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Libretto em Ingl�s

ACT 2

Scene 1

THE STAIRCASE OF THE OPERA HOUSE



(A gauze half conceals the tableau of guests at the

opera ball. The guests (whom we cannot yet see

clearly) are in fancy dressQa peacock, a lion, a

dragon, Mephistopheles, a highwayman, a clown,

knights, ladies, an executioner. M. ANDRE enters.

He is dressed as a skeleton in an opera cape. Almost

immediately M. FIRMIN arrives.He is also dressed

as a skeleton in an opera cape. The two skeletons see

each other and approach nervously)



ANDRE

M'sieur Firmin?



FIRMIN

M'sieur Andre?



(Each raises his mask to the other. They recognise each

other.)



FIRMIN

Dear Andre

what a splendid party!



ANDRE

The prologue

to a bright new year!



FIRMIN

Quite a night!

I'm impressed!



FIRMIN

Well, one does

one's best . . .



ANDRE/FIRMIN (raising their glasses)

Here's to us!



FIRMIN

I must say, all the same, that

it's a shame that 'Phantom'

fellow isn't here!



(The gauze lifts fully to reveal the staircase of the

opera house. The opera ball begins. Among the

GUESTS are four carrying strange percussion

instruments: a monkey with cymbals, a toy soldier

with a drum, a triangle, bells. Together they play

weirdly throughout)



CHORUS

Masquerade!

Paper faces on parade . . .

Masquerade!

Hide your face,

so the world will

never find you!



Masquerade!

Every face a different shade . . .

Masquerade!

Look around -

there's another

mask behind you!



Flash of mauve . . .

Splash of puce . . .

Fool and king . . .

Ghoul and goose . . .

Green and black . . .

Queen and priest . . .

Trace of rouge . . .

Face of beast . . .



Faces . . .

Take your turn, take a ride

on the merry-go-round . . .

in an inhuman race . . .



Eye of gold . . .

Thigh of blue . . .

True is false . . .

Who is who . . .?

Curl of lip . . .

Swirl of gown . . .

Ace of hearts . . .

Face of clown . . .



Faces . . .

Drink it in, drink it up,

till you've drowned

in the light . . .

in the sound . . .



RAOUL/CHRISTINE

But who can name the face . . .?



ALL

Masquerade!

Grinning yellows,

spinning reds . . .

Masquerade!

Take your fill -

let the spectacle

astound you!



Masquerade!

Burning glances,

turning heads . . .

Masquerade!

Stop and stare

at the sea of smiles

around you!



Masquerade!

Seething shadows

breathing lies . . .

Masquerade!

You can fool

any friend who

ever knew you!



Masquerade!

Leering satyrs,

peering eyes . . .

Masquerade!

Run and hide -

but a face will

still pursue you!



(The ENSEMBLE activity becomes background, as

ANDRE, FIRMIN, MEG, GIRY, PIANGI and CARLOTTA

come to the fore, glasses in hand)



GIRY

What a night



MEG

What a crowd!



ANDRE

Makes you glad!



FIRMIN

Makes you proud!

All the creme

de la creme!



CARLOTTA

Watching us watching them!



MEG/GlRY

And all our fears

are in the past!



ANDRE

Six months...



PIANGI

Of relief!



CARLOTTA

Of delight!



ANDRE/FIRMIN

Of Elysian peace!



MEG/GIRY

And we can breathe at last!



CARLOTTA

No more notes!



PIANGI

No more ghost!



GIRY

Here's a health!



ANDRE

Here's a toast:

to a prosperous year!



FIRMIN

To the new chandelier!



PIANGI/CARLOTTA

And may its

splendour never fade!



FIRMIN

Six months!



GIRY

What a joy!



MEG

What a change!



FIRMIN/ANDRE

What a blessed release!



ANDRE

And what a masquerade!



(They clink glasses and move off RAOUL and

CHRISTINE emerge. She is admiring a new acquisition:

an engagement ring from RAOUL, which she has

attached to a gold chain around her neck.)



CHRISTINE

Think of it!

A secret engagement!

Look - your future bride!

Just think of it!



RAOUL

But why is it secret?

What have we to hide?



CHRISTINE

Please, let's not fight . . .



RAOUL

Christine, you're free!



CHRISTINE

Wait till the time is right . . .



RAOUL

When will that be?

It's an engagement,

not a crime!



Christine,

What are you

afraid of?



CHRISTINE

Let's not argue . . .



RAOUL

Let's not argue . . .



CHRISTINE

Please pretend . . .





RAOUL

I can only hope I'll . . .



CHRISTINE

You will . . .



BOTH



. . . understand

in time . . .



(Dance section, in which CHRISTINE, almost

coquettish almost jittery, goes from man to man. But too

many of her partners seem to be replicas of the

PHANTOM, and each spins her with increasing force.

Eventually RAOUL rescues her and holds her tightly. He

whirls her back into the dance, as the music heads

towards its climax.)



ALL

Masquerade!

Paper faces on parade!

Masquerade!

Hide your face,

so the world will

never find you!



Masquerade!

Every face a different shade!

Masquerade!

Look around -

There's another

mask behind you!



Masquerade!

Burning glances,

turning heads . . .

Masquerade!

Stop and stare

at the sea of smiles

around you!



Masquerade!

Grinning yellows,

spinning reds . . .

Masquerade!

Take your fill -

let the spectacle

astound you!



