The World of Gaston Leroux and
The Phantom of the Opera
1841
| One of the works that will greatly influence Gaston Leroux’s writing—Edgar Allan Poe’s The Murders in the Rue Morgue—is published.
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1868
| Gaston Louis Alfred Leroux is born on May 6 in Paris to Dominique-Alfred Leroux and Marie Bidault.
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1871
| Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking Glass is published. The Royal Albert Hall opens in London.
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1872
| George Eliot’s Middlemarch is published in book form.
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1874
| French novelist and critic Jules-Amédée Barbey d‘Aurevilly publishes Les Diaboliques (The Fiends).
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1883
| French naturalist writer Guy de Maupassant’s Une Vie (A Life) and Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island are published.
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1885
| H. Rider Haggard publishes King Solomon’s Mines.
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1886
| A good student, Leroux receives his baccalaureate degree in Normandy from the College d’Eu and then studies law in Paris. Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is published.
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1887
| Spending much of his extracurricular time composing poetry and fiction, Leroux begins to publish his work in various journals. Arthur Conan Doyle’s A Study in Scarlet , the first Sherlock Holmes story, is published.
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1888
| Jack the Ripper commits a rash of murders in London.
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1889
| Leroux is awarded a law degree and works as a law clerk; he spends his free time writing.
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1891
| Leroux works full-time as a journalist; he is a court reporter and arts critic for the newspaper L‘Écho de Paris. Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray is published.
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1893
| In December anarchist Auguste Vaillant throws a bomb into the Chamber of Deputies while it is in session.
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1894
| When Vaillant is sentenced to death by guillotine, Leroux reports the court decision in Le journal de Paris. On the strength of his report, the prestigious Paris daily Le Matin offers him a position; traveling as a correspondent for Le Matin until 1906, he covers stories from locations in Europe, Asia, and Africa. French president Sadi Carnot is assassinated.
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1895
| H. G. Wells’s The Time Machine is published.
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1897
| Bram Stoker’s Dracula is published.
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1899
| For Le Matin, Leroux covers the case against wrongfully convicted army officer Alfred Dreyfus.
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1901
| Leroux receives a promotion and hefty salary increase from Le Matin.
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1902
| Estranged from his wife, Marie Lefranc, Leroux begins a long-term affair with Jeanne Cayatte. Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness is published.
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1904
| La Double Vie de Théophraste Longuet (The Double Life of Théophraste Longuet), Leroux’s first novel, is serialized in Le Matin.
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1905
| Leroux travels with Cayatte to Russia to report on the revolution. A son, André-Gaston, is born to the couple. Baroness Emmuska Orczy’s The Scarlet Pimpernel is published .
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1907
| Le Mystère de la chambre jaune (The Mystery of the Yellow Room) is published to strong sales; it is the first of a series featuring investigative reporter Joseph Rouletabille. Leroux devotes himself to writing fiction.
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1908
| Le Parfum de la Dame en noir (The Perfume of the Lady in Black), the first sequel to The Mystery of the Yellow Room, is serialized in L’Illustration beginning in September and ending in January 1909. The region’s nice weather and elegant gambling halls inspire Leroux to move to the French Riviera. He and Cayatte have a daughter, Madeleine.
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1909
| Le Fantôme de l’Opéra (The Phantom of the Opera) is published serially in the newspaper Le Gaulois from September until January of the following year; the book’s tepid early reception offers no hint of its future fame and enduring popularity.
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1912
| Balaoo, about a mad scientist who turns an ape half human, is serialized in Le Matin.
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1913
| Balaoo is adapted for the cinema—the first of what will be more than twenty film versions of novels by Leroux. He begins publication in Le Matin of a new series of mysteries , starring the character Chéri-Bibi; after the Rouletabille stories, these are Leroux’s most successful.
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1914
| Edgar Rice Burroughs’s Tarzan of the Apes is serialized. World War I begins.
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1917
| After obtaining a divorce from his first wife, Leroux marries Jeanne Cayatte.
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1918
| He writes the screenplay for a film, La Nouvelle Aurore (The New Dawn), that consists of sixteen 30-minute installments. World War I ends.
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1919
| La Nouvelle Aurore opens in Paris. Leroux forms a film company dedicated to producing serialized films but abandons the enterprise after three years.
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1920
| Agatha Christie’s first novel, The Mysterious Affair at Styles, is published.
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1925
| Universal Studios adapts The Phantom of the Opera as a silent film starring Lon Chaney and Mary Philbin. More film, stage, and television adaptations will follow, including , in 2004, a film version of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s popular 1986 musical.
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1927
| Gaston Leroux dies in April at his home in Nice one day after surgery for an attack of uremia.
