made to the set design in order to make the tour "lighter". These included a scaling down of the production's false proscenium, with the centrepiece Angel statue designed by
Maria Björnson removed. Performances of this latest 2020 tour were suspended from 16 March 2020 as a result of the
COVID-19 pandemic. In May 2020, Mackintosh and RUG announced the premature closure of the tour as a result. Rather than resume the tour following the end of COVID-19-related shutdowns, the producers installed that production into Her Majesty's Theatre in London in July 2021, where it replaced Hal Prince's original production.
Other international productions The Phantom of the Opera has been translated into several languages and produced in over 40 countries on 6 continents. With some exceptions like the 25th Anniversary UK and US Tours, these productions have all been "clones", using the original staging, direction, sets, and costume concepts. Notable international productions include the following: • Argentina: The show ran from March to November 2009 in Buenos Aires at the Teatro Opera. • Australia: 1990–1998: Melbourne, Sydney,
Brisbane,
Adelaide, and
Perth; 2007–2009: Melbourne, Brisbane, Sydney, Auckland, Perth and Adelaide, both starring
Anthony Warlow as the Phantom.
Brian Stacey was the original conductor of the first Australian production.
Marina Prior starred as Christine in the original production, where
Rob Guest later took over the title role. The final leg of the recent tour was staged in Adelaide in an arena format featuring giant screens on either side of the stage that presented footage shot simultaneously with the performance. 2013:
Canberra starring
Michael Cormick as The Phantom and with Julie Lea Goodwin starring as Christine from 9 to 23 August 2013. Goodwin had previously played the role, as the "Alternate Christine", in the 2007 to 2009 national tour. An outdoor production at the Sydney Harbour with all new sets, costumes and direction ran from March to April 2022. A production ran from August 2022 to February 2023 at the
Sydney Opera House with Josh Piterman,
Amy Manford and
Paul Ettore Tabone reprising their roles of the Phantom, Christine and Piangi from the West End production. • Austria: The German-language premiere was the second overall after the original London show. It opened at the
Theater an der Wien in December 1988, running until June 1993. A production of the touring version by Laurence Connor is scheduled to premiere in Vienna in March 2024, produced by
Vereinigte Bühnen Wien at the
Raimund Theater. • Brazil: The first Brazilian production premiered in São Paulo in April 2005 and closed in April 2007. The revival began 1 August 2018 in São Paulo at the Teatro Renault. • Canada: The Canadian production of
The Phantom of the Opera ran from 20 September 1989 to 31 October 1999 in Toronto at the Pantages Theatre, with
Colm Wilkinson originating the role of the Phantom. The Canadian International Touring Company toured the musical in Canada, Hawaii, Alaska, Hong Kong, and Singapore from 11 March 1991 to October 1995. The Music Box Tour (third US national tour) played dates across Canada in 2006–2007 including
Calgary, Vancouver,
Edmonton, Winnipeg, Toronto,
Saskatoon and
Ottawa. • China: The Shanghai production played 97 performances at the
Shanghai Grand Theatre. The world tour had their sixth season at the Culture Plaza Theatre at Shanghai Culture Square from 3 December 2013 to 26 January 2014. The world tour returned to China at the
Guangzhou Opera House in Guangzhou from 26 September to 10 October 2015 and performed its final season at the Tianqiao Performing Arts Center in Beijing from 17 November 2015 to 10 January 2016. A new mandarin production opened in Shanghai from 2 May to 4 June 2023. It was then announced that it would tour the mainland China, visiting Shenzhen, Quanzhou, Guangzhou, Xiamen, Nanjing, Hangzhou, Beijing, Changsha, Chengdu, etc. • Czech Republic: The GoJA Music Hall Theater in Prague had a non-replica production, beginning September 2014. The revival began in September 2018 and a planned finish in June 2019. • Denmark: First production was in Copenhagen in 2000 and the second ran from January to May 2009. The third began in September 2018, also in Copenhagen. •
Estonia: Production in Estonian (but with English and Finnish subtitles) featuring original sets, costumes, and direction premiered on 4 October 2014 at Theatre
Vanemuine in
Tartu. In first season 2014/2015 there were 24 performances in total, eight of which took place in capital
Tallinn at Nordea Concert Hall (premiered there on 30 October 2014). In spring 2017 there will be further 12 performances (two of which in Tallinn). The revival began in November 2018. A second revival began in October 2021. • Hungary: Madách Theatre,
Budapest. This production, which began in 2003, was the first to modify the original staging with new sets, costumes and direction. The five hundredth performance on 20 September 2007 featured four successive sets of casts. and has since played in other Japanese cities. • Mexico: The show had its Mexican premiere on 16 December 1999, in Spanish in Mexico City. • Netherlands: A production in Scheveningen began in August 1993 and closed in August 1996 with
Henk Poort as the title role. • New Zealand: Opened at the
Aotea Centre in
Auckland in 1997 and at The Civic, The Edge-Auckland in 2008. A local production (with new designs) opened on 13 June at the St. James Theatre in
Wellington and closed on 16 July 2013. • Norway: A non-replica production opened for the first time in
Oslo in September 2018. • Panama: For the first time in Central America,
El Fantasma de la Opera played in Spanish at the Teatro Anayansi of the Atlapa Convention Center from 23 to 25 September 2016, directed by
Aaron Zebede. Randy Dominguez starred in the role of The Phantom, with Maria Fernanda Achurra as Christine and Leo Almengor as Raoul. • Poland: The Polish production opened at the Roma Theater in Warsaw in March 2008 and closed in June 2010. • Romania: The Romanian premiere was in January 2015 produced by the Romanian National Opereta. This new non-replica production was performed in Romanian with a local cast led by a British creative team. • Russia: Moscow production co-produced by