(At the height of the activity a grotesque figure suddenly

appears at the lop of the staircase. Dressed all in

crimson, with a death's head visible inside the hood of

his robe, the PHANTOM has come to the party. With

dreadful wooden steps he descends the stairs and takes the

centre of the stage)



PHANTOM

Why so silent, good messieurs?

Did you think that I had left you for good?

Have you missed me, good messieurs?

I have written you an opera!



(He takes from under his robe an enormous bound

manuscript)



Here I bring the finished score -

"Don Juan Triumphant" !



(He throws it to ANDRE)



I advise you

to comply -

my instructions

should be clear -

Remember

there are worse things

than a shattered chandelier . . .



(CHRISTlNE, mesmerized, approaches as the

PHANTOM beckons her. He reaches out, grasps the

chain that holds the secret engagement ring, and rips it

from her throat)



Your chains are still mine -

you will sing for me!



(ALL cower in suspense as the music crescendos, until

suddenly, his figure evaporates)



Scene 2

BACKSTAGE



(GIRY is hurrying across. RAOUL appears and calls

after her)



RAOUL

Madame Giry. Madame Giry . . .



GIRY

Monsieur, don't ask me - I know no more than

anyone else.



(She moves off again. He stops her)



RAOUL

That's not true. You've seen something, haven't

you ?



GIRY (uneasily)

I don't know what I've seen . . . Please don't ask me,

monsieur . . .



RAOUL (desperately)

Madame, for all our sakes . . .



GIRY (She has glanced nervously about her and

suddenly deciding to trust him, cuts in):

Very well. It was years ago. There was a travelling

fair in the city. Tumblers, conjurors, human

oddities . . .



RAOUL

Go on . . .



GIRY (trance-like, as she retraces the past)

And there was . . . I shall never forget him: a man . .

Iocked in a cage . . .



RAOUL

In a cage . . ?



GIRY

A prodigy, monsieur! Scholar, architect, musician .



RAOUL (piecing together the jigsaw)

A composer . . .



GIRY

And an inventor too, monsieur. They boasted he

had once built for the Shah of Persia, a maze of

mirrors . . .



RAOUL (mystified and impatient, cuts in)

Who was this man . . .?



GIRY (with a shudder)

A freak of nature . . .

more monster

than man . . .



RAOUL (a murmur)

Deformed . . .?



GIRY

From birth, it seemed . . .



RAOUL

My God . . .



GIRY

And then . . . he went missing. He escaped.



RAOUL

Go on.



GIRY

They never found him

it was said he

had died . . .



RAOUL (darkly)

But he didn't die, did he?



GIRY

The world forgot him,

but I never can . . .

For in this darkness

I have seen him again . . .



RAOUL

And so our

Phantom's this man . . .



GIRY (starts from her daze and turns to go)

I have said too much, monsieur.



(She moves off into the surrounding blackness)



And there have been too many accidents . . .



RAOUL (ironical)

Accidents?!



GIRY

Too many . . .



(And, before he can question her further, she has

disappeared)



RAOUL (running after her)

Madame Giry . . .!



Scene 3

THE MANAGERS ' OFFICE



(The PHANTOM'S score lies open on the desk.

ANDRE is impatiently flicking through it)



ANDRE

Ludicrous!

Have you seen the score?



FIRMIN (entering)

Simply ludicrous!



ANDRE

It's the final straw!



FIRMIN

This is lunacy!

Well, you know my views . . .



ANDRE

Utter lunacy!



FIRMIN

But we daren't refuse . . .



ANDRE (groans)

Not another

chandelier . . .



FIRMIN

Look, my friend, what

we have here . . .



(He has two notes from the PHANTOM, one of which he

hands to ANDRE, who opens it and reads):



ANDRE

"Dear Andre,

Re my orchestrations:

We need another first bassoon.

Get a player with tone -

and that third trombone

has to go!

The man could not be deafer,

so please preferably one

who plays in tune!"



FIRMIN (reading his letter)

"Dear Firmin,

vis a vis my opera:

some chorus-members must be sacked.

If you could, find out which

has a sense of pitch -

wisely, though,

I've managed to assign a

rather minor role to those

who cannot act! "



(They are interrupted by the arrival of CARLOTTA and

PIANGI both furiously brandishing similar notes)



CARLOTTA

Outrage!



FIRMIN

What is it now?



CARLOTTA

This whole affair is

an outrage!



FIRMIN

Signora, please . . .



ANDRE

Now what's the matter?



CARLOTTA

Have you seen

the size of my part?



ANDRE

Signora, listen . . .



PIANGI

It's an insult!



FIRMIN

Not you as well!



PIANGI

Just look at this -

it's an insult!



FIRMIN

Please, understand . . .



ANDRE

Signor! Signora!



CARLOTTA

The things I have

to do for my art!



PIANGI (stabbing a finger at the open score)

If you .an call

this gibberish "art" !



(RAOUL and CHRISTINE enter: CARLOTTA bristles)



CARLOTTA (dryly)

Ah! Here's our little flower!



FIRMIN

Ah Miss Daae

quite the lady

of the hour!



ANDRE (explaining)

You have

secured the largest role

in this "Don Juan".



CARLOTTA (half to herself)

Christine Daae?

She doesn't have

the voice!



FIRMIN (hearing this, to CARLOTTA)

Signora, please!



RAOUL (to the MANAGERS)

Then I take it

you're agreeing.



CARLOTTA (aside)

She's behind this . . .



ANDRE

It appears we have

no choice.



