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Ticket Sales for Ken Hill’s ‘Phantom’ Are Halted in Anaheim

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Times Staff Writer

The Celebrity Theatre in Anaheim halted ticket sales Thursday for Ken Hill’s “The Phantom of the Opera,” following a threat of legal action by the producers, who have claimed the sales are unauthorized.

H. Yale Gutnick, the attorney for the Phantom Touring Co., said the theater had done “a substantial amount” of business in advance ticket sales. “We don’t know how many tickets they’ve sold because we are not getting good information from them,” Gutnick said Thursday from his office in Pittsburgh, Pa., “but our conservative ‘guesstimate’ is in the neighborhood of $100,000 at least.”

Celebrity Theatre officials have failed to respond to repeated inquiries from The Times, which reported Wednesday that Hill’s “Phantom” would not be coming to the theater.

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The musical comedy--a version of the “The Phantom of the Opera” that inspired Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical--has been advertised by the theater for a December engagement without authorization for several months, Gutnick said. He was scheduled to speak with theater officials Thursday and said he would demand that all ticket purchases be refunded.

A box-office clerk said Thursday that ticket sales had been discontinued that morning.

Klaus Kolmar, the New York booking agent for the show’s coming national tour, said earlier this week that the theater had been negotiating for the show for several months but had never concluded a contract. He said the producers required a deposit in the “low five figures” and that the theater “never deposited 2 cents.”

Moreover, Kolmar said, the producers of the tour had rejected both the theater’s seating capacity and the five-day engagement that Celebrity officials have been advertising because “it was inadequate for the production.” “The potential gross did not make any sense,” he said.

The theater’s full-round configuration has a capacity of 2,500 seats. It would have to be transformed into a proscenium setting for the show, reducing capacity to about 1,500 seats. Kolmar said the show needs between 1,800 and 2,500 seats to turn a profit in a limited run.

Hill’s “Phantom” will play the the 2,198-seat Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles (Nov. 20 to Dec. 3).

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