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Introduction
Long before
The Phantom of the Opera
became a perennial film favorite and a Broadway fixture of enormous success, it was a novel of modest critical and commercial acclaim, written by one Gaston Leroux, a lawyer turned journalist turned novelist. First published serially in the newspaper
Le Gaulois
from September 1909 to January 1910,
Le Fantôme de l’Opéra
might well have shared the fate of the bulk of Leroux’s fiction—which is largely unread today—had it not been for its elevation to the big screen with Rupert Julian’s 1925 film version starring Lon Chaney as the phantom. Chaney’s astonishing performance in the role, coupled with a tale that lends itself particularly well to visual rendering, inspired such a considerable number of remakes in various mediums over the course of the twentieth century that the phantom’s story has taken on a life of its own.
Indeed, readers picking up Leroux’s novel for the first time may be surprised to discover the extent to which the novel differs from the many versions that they have seen or heard. For while the adaptations have generally remained faithful to the novel’s core themes—attraction and repulsion, artistry and suffering, love, loss, and redemption—they have taken more extreme liberties in regard to the narrative elements: Leroux’s original plot has been streamlined and at times greatly altered, the pacing quickened, and the journalistic tone of the novel has been expunged in favor of dramatic suspense. Whether or not the many cinematic interpretations have improved upon Leroux’s original is a matter of taste; what is more certain is that
The Phantom of the Opera,
the novel, merits our attention: Not only does the very readable story capture the mood and sentiment of the years immediately leading up to the golden period of art and innovation that would later be dubbed
La Belle Époque
(literally, “The Beautiful Age”), it also serves as an interesting marker in the history and evolution of the French novel. It is indebted to the Gothic tradition and the fantastic literature and serial novel of the nineteenth century; at the same time it is a precursor of the twentieth-century detective and mystery story that would flourish both abroad and in France with the fiction of Agatha Christie and Georges Simenon, among others.
Leroux had already published nearly a third of the more than thirty novels that would appear in his lifetime when
The Phantom of the Opera
came out in 1910. A well-respected and talented journalist with a law degree and particular strengths in the areas of court and political reporting, he had turned to full-time fiction writing in 1907 after becoming weary with the pressures and travel required by his job. This shift allowed him to wed his love of writing with his imaginative impulses, which had been nourished by his journeys to such exotic locales as Russia, Africa, and Asia, and Leroux churned out relatively successful potboilers with an impressive regularity. As an art and theater critic for the newspaper
Le Matin
at an earlier point in his career, he had visited the Nouvel Opera (opened in 1875 and known today as the Palais Garnier or the Opera Garnier) many times and was impressed by the building’s grandiose and imposing architectural design. The catalyst for
The Phantom of the Opera,
by his own account, was a private visit to the usually sealed-off lower depths of the Opera House during which his curiosity and his imagination were piqued by both the preserved traces of the building’s historical and political importance and the palpable sense of secrecy that the underground labyrinth evoked.
The circumstances surrounding the construction of the Opera Garnier were the material of legend and lore. On an 1858 visit to the then-official opera house on the rue le Peletier, Emperor Napoleon III (nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte) was the target of a politically motivated attack that ultimately spared him but resulted in the death of 150 people. It was at this moment that the Emperor conceived of replacing the rue le Peletier building (which had been designated the home of the Paris Opera following the assassination of the Duc de Berry in 1820 at the previous opera house at the square Louvois) with a new, more secure structure (with a private, imperial entrance), one whose grandeur would be representative of his ambitious reign. He gave his controversial city planner, Baron Haussmann, who was in the process of reconfiguring Paris with a new layout, the task of organizing a competition to select an architect to design the new building, which would be one of the hubs of his plan of connected boulevards and avenues. Chosen from among the nearly 200 entries was that of the more or less unknown Charles Garnier. Garnier impressed the judges by labeling his eclectic architectural approach “Napoleon III style,” and the resulting structure indeed remains the prime example of Second Empire construction in Paris.
Erecting such a daunting edifice—distinguished by its imposing polygonal shape, crowning dome, ornately sculptured facade, and gigantic interior complete with an enormous foyer and a majestic, gilded double staircase—was a monumental task that was stymied during nearly a twenty-year period by financing issues, construction difficulties, and most directly, political upheaval. The French defeat at Sedan during the Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871 resulted in the Emperor’s capture. A Third Republic was proclaimed, but the fragile provisional government was then menaced by the siege of the capital by German troops. The still-unfinished Opera House was designated an arsenal and warehouse, and then became the headquarters and eventually a military prison of the Communards—the name given to working-class Parisians who formed their own army in an effort to overthrow those at the helm of the new French regime following France’s capitulation. The violent civil revolution lasted three months and resulted in the loss of thousands of lives before the rebellion was squashed by government forces in May 1871. It was not until 1875 that Garnier’s building—whose cost had escalated to more than 47 million francs—was finally ready to be unveiled with a gala event thrown more to demonstrate the political stability attained by the Third Republic than to celebrate the architect’s achievement (Garnier, in fact, was famously asked to pay to attend the opening!). The Paris Opera—which also had its own ballet company—would draw an increasingly large public during the next few decades as cultural appreciation took on a new importance as part of the
joie de vivre
mentality that enveloped France before World War I.