CARLOTTA (unable to contain herself any longer,

points accusingly)

She's the one

behind this!

Christine Daae!



CHRISTINE (who has been silent till now, incensed at

this)

How dare you!



CARLOTTA

I'm not a fool!



CHRISTINE

You evil woman!

How dare you!



CARLOTTA

You think I'm blind?



CHRISTINE

This isn't my fault!

I don't want any

part in this plot!



FIRMIN

Miss Daae, surely . . .



ANDRE

But why not?



PIANGI (baffled, to CARLOTTA)

What does she say?



FIRMIN (reasonably)

It's your decision -



(Suddenly rounding on her)



But why not?



CARLOTTA (to PIANGI)

She's backing out!



ANDRE

You have a duty!



CHRISTINE

I cannot sing it,

duty or not!



RAOUL (comforting)

Christine . . .

Christine . . .

You don't have to . . .

they can't make you . . .



(MEG and GlRY arrive, the latter bearing another note

from the PHANTOM)



GIRY

Please, monsieur:

another note.



(The MANAGERS gesture: "read it". As she reads, ALL

react variously, as they are singled out)



GIRY

"Fondest greetings

to you all !

A few instructions

just before

rehearsal starts:

Carlotta must be

taught to act . . . ,"



(The PHANTOM'S voice gradually takes over

from her)



PHANTOM'S VOICE

. . . not her normal trick

of strutting round the stage.

Our Don Juan must

lose some weight -

it's not healthy in

a man of Piangi's age.

And my managers

must learn

that their place is in

an office, not the arts.



As for Miss Christine Daae . . .

No doubt she'll

do her best - it's

true her voice is

good. She knows, though,

should she wish to excel

she has much still

to learn, if pride will

let her

return to me, her

teacher,

her teacher . . .



Your obedient friend . . .

(The PHANTOM'S voice fades out and GIRY takes over)



GIRY

". . . and Angel . . ."



(Attention now focuses on RAOUL whose eyes are

suddenly bright with a new thought)



RAOUL

We have all been

blind - and yet the

answer is staring us

in the face . . .

This could be the

chance to ensnare our

clever friend . . .



ANDRE

We're listening . . .



FIRMIN

Go on.



RAOUL

We shall play his

game - perform his

work - but remember we

hold the ace . . .

For, if Miss Daae

sings, he is certain

to attend . . .



ANDRE (carried along by the idea)

We make certain

the doors are barred . . .



FIRMIN (likewise)

We make certain

our men are there . . .



RAOUL

We make certain

they're armed . . .



RAOUL/ANDRE/FIRMIN (savouring their victory)

The curtain falls -

his reign will end!



(ALL have been listening intently. GIRY is the first to

express a reaction. CHRISTINE remains silent and

withdrawn)



GIRY

Madness!



ANDRE

I'm not so sure . . .



FIRMIN

Not if it works . . .



GIRY

This is madness!



ANDRE

The tide will turn!



GIRY

Monsieur, believe me -

there is no way of

turning the tide!



FIRMIN (to GIRY)

You stick to ballet!



RAOUL (rounding on GIRY)

Then help us!



GIRY

Monsieur, I can't . . .



RAOUL

Instead of warning us . . .



RAOUL/ANDRE/FIRMIN

Help us!



GIRY

I wish I could . . .



RAOUL/ANDRE/FIRMIN

Don't make excuses!



RAOUL

Or could it be that

you're on his side?



GIRY (to RAOUL)

Monsieur, believe me,

I intend no ill . . .



(to ANDRE and FIRMIN)



But messieurs, be careful -

we have seen him kill . . .



ANDRE/FIRMIN (to GIRY)

We say he'll fall

and fall he will!



CARLOTTA

She's the one behind this!

Christine!

This is all her doing!



PIANGI

This is the truth!

Christine Daae!



RAOUL

This is his undoing!



ANDRE/FIRMIN (to RAOUL)

If you succeed

you free us all -

this so called "angel"

has to fall!



RAOUL

Angel of music,

fear my fury -

Here is where you fall!



GIRY (to RAOUL)

Hear my warning!

Fear his fury!



CARLOTTA

What glory can

she hope to gain?

It's clear to all

the girl's insane!



.ANDRE (to FIRMIN)

Christine sings

We'll get our man . . .



PIANGI

She is crazy!

She is raving!



FIRMIN (to ANDRE)

If Christine helps

us in this plan . . .



RAOUL

Say your prayers,

black angel of death!



CHRISTINE (vainly pleading amidst the tumult)

Please don't . . .



ANDRE (to FIRMIN)

If Christine won't,

then no-one can . . .



GIRY (to RAOUL)

Monsieur, I beg you,

do not do this . . .



PIANGI/CARLOTTA

Gran Dio!

Che imbroglio!



ANDRE/FIRMIN

This will seal his fate!



CHRISTINE (bursting through the hubbub with a

great cry)

If you don't stop,

I'll go mad! ! !



(to RAOUL, pleading)



Raoul, I'm frightened -

don't make me do this . . .

Raoul, it scares me -

don't put me through this

ordeal by fire . . .

he'll take me, I know . . .

we'll be parted for ever . . .

he won't let me go . . .



What I once used to dream

I now dread . . .

if he finds me, it won't

ever end . . .

and he'll always be there,

singing songs in my head . . .

he'll always be there,

singing songs in my head . . .



(ALL stare at her)



CARLOTTA

She's mad . . .



RAOUL (to CHRISTINE)

You said yourself

he was nothing

but a man . . .