Stage Entertainment and Really Useful Group premiered on 4 October 2014 in the MDM theatre starring
Ivan Ozhogin and Dmitry Yermak as The Phantom. The stalls and the stage were modernised specially for the production. The premiere was attended by
Richard Stilgoe and
Charles Hart. • Serbia: The Serbian premiere was in October 2017 produced by Belgrade-based
Terazije Theatre. The non-replica production was performed in Serbian with a local cast. • Singapore: First tour at the Kallang Theatre from 26 February 1995 to 20 May 1995, second tour at the
Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay from 23 March 2007 to 20 May 2007. • South Korea: Three productions in Korean; The first in December 2001, the second in 2009 and the third from 2023 to 2024. The world tour had two shows in Seoul in 2005, December 2012, and 2020. The show in 2020 was the only production held that time due to COVID-19. • Spain: A Spanish production ran at the Teatro Lope de Vega in Madrid from 4 September 2002 to 30 June 2004. A second production, this time non-replica, ran at the Teatro Albéniz in Madrid from 4 October 2023 to 20 April 2025, before embarking on a national tour. • Sweden: First production premiered in Stockholm 1989 and the second one in September 2016 • Switzerland: Opened and co-produced by the Really Useful Group on 12 October 1995 at the Musical Theater Basel, the play was performed until 27 July 1997. Two performances per week were given in the original English while the other performances were given in the German translation from Hamburg. • Turkey: The world tour played in
Istanbul at the
Zorlu Center PSM from 7 April to 17 May 2015. • Thailand: World tour production opened in Bangkok on 7 May 2013 and closed on 9 June 2013 at Muangthai Rachadalai Theatre. The second world tour, produced by Tero Scenario, Really Useful Group, and Crossroads Live began on 5 August 2025 to 31 August 2025 at the same venue. • United States: Los Angeles (1989–1993), San Francisco (1993–1999). A US national tour commenced in 1992 in Seattle and closed on 31 October 2010 at the
Pantages Theatre in Hollywood, California, after nearly two decades. The closing night performance was attended by many former cast and crew members, including Andrew Lloyd Webber and Sarah Brightman. A multi-year North American tour is set to begin on 7 November 2025 at the Hippodrome in Baltimore. The first leg of the tour began in Manila at the Theatre at Solaire on 20 February 2019 and closed its Manila leg on 6 April 2019. The cast was also set to perform in Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Tel Aviv, and Dubai for the succeeding legs of the tour in 2019. In 2020, performances were set in Taiwan and later continued to
South Korea. In 2021, a documentary called
Show Must Go On came out, documenting how the world tour Phantom of the Opera production dealt with the COVID situation and went on stage in South Korea when restrictions were lifted, and Andrew Lloyd Webber's struggle to reopen theatres in the UK.
Phantom: The Las Vegas Spectacular An edited production renamed
Phantom: The Las Vegas Spectacular opened 24 June 2006 at
The Venetian Las Vegas. The show starred
Brent Barrett and
Anthony Crivello as the Phantom,
Sierra Boggess and Elizabeth Loyacano as Christine, and
Tim Martin Gleason as Raoul. The theatre was built specifically for the show to resemble the
Opéra Garnier in Paris. The production ran 95 minutes with no intermission, and was directed and choreographed by Harold Prince and Gillian Lynne, with scenic designs by
David Rockwell. The show featured updated technology and effects, including a re-engineered chandelier capable of reassembling in midair during the overture while the entire interior of the venue (not merely the stage) returned to its 1880s halcyon days. Due to economic reasons, the Las Vegas production closed on 2 September 2012, after five years and almost 2,700 performances.
Copyright release In 2011, the
Really Useful Group (copyright owners of
The Phantom of the Opera) released certain rights to the musical in celebration of its 25th anniversary. In March 2011
Reed-Custer High School in Braidwood, Illinois, became the first school to perform
The Phantom of the Opera under the new rights. Later in 2011,
Stanwell School in
Penarth became the first school in the UK to perform the show.
Cancelled French production A production was originally planned for the first ever French production in
Paris at the
Mogador Theatre in September 2016.
Sierra Boggess was set to reprise her performance as Christine and
Garðar Thór Cortes was cast as The Phantom. A few days before the premiere, a fire damaged the stage floor and most of the backdrops and set pieces leading to the cancellation of the production.
Masquerade Immediately following the closure of the Broadway production, Andrew Lloyd Webber appeared on the
Tonight Show and hinted a likely revival of
Phantom in the near future at a different theater. Industry insiders widely speculated these comments to indicate a Broadway transfer of the revised London production. no announcement was made of a transfer to Broadway. However, in 2024, a casting notice was issued by "POTO, LLC" for an "untitled immersive musical production" that was widely rumoured to be a remount of
Phantom. After extensive speculation, the completely new production
Masquerade was announced in mid-2025, performing off-Broadway at
218 West 57th Street, custom renovated for the show, where guests traverse through a multistory experience presented in an intimate immersive format.. The show, directed by
Diane Paulus and produced by
Randy Weiner, opened on September 29th, 2025. Masquerade's cast includes at least three former Phantoms in
Hugh Panaro, Jeremy Stolle, and Cooper Grodin, as well as two former Christines in Eryn LeCroy and Kaley Ann Voorhees, and one former Raoul in Paul Adam Schaefer. Other notable performers in the cast include
Nik Walker,
Kyle Scatliffe,
Telly Leung,
Jeff Kready, and
Quentin Earl Darrington. The production was nominated for a
Drama League Award and an
Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Revival of a Musical.. Masquerade also won a 2026
Drama Desk Special Award for Outstanding Creative Collaboration. ==Film adaptations==