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Re:Adapted

Re:Adapted
Author: Kris Pepper Hambrick
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© Kris Pepper Hambrick
Description
Re:Adapted is a podcast about the stories we tell over and over again, what changes in the telling, and what those changes say about us. Each season will tackle a different book or work, and each episode will cover different adaptations of that work.
Season 1: The Phantoms of the Opera
Season 1: The Phantoms of the Opera
9 Episodes
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After the worldwide popularity of Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical, a film version was inevitable. But the sequel? That's another story entirely. Today we'll get into what the casting of Gerard Butler and the collaboration of Joel Schumacher meant for the movie, and how Lloyd Webber entered into a Freudian battle with his past self to create "Love Never Dies."
Special thanks to Joy DeLyria with help on this episode!
Please subscribe, rate, review, and tell your friends. Or contact me at my website, twitter, tumblr, instagram, or facebook. Or email me at readaptedpodcast@gmail.com!
In the 1980s and 90s, horror was big money, so perhaps it was inevitable that multiple adaptations would crop up to take advantage of the trend. But the Dwight Little and Dario Argento Phantoms, played by Robert Englund and Julian Sands respectively, took the character in two new, and very different, directions. Today we'll explore the horror versions of our beloved Phantom, as sex and death become the focus.
Please subscribe, rate, review, and tell your friends. Or contact me at my website, twitter, tumblr, instagram, or facebook. Or email me at readaptedpodcast@gmail.com!
Despite the fact the Lloyd Webber musical's popularity would dominate Phantom fandom for the rest of time, other strains of the story were still percolating. Today we're looking at two directions the story was taken in on opposite sides of the world: into family melodrama by Arthur Kopit and Maury Yeston, and into a romantic revolutionary tale in China by Ma-Xu Weibang in Song at Midnight.
Please subscribe, rate, review, and tell your friends. Or contact me at my website, twitter, tumblr, instagram, or facebook. Or email me at readaptedpodcast@gmail.com!
The Lloyd Webber musical was so big, we needed two episodes to cover it! Here we dissect a few reasons why it affected people so deeply, and look at some of the consequences of that popularity: more works based on the story, an active fandom rising with the coming of the internet, and what I see as a complete shift in our relationship with the title character.
Please subscribe, rate, review, and tell your friends. Or contact me at my website, twitter, tumblr, instagram, or facebook. Or email me at readaptedpodcast@gmail.com!
In 1986, a musical hit London. Two years later, Broadway also succumbed. And the Phantom would never be the same. In this and the next episode, we talk about the inspiration for the megamusical version of Phantom, and also begin to unpack the effect this had on audiences as well as subsequent versions. Namely, the transition from horror to romance.
Please feel free to contact me at readaptedpodcast at gmail, Facebook, instagram, or TikTok, or readaptedpod on twitter with comments, questions, and suggestions.
In 1974, Brian de Palma hadn't yet made Carrie, Scarface, or the Untouchables. But he did make a version of Phantom of the Opera that merged fiction and current events alike into something a lot of people didn't quite know what to do with.
So I'm going to get pretentious and talk about zeitgeist, post-modernism, and pastiche.
Warning: Today's film (and to a lesser degree, the episode) contains elements of violence, sexual abuse, suicide, drugs, and other 70s excesses. I don't go into detail but they're mentioned.
Reach out to me at my website, https://www.readaptedpodcast.com or at readaptedpodcast on gmail/instagram/facebook/tiktok or readaptedpod on twitter.
In 1943 and 1962, almost twenty years apart, two films named The Phantom of the Opera came out that not only shared several plot and character elements, but changed the story of Phantom forever. We'll talk about how the struggle to reach a wide audience, and to maintain sympathy for the Phantom, resulted in a muddling of the relationships within the story. We'll also talk about the many changes that can happen in a Hollywood film from concept to screen.
As always, feel free to reach out at RedaptedPodcast or Readapted pod on most social media or at readaptedpodcast@gmail.com. Sources and transcripts can be found at my website, http://www.readaptedpodcast.com.
After last episode's summary of the novel, we've got our first adaptation--1925's Universal film starring Lon Chaney. We'll look at what elements made it to the screen, and how those elements changed due to the medium, the time, and the collaborative nature of filmmaking.
Plus, I take some potshots at a director who's been dead for decades.
As always, find transcripts and sources at www.readaptedpodcast.com.
We begin our exploration of The Phantom of the Opera with an overview of the original novel, written by Gaston Leroux in 1909. Over the next ten episodes, we'll look at what the different versions of Phantom have changed and what that says about the story... and us. We'll also look at how villainy and empathy morph over the course of the Phantom's journey, and how we got from a walking corpse to Gerard Butler. But first? The original book!
Please note that this series contains some ableist content, bad boyfriend behavior, reference to fictional suicide, and some period-typical racism.
Please feel free to get in touch by gmail/instagram/facebook at Readaptedpodcast or twitter at Readaptedpod.
Transcript can be found here: https://www.readaptedpodcast.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/1-Introduction-and-Gaston-Leroux.pdf
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