Yet while he lives,

he will haunt us

till we're dead . . .



(CHRISTINE turns away unhappily)



CHRISTINE

Twisted every way,

what answer can I give?

Am I to risk my life,

to win the chance to live?

Can I betray the man

who once inspired my voice?

Do I become his prey?

Do I have any choice?



He kills without a thought,

he murders all that's good . . .

I know I can't refuse

and yet, I wish I could . . .

Oh God - if I agree,

what horrors wait for me

in this, the Phantom's opera . . .?



RAOUL (to CHRISTINE, very tenderly)

Christine, Christine,

don't think that I don't care -

but every hope

and every prayer

rests on you now . . .



(CHRISTINE, overcome by her conflicting emotions

turns away and hurries out. RAOUL strides forward and

addresses an imaginary PHANTOM)



RAOUL

So, it is to be war between us! But this time, clever

friend, the disaster will be yours!



(As lights fade, ATTENDANTS stretch a red, velvet rope

across the downstage area. OTHERS bring on gilt chairs.

CARLOTTA PIANGI and GIRY move downstage to take

their places for the next scene)



Scene 4

A REHEARSAL FOR DON JUAN TRIUMPHANT



(REYER supervises the learning of the new piece from

the piano. Present are PIANGI, CHRISTINE,

CARLOTTA, GlRY and CHORUS)



CHORUS

Hide our sword now wounded knight!

Your vainglorious gasconnade

brought you to your final fight

for your pride, high price you've paid!



CHRISTINE

Silken couch and hay-filled barnQ

both have been his battlefield.



PIANGI (wrong)

Those who tangle with Don Juan . . .



REYER (stopping him)

No, no, no! ChorusQrest, please.



Don Juan, Signor Piangi - here is the phrase.



(He demonstrates it)



"Those who tangle with Don Juan . . ."

If you please?



PIANGI (still wrong)

Those who tangle with Don Juan . . .



REYER

No, no. Nearly - but no.

"Those who tan, tan, tan . . ."



PIANGI (still wrong)

Those who tangle with Don Juan . . .



CARLOTTA (to the OTHERS)

His way is better. At least he make it sound like

music!



GIRY (to CARLOTTA)

Signora - would you speak that way in the

presence of the composer?



CARLOTTA (deaf to the implications of this remark)

The composer is not here. And if he were here, I

would . . .



GIRY (cutting in, ominous)

Are you certain of that, Signora . . .?



REYER

So, once again - after seven.



(He gives the note and counts in)

Five, six, seven . . .



PIANGI (wrong again)

Those who tangle with Don Juan . . .



(Gradually EVERYONE starts either to talk or to

practice the phrase simultaneously)



CARLOTTA

Ah, piu non posso! What does it matter what notes

we sing?



GIRY

Have patience, Signora.



CARLOTTA

No-one will know if it is right or if it is wrong.

No-one will care if it is right, or if it is wrong.



CARLOTTA (mocking)

Those who tangle

with Don Juan!



PIANGI (trying again)

Those who tan . . . tan . . .



(to CHRISTINE)

Is right?



CHRISTINE (to PIANGI)

Not quite, Signor:

Those who tan . . . tan . . .



REYER (attempting lo restore order)

Ladies . . . Signor Piangi . . . if you please . . .



(REYER thumps the piano keys, then leaves the piano,

and attempts to attract attention using signals. Al the

height of the mayhem, the piano suddenly begins to

demonstrate the music unaided. It plays with great force

and rhythm. ALL fall silent and freeze then suddenly start

to sing the piece robotically and accurately. As they

continue to sing, CHRISTINE moves away from the

group.)



ALL EXCEPT CHRISTINE

Poor young maiden! For the thrill

on your tongue of stolen sweets

you will have to pay the bill -

tangled in the winding sheets!



(As the ENSEMBLE becomes background, CHRISTINE,

transfixed, sings independently):



CHRISTINE

In sleep

he sang to me,

in dreams

he came . . .

that voice

which calls to me

and speaks

my name . . .



(The scene begins to change. Trance-like, CHRISTINE

moves slowly upstage. We hear the distant sound of

bells)



Little Lotte

thought of everything and nothing . . .

Her Father promised her

that he would send her the Angel of Music . . .

Her father promised her . . .

Her father promised her . . .





Scene 5



A GRAVEYARD

(A mausoleum with hanging moss. In the centre a

pyramid of skulls in front of a cross.)



CHRISTINE

You were once

my one companion . . .

you were all

that mattered . . .

You were once

a friend and father -

then my world

was shattered . . .



Wishing you were

somehow here again . . .

wishing you were

somehow near . . .

Sometimes it seemed

if I just dreamed,

somehow you would

be here . . .



Wishing I could

hear your voice again . . .

knowing that I

never would . . .

Dreaming of you

won't help me to do

all that you dreamed

I could . . .



Passing bells

and sculpted angels,

cold and monumental,

seem, for you,

the wrong companions -

you were warm and gentle . . .



Too many years

fighting back tears . . .

Why can't the past

just die . . .?



Wishing you were

somehow here again . . .

knowing we must

say goodbye . . .

Try to forgive . . .

teach me to live . . .

give me the strength

to try . . .



No more memories,

no more silent tears . . .

No more gazing across

the wasted years . . .

Help me say

goodbye.



(The PHANTOM emerges from behind the cross)



PHANTOM (very soft and enticing)

Wandering child . . .

so lost . . .

so helpless . . .

yearning for my

guidance . . .



