"OFF TO THE OPERA"
"It's really going to be kind of an epic," said Patrick Wilson, who I found
lazing in the grass by Heckscher Field, where he had just finished playing on
the Urinetown team with best friend and Full Monty co-star Matthew Stocke.
Although he was referring to the upcoming film version of The Phantom of the
Opera, in which he plays romantic lead Raoul, he could have been talking about
any of his upcoming film projects.
In case you haven't heard, 29-year-old Wilson is on a roll. After enjoying
back-to-back Tony noms for his work in the Broadway musicals The Full Monty and
Oklahoma!, he's caught the eye of the other coast. First up is the September HBO
premiere of Mike Nichols' six-hour adaptation of Tony Kushner's Angels in
America, in which he joins an all-star cast playing closeted Mormon Joe Pitt
(Mary-Louise Parker is wife Harper). Then, on Christmas Day, he hits the big
screen in the $95 million The Alamo, directed by John Lee Hancock and produced
by Oscar-winners Ron Howard and Brian Grazer. Wilson plays Colonial William
Barret Travis, the young leader who fought and died in the historic battle,
alongside seasoned pros like Dennis Quaid, Jason Patric and Billy Bob Thorton.
But Wilson won't be around to hit the red carpets when those two eagerly
anticipated projects are released. Instead, he'll be holed up in London's
Pinewood Studios, where filming begins on Phantom in September. Reportedly
joining him is 33-year-old Gerard Butler in the lead role, a veteran of a few
London theater productions who will be seen as the love interest in this
summer's Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life. Although Wilson wouldn't
divulge any other casting, my overseas sources tell me that 16-year-old Emmy
Rossum is onboard as Christine. (Ironically, Rossum and Wilson's former flame
Jennifer Love Hewitt played the young and older versions of Audrey Hepburn in
TV's The Audrey Hepburn Story.) In addition, I hear Miranda Richardson has been
offered the role of Madame Giry and Alan Cumming is planning on playing one of
the Paris Opera House owners.
Before he landed the part, Wilson had meetings with both composer Andrew Lloyd
Webber, who is producing the pet project, and director/screenwriter Joel
Schumacher, who had seen some of Wilson's Broadway work. Because of Lloyd
Webber's involvement, the focus was on the music during the casting process,
which gave Wilson an edge. "I think that it was a relief for Sir Andrew and his
crowd to meet me," he told me. "They'd been seeing a lot of Hollywood people for
the part who hadn't been doing musicals for the past 10 years. With a score like
Phantom, you really can't fake the singing."
With a younger cast (Michael Crawford was 46 when he played the Phantom opposite
27-year-old Sarah Brightman), Wilson promises a leaner, meaner Phantom of the
Opera. "It's going to be more of a battle between the Phantom and Raoul," he
said. "Raoul's more of a fighter in the film. It's a little more aggressive. I
never really saw all of that in Raoul when I saw the show, probably because I
was 15 and just wanted to hear the songs and see a guy with a mask on." Wilson
also revealed that there will be a climactic swordfight between Christine's two
suitors and that there will be plenty of horseback riding for him, a skill he
learned during his months on the Texas set of The Alamo.
For Phantom followers, who have helped make it one of Broadway's most successful
shows ever, Wilson offered words of encouragement: "They're not trying to
reinvent the wheel here. Anyone who's a fan of the show is going to be a fan of
the movie. It's not a studio taking something that is sacred to millions of
people in the world and changing it for the sake of changing it." Phew! That's
all we ask of you!"