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  1. The Phantom of the Opera: Directed by Terence Fisher. With Herbert Lom, Heather Sears, Edward de Souza, Thorley Walters. An acid-scarred composer has his dwarf helper bring an opera singer to his London sewer hide-out.

    • (3.7K)
    • Drama, Horror, Music
    • Terence Fisher
    • 1962-08-15
  2. The Phantom appears and takes Christine with him. The Music Of The Night. Gerard Butler. 35m. The Phantom sings it to Christine. I Remember / Stranger Than You Dreamt It. Emmy Rossum and Gerard Butler. 44m. Christine comes to herself, sees the Phantom and removes his mask.

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  4. The Phantom of the Opera (1962 film) The Phantom of the Opera. (1962 film) The Phantom of the Opera is a 1962 British horror film directed by Terence Fisher, a loose adaptation of the 1910 novel Le Fantôme de l'Opéra by Gaston Leroux. The film was made by Hammer Film Productions but performed unsuccessfully at the box office.

  5. Andrew Lloyd Webber's sumptuously melodic "music of the night" kicks off with a gothic synthesizer flourish for the soundtrack to Joel Schumacher's 2004 film. Starring Gerard Butler in the title role and a teenaged Emmy Rossum as Christine, The Phantom is an old-fashioned musical at heart, with sweeping romantic balladry ("All I Ask of You ...

  6. The Phantom of the Opera (1962) Portrayed by. Herbert Lom. Professor L. Petrie is the main character of The Phantom of the Opera (1962). Loosely based on Erik (The Phantom), this Phantom shares similarities with the Lon Chaney rendition as well as the Claude Rains rendition. He died after saving Christine Charles by pushing her out of the way ...

  7. The Phantom of the Opera Wiki. in: Phantoms, Herbert Lom Characters, Male Characters, Deceased characters. Professor Petrie. Professor Petrie. Name. Professor L. Petrie. Title/Occupation. Composer/musician (formerly) Phantom of the Opera.

  8. The opera house's star soprano Maria (Liane Aukin) is terrorized into leaving after a dead body falls on stage during her performance. However, the Phantom, formerly a quirky and eccentric Professor, is wrongly suspected. The guilty party this time is another resident living under the Opera House: a dwarf (Ian Wilson). That's right. Blame the ...