(Bewildered, CHRISTINE looks up, and murmurs

breathlessly):



CHRISTINE

Angel . . . or father . . .

friend . . . or

Phantom . . . ?

Who is it there,

staring . . . ?



PHANTOM (more and more hypnotic)

Have you

forgotten your Angel . . .?



CHRISTINE

Angel . . . oh, speak . . .

What endless

longings

echo in this

whisper . . .!



(RAOUL appears in the shadows and watches for a

moment transfixed)



PHANTOM (now drawing CHRISTINE towards him)

Too long you've wandered

in winter . . .



RAOUL (to himself a murmur)

Once again

she is his . . .



PHANTOM

Far from my

far-reaching gaze . . .



RAOUL

Once again

she returns . . .



CHRISTINE (increasingly mesmerized)

Wildly my mind

beats against you . . .



PHANTOM

You resist . . .



PHANTOM/CHRISTINE

Yet your/the soul

obeys . . .



RAOUL

. . . to the arms

of her angel . . .

angel or demon . . .

still he calls her . . .

luring her back, from the grave . . .

angel or dark seducer . . .?

Who are you, strange

angel . . .?



PHANTOM

Angel of Music!

You denied me,

turning from true beauty . . .

Angel of Music!

Do not shun me . . .

Come to your strange

Angel . . .



CHRISTINE

Angel of Music!

I denied you,

turning from true beauty . . .

Angel of Music!

My protector . . .

Come to me, strange

Angel . . .



(CHRISTINE moves towards the figure of the

PHANTOM)



PHANTOM (beckoning her)

I am your Angel of Music . . .

Come to me: Angel of Music . . .



RAOUL (suddenly calling out)

Angel of darkness!

Cease this torment!



(Inexorably the PHANTOM continues to beckon

CHRISTINE)



PHANTOM

I am your Angel of Music . . .

Come to me: Angel of Music . . .



RAOUL (in desperation)

Christine! Christine listen to me!

Whatever you may believe, this man . . .

this thing . . . is not your father!



(to the PHANTOM)



Let her go! For God's sake, let her go! Christine !



(Coming out of her trance CHRISTINE turns and

mouths the words):



CHRISTINE

Raoul . . .



(She turns lo RAOUL who embraces her protectively.

The PHANTOM freezes for a moment and then suddenly

seizes a pike upon which is impaled a skull. At a

movement from him a flash of fire streaks from the

gaping mouth of the skull and lands at RAOUL's feet)



PHANTOM

Bravo, monsieur!

Such spirited words!



(Another fireball)



RAOUL

More tricks, monsieur?



PHANTOM

Let's see, monsieur

how far you dare go!



(Another fireball)



RAOUL

More deception? More violence?



CHRISTINE (to RAOUL)

Raoul, no . . .



(RAOUL has begun to walk slowly and resolutely

towards the PHANTOM the fireballs always landing

just ahead of him)



PHANTOM

That's right, that's right,

monsieurQ

keep walking this way!



(Two more fireballs)



RAOUL

You can't win her love by making her your prisoner.



CHRISTINE

Raoul, don't . . .



RAOUL (to CHRISTINE)

Stay back!



PHANTOM

I'm here, I'm here,

monsieur:

the angel of death!

Come on, come on,

monsieur

Don't stop, don't stop!



(Three more fireballs.

RAOUL. is almost at the PHANTOM's feet. A

confrontation is imminent when CHRISTINE

suddenly rushes across to RAOUL)



CHRISTINE

Raoul! Come back . . .



(She pulls him away)



PHANTOM

Don't go!



(As they are exiting, the PHANTOM declaims

in fury):



So be it! Now let it be war upon you both!

(At a gesture from the PHANTOM, there is a flash of

lighting and the stage erupts into flame)



Scene 6

BEFORE THE PREMIERE



THE OPERA HOUSE ON THE NIGHT OF THE

PREMIERE OF "DON JUAN TRIUMPHANT''

(The orchestra is tuning. A whistle soundsQthe

CHIEF FIRE OFFICER is reviewing two FIRE

MARSHALLS in tin helmets. A worklight on a

stand illuminates them. Also present are RAOUL,

ANDRE and FIRMIN, supervising the proceedings, and a

MARKSMAN, at present hidden in the pit)





CHIEF

You understand your instructions?



FIREMEN (severally)

Sir!



CHIEF

When you hear the whistle, take up your positions.

I shall then instruct you to secure the doors. It is

essential that all doors are properly secured.



FIRMIN'

Are we doing the right thing, Andre?



ANDRE

Have you got a better idea?



CHIEF

Monsieur le Vicomte, am I to give the order?



RAOUL

Give the order.





(The CHIEF blows his whistle. The FIREMEN fan

out, leaving RAOUL, the CHIEF and the

MANAGERS on stage)



RAOUL (to the MARKSMAN)

You in the pit - do you have a clear view of this

box?



MARKSMAN (appearing from the pit)

Yes, sir.



RAOUL

Remember, when the time comes, shoot. Only if

you have to - but shoot. To kill.



MARKSMAN

How will I know, sir?



RAOUL

You'll know.



FIRMIN

Monsieur le Vicomte, are you confident that this

will work? Will Miss Daae sing?



RAOUL

Don't worry, Firmin. Andre?



ANDRE

We're in your hands, sir.



CHIEF

My men are now in position, sir.



RAOUL

Go ahead, then.



