In desperation, after another performance by Christine, Eric kidnaps her again.
During Christine's childhood, which is described retrospectively in the early chapters of the book, her father tells her many stories featuring an 'Angel of Music', who, like a muse, is the personification of musical inspiration.
Erik rescues the Persian and the young Raoul from his torture chamber thereafter. He is romantically interested in her, but Eric will not allow it. On his deathbed, Christine's father tells her that from Heaven, he will send the Angel of Music to her. The most famous ones being the 1911 original book by Gaston Leroux, the later Phantom by Susan Kay, the musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber and the movie by Andrew Lloyd Webber and directed by …
The man who created the Phantom. Initially, the story sold very poorly upon publication in book form and was even out of print several times during the twentieth century; it is overshadowed by the success of its various film and stage adaptations. The best known stage and screen adaptations of the novel are probably the 1925 silent film version starring Lon Chaney, Sr. and the 1986 Take your favorite fandoms with you and never miss a beat. They cry together, and then she leaves. Raoul tells Christine he shall act on his promise the following day, to which Christine agrees, but she pities Erik and will not go until she has sung for him one last time. Begins when an opera ghost terrorizes the cast and crew of the French Opera House while tutoring a chorus girl.
This is followed by the … She believes this must be the Angel of Music and asks him if he is. He lets Christine go and tells her "go and marry the boy whenever you wish," explaining, "I know you love him." The Phantom of the Opera Character Analysis | LitCharts. "The Phantom of the Opera" is a hideously deformed musical genius who hides in shadow, living beneath the Paris Opera house (which he himself designed some years earlier). He plans to keep her there only a few days, hoping she will come to love him, and Christine begins to find herself attracted to her abductor. The paintings served as an inspiration for the 1925 film, and have appeared in many subsequent reprintings and translations.
The original Frod book publication of 1910 was illustrated with five oil paintings by André Castaigne. He tries all manor of things to kill Raoul, who follows them down under the Opera House. But now she is the enemy of the Phantom. Indeed, it was even upon his deathbed that he made a final plea to the world that Erik was a true figure in history. If you are familiar with the Phantom of the …more It is an author's interpretation of Erik, the Phantom of the Opera's, life story starting from his birth.
The review of this Book prepared by Brenna Saunders The review of this Book prepared by SM Tate Back in the cellars, Erik tries to force Christine into marrying him.
The two leave. In response to a refused surrender of Box Five to the Opera Ghost, Carlotta loses her voice and the chandelier overhead plummets into the audience. Throughout the book, Leroux insists that the ghost or man, dubbed Erik, was indeed real. If she refuses, he threatens, he will destroy the entire Opera using explosives he has planted in the cellars, killing everyone in it, including himself and Christine. It was first published as a serialisation in "Le Gaulois" from September 23, 1909 to January 8, 1910.
The Voice, however, belongs to Erik, a disfigured genius who was one of the contractors who built the opera and who secretly built into the cellars a home for himself.
Phantom of the Auditorium is the twenty-fourth book in the original Goosebumps book series. He is the Opera ghost ("Fantôme" in French can be translated as both "ghost" and "phantom") who has been extorting money from the Opera's management for many years.