(Sounding his whistle again, the CHIEF shouts

into the auditorium):



CHIEF

Are the doors secure?



(Exit doors are slammed all over the building, The

FIREMEN answering one by one: "Secure."'

The orchestra falls silent. Very quietly from

nowhere, we hear the VOICE of the PHANTOM)



PHANTOM'S VOICE

I'm here: The Phantom of the Opera . . .



(ALL look around apprehensively. FIREMEN start to run

in the direction of the VOICE)



PHANTOM'S VOICE (from somewhere else)

I'm here: The Phantom of the Opera . . .



(Again, they follow the VOICE. This happens several

times, the PHANTOM'S VOICE darting more and more

bewilderingly from place to place. Finally it is heard

from Box Five, and in the confusion the

MARKSMAN fires a shot. RAOUL rounds on the

MARKSMAN furiously)



RAOUL

Idiot! You'll kill someone. I said: only when the

times comes!



MARKSMAN

But, Monsieur le Vicomte . . .



(The PHANTOM'S VOICE cuts in, filling the

building. All look up)



PHANTOM'S VOICE

No "buts"! For once, Monsieur le Vicomte is

right . . .



Seal my

fate tonight - I

hate to have to

cut the fun short

but the joke's

wearing thin . . .

Let the audience in . . .

Let my opera begin!



Scene 7

"DON JUAN TRIUMPHANT"

(The set of the final scene of "Don Juan

TRIUMPHANT" A huge hall with an arch. Behind the

arch, which has curtains, is a bed. A fine table, laid for

two. PASSARINO, DON JUAN'S servant, is

directing the STAFF as they make the room ready.

They are a crowd of sixteenth century ruffians and

hoydens, proud of their master's reputation as a

libertine)



CHORUS

Here the sire may serve the dam,

here the master takes his meat!

Here the sacrificial lamb

utters one despairing bleat!



CARLOTTA AND CHORUS

Poor young maiden! For the thrill

on your tongue of stolen sweets

you will have to pay the bill -

tangled in the winding sheets!



Serve the meal and serve the maid!

Serve the master so that, when

tables, plans and maids are laid,

Don Juan triumphs once again!



(SIGNOR PIANGI, as Don Juan, emerges from behind the

arch. MEG, a gypsy dancer pirouettes coquettishly for

him.He throws her a purse. She catches it and leaves)



DON JUAN

Passarino, faithful friend,

once again recite the plan.



PASSARINO

Your young guest believes I'm you -

I, the master, you, the man.



DON JUAN

When you met you wore my cloak,

with my scarf you hid your face.

She believes she dines with me,

in her master's borrowed place!

Furtively, we'll scoff and quaff,

stealing what, in truth, is mine.

When it's late and modesty

starts to mellow, with the wine . . .



PASSARINO

You come home! I use your voice -

slam the door like crack of doom!



DON JUAN

I shall say: "come - hide with me!

Where, oh, where? Of course - my room!"



PASSARINO

Poor thing hasn't got a chance!



DON JUAN

Here's my hat, my cloak and sword.

Conquest is assured,

if I do not forget myself and laugh . . .



(DON JUAN puts on PASSARINO's cloak and goes into

the curtained alcove where the bed awaits.

Although we do not yet know it, the Punjab Lasso has

done its work, and SIGNOR PIANGI is no more. When

next we see DON JUAN, it will be the PHANTOM.

Meanwhile, we hear AMINTA (CHRISTINE) singing

happily in the distance)



AMINTA (CHRISTINE - offstage, entering)

". . . no thoughts

within her head,

but thoughts of joy!

No dreams

within her heart

but dreams of love!"



PASSARINO (onstage)

Master?



DON JUAN (PHANTOM - behind the curtain)

Passarino - go away!

For the trap is set and waits for its prey . . .



(PASSARINO leaves. CHRISTINE (AMINTA) enters. She

takes off her cloak and sits down. Looks about her. No-

one. She starts on an apple. The PHANTOM, disguised as

DON JUAN pretending to

be PASSARINO, emerges. He now wears PASSARINO's

robe, the cowl of which hides his face. His first words

startle her)



DON JUAN (PHANTOM)

You have come here

in pursuit of

your deepest urge,

in pursuit of

that wish,

which till now

has been silent,

silent . . .



I have brought you,

that our passions

may fuse and merge -

in your mind

you've already

succumbed to me

dropped all defences

completely succumbed to me -

now you are here with me:

no second thoughts,

you've decided,

decided . . .



Past the point

of no return -

no backward glances:

the games we've played

till now are at

an end . . .

Past all thought

of "if" or "when" -

no use resisting:

abandon thought,

and let the dream

descend . . .



What raging fire

shall flood the soul?

What rich desire

unlocks its door?

What sweet seduction

lies before

us . . .?



Past the point

of no return,

the final threshold -

what warm,

unspoken secrets

will we learn?

Beyond the point

of no return . . .



AMINTA (CHRISTINE)

You have brought me

to that moment

where words run dry,

to that moment

where speech

disappears

into silence,

silence . . .



I have come here,

hardly knowing

the reason why . . .

In my mind,

I've already

imagined our

bodies entwining

defenceless and silent -

and now I am

here with you:

no second thoughts,





I've decided,

decided . . .



Past the point

of no return -

no going back now:

our passion-play

has now, at last,

begun . . .

Past all thought

of right or wrong -

one final question:

how long should we

two wait, before

we're one . . .?



When will the blood

begin to race

the sleeping bud

burst into bloom?

When will the flames,

at last, consume

us . . .?



BOTH

Past the point

of no return

the final threshold -

the bridge

is crossed, so stand

and watch it burn . . .

We've passed the point

of no return . . .



(By now the audience and the POLICE have realised

that SIGNOR PIANGI is dead behind the curtain, and it is

the PHANTOM who sings in his place. CHRISTINE

knows it too. As final confirmation, the PHANTOM

sings):



PHANTOM

Say you'll share with

me one

love, one lifetime . . .

Lead me, save me

from my solitude . . .



(He takes from his finger a ring and holds it out to her.

Slowly she takes it and puts it on her finger.)



Say you want me

with you,

here beside you . . .

Anywhere you go

let me go too -

Christine

that's all I ask of . . .



(We never reach the word 'you', for CHRISTINE quite

calmly reveals the PHANTOM'S face to the audience. As

the FORCES OF LAW close in on the horrifying skull,

the PHANTOM sweeps his cloak around her and

vanishes.



MEG pulls the curtain upstage, revealing PIANGI'S

body garotted, propped against the bed, his head

gruesomely tilted to one side. She screams.)



TRANSFORMATION TO:



REVERSE VIEW OF THE STAGE

(POLICE, STAGEHANDS, etc. rush onto the stage in

confusion. Also: ANDRE, FIRMIN, RAOUL, GIRY,

CARLOTTA and MEG)



CARLOTTA

What is it? What has happened? Ubaldo!



ANDRE

Oh, my God . . . my God . . .



FIRMIN

We're ruined, Andre - ruined!





GIRY (to RAOUL)

Monsieur le Vicomte! Come with me!



CARLOTTA (rushing over to PIANGI's body)

Oh, my darling, my darling . . . who has done

this ...?



(hysterical, attacking ANDRE)



You! Why did you let this happen?



(She breaks down, as PIANGI's body is carried off on a

stretcher)



GIRY

Monsieur le Vicomte, I know where they are.



RAOUL

But can I trust you?



GIRY

You must. But remember: your hand at the level of

your eyes!



RAOUL

But why . . .?



GIRY

Why? The Punjab lasso, monsieur. First Buquet.

Now Piangi.



MEG (holding up her hand)

Like this, monsieur. I'll come with you.



GIRY

No, Meg! No, you stay here!



(to RAOUL)



Come with me, monsieur. Hurry, or we shall be too

late . . .



Scene 8

THE LABYRINTH UNDERGROUND



(Meanwhile, down below, we see the PHANTOM and

CHRISTINE in the boat, crossing the underground

lake)



PHANTOM (furiously propelling the boat onwards)

Down once more

to the dungeon

of my black despair!

Down we plunge

to the prison

of my mind!

Down that path

into darkness

deep as hell!



(He rounds on her, bitterly)



Why, you ask,

was I bound and chained

in this cold and dismal place?

Not for any

mortal sin, but the

wickedness of

my abhorrent face!



(He hears the offstage voices of the pursuing MOB)



MOB (offstage)

Track down this murderer!

He must be found!



PHANTOM (moving off again)

Hounded out by

everyone!

Met with hatred

everywhere!

No kind word from

anyone!

No compassion

anywhere!



Christine, Christine . . .

Why, why . . .?



(RAOUL and GIRY appear above. They make their way

down, meeting a pack of rats. GlRY screams and lowers

her guard. The rats and the RATCATCHER pass them.

GIRY raises her hand again)



GIRY

Your hand at the level of your eyes!



RAOUL

. . . at the level of your eyes . . .



MOB (offstage)

Your hand at the level of your eyes!



GIRY

He lives across the lake, monsieur. This is as far as

I dare go.



RAOUL

Madame Giry, thank you.



(She turns to go back up the slope. RAOUL looks at the

water. He removes his coat and plunges in. The MOB

appears at the top of the slope. They come

down to the lake edge, their torches flickering.)



MOB

Track down this

murderer -

He must be found!

Hunt out this

animal,

who runs to ground!

Too long he's

preyed on us -

but now we know:

the Phantom of the Opera

is there

deep down below . . .



He's here: the Phantom of the Opera . . .



(They turn back up the slope. Perhaps there is another

way in. The gate to the lair descends, as the rest of the

lair appears.)



Scene 9

BEYOND THE LAKE



(The dummy of CHRlSTlNE sits crumpled on a large

throne. The PHANTOM drags CHRISTINE roughly out of

the boat. She frees herself and backs away as he stares

blackly out front. Braving her terror, she addresses him

fiercely).



CHRISTINE

Have you gorged yourself

at last, in your

lust for blood?



(no reply)



Am I now to be

prey to your

lust for flesh?



PHANTOM (Coldly)

That fate, which

condemns me

to wallow in blood

has also

denied me

the joys of the flesh . . .

this face -

the infection

which poisons our love . . .



(He lakes the bridal veil front the dummy, and moves

slowIy towards her)



This face,

which earned

a mother's fear

and loathing . . .

A mask,

my first

unfeeling scrap

of clothing . . .



(He places the veil on her head)



Pity comes

too late -

turn around

and face your fate:

an eternity of this

before your eyes!



(They are almost touching. She looks calmly and coldly

into his face)



CHRISTINE

This haunted face

holds no horror

for me now . . .

It's in your soul

that the true

distortion lies . . .



(The PHANTOM suddenly senses RAOUL'S presence.

Behind the portcullis, RAOUL climbs out of the water)



PHANTOM



Wait! I think, my dear,

we have a guest!



(to RAOUL)



Sir, this is indeed

an unparalleled delight!

I had rather hoped

that you would come.

And now my wish comes true -

you have truly made my night!



RAOUL (pleading, grasping the bars of the gate)

Free her!

Do what you like

only free her!

Have you no pity?



PHANTOM (to CHRISTINE, dryly)

Your lover makes

a passionate plea!



CHRISTINE

Please, Raoul, it's useless . . .



RAOUL

I love her!

Does that mean nothing?

I love her!

Show some compassion . . .



PHANTOM (snarls furiously at RAOUL)

The world showed no

compassion to me!



RAOUL

Christine . . .

Christine . . .



(to PHANTOM)



Let me see her . . .



PHANTOM (drily)

Be my guest, sir . .



(He gestures, and the fence rises. RAOUL enters)



Monsieur, I

bid you welcome!

Did you think that

I would harm her?

Why should I make

her pay

for the sins which

are yours?



(So saying, he takes the Punjab lasso and, before RAOUL

has a chance to move, catches him by the neck. The end

of the rope, of which the PHANTOM has let go, remains

magically suspended in mid-air)



(taunting)

Order your fine horses now!

Raise up your hand to the level of your eyes!

Nothing can save you now -

except perhaps Christine . . .



(He turns to her)



Start a new life with me -

Buy his freedom with your love!

Refuse me, and you send your lover to his

death!

This is the choice -

This is the point of no return!



CHRISTINE (to the PHANTOM)

The tears I might have shed

for your dark fate

grow cold, and turn to tears

of hate . . .



RAOUL (despairing)

Christine, forgive

me please forgive me . . .

I did it all

for you, and all for

nothing . . .



CHRISTINE (looking at the PHANTOM but to

herself)

Farewell

my fallen idol

and false friend . . .

One by one

I've watched

illusions shattered . . .



PHANTOM

Past all hope

of cries for help:

no point in fighting -



RAOUL

Either way

you choose,

he has to win . . .



PHANTOM

For either way

you choose,

you cannot win!



So, do you end

your days with me,

or do you send

him to his grave?



RAOUL (to PHANTOM)

Why make her lie

to you, to save

me?



CHRISTINE

Angel of Music . . .



PHANTOM

Past the point

of no return -



RAOUL

For pity's sake,

Christine, say no!



CHRISTINE

. . . why this torment?



PHANTOM

. . . the final threshold . . .



RAOUL

Don't throw your life

away for my sake . . .



CHRISTINE

When will you see

reason . . .?



PHANTOM

His life is now the prize

which you must earn!



RAOUL

I fought so hard

to free you . . .



CHRISTINE

Angel of Music . . .



PHANTOM

You've passed the point

of no return . . .



CHRISTINE

. . . you deceived me -

I gave my mind

blindly . . .



PHANTOM (to CHRISTINE)

You try my patience -

make your choice!



(She reflects for a moment, then with resolution moves

slowly towards the PHANTOM)



CHRISTINE (quietly at first, then with growing

emotion)

Pitiful creature

of darkness . . .

What kind of life

have you known . . .?



God give me courage

to show you

you are not

alone . . .



(Now calmly facing him, she kisses him long and full on

the lips. The embrace lasts a long time. RAOUL watches

in horror and wonder.



The PHANTOM lakes a lighted candle and holds it

above RAOUL's head. A tense moment. But the

suspended rope suddenly falls harmlessly - the

PHANTOM has burned the thread by which the noose was

held. Resigned, he addresses RAOUL, as we hear the

offstage voices of the approaching MOB)



MOB

Some:

Track down this

murderer -

he must be found!

Hunt out this

animal,

who runs to ground!



Too long he's

preyed on us -

but now we know:

the Phantom of the Opera

is there

deep down below . .



Others:

Who is this monster,

this murdering beast?

Revenge for Piangi!

Revenge for Buquet!

This creature

must never go free . . .



PHANTOM

Take her - forget me - forget all of this . . .

Leave me alone - forget all you've seen . . .

Go now - don't let them find you!

Take the boat - leave me here - go now,

don't wait . . .

Just take her and go - before it's too late . . .

Go . . .

Go now - go now and leave me!



(RAOUL and CHRISTINE move off towards the boat.

The PHANTOM looks mockingly at his mask. The

musical box starts up magically, and he listens to it)



Masquerade . . .

Paper faces on parade . . .

Masquerade . . .

Hide your face

so the world will

never find you . . .



(CHRISTINE re-enters and walks slowly towards him.

She takes off her ring and gives it to the PHANTOM)



PHANTOM

Christine, I love you . . .



(She hurries off The PHANTOM puts the ring on his

finger)



CHRISTINE (In the distance, to RAOUL, as the boat

pulls away in the shadow)

Say you'll share with

me, one

love, one lifetime . . .

say the word

and I will follow you . .



RAOUL

Share each day with me . . .



CHRISTINE

. . . each night . . .



BOTH

. . . each morning . . .



PHANTOM (looking after her)

You alone

can make my song take flight -

it's over now, the music of the night . . .



(The PHANTOM walks slowly towards the throne. He

takes his place on it, sitting on his cloak.



The MOB including MEG, appears above, climbing

down the portcullis. As the MOB enters the lair, the

PHANTOM wraps his cloak around himself and

disappears.



MEG crosses to the throne and picks up his mask in her

small hand)



END OF ACT 2
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