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Celia Graham is a Actor British born on 1976

Celia Graham

Celia Graham
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Birth name Celia Graham
Nationality United-kingdom
Birth 1976 (49 years)

Celia Graham (born in 1976) is a musical theatre actor. She began her career at the age of 11 performing in Scottish Opera's Street Scene by Kurt Weill, at Glasgow's Theatre Royal.



She is mostly known for playing Christine Daaé in The Phantom of the Opera in 2008 with John Owen-Jones and she took over the role from Sierra Boggess in Love Never Dies in 2011 in London's West End. Celia Graham has done recording for films and television programmes. Celia Graham was the last Christine Daae in Love Never Dies.

She has done recording for Easy Virtue and Johnny English Reborn. and Young Victoria

As part of the celebrations in honour of the centenary of the Entente Cordiale, Celia Graham took part in a performance of Les Miserables at Windsor Castle with Ramin Karimloo and Michael Ball in the presence of Queen Elizabeth II and French President Jacques Chirac.

Celia has done a tour of England with Ramin Karimloo where they stopped at main cities such as Southampton and Birmingham where they sung songs from Les Miserables, The Phantom of the Opera Miss Saigon, South Pacific and Love Never Dies where it ended at the Southampton Mayflower Theatre.

Celia is currently working on her own album due to be released in 2012.

Usually with

Source : Wikidata

Filmography of Celia Graham (1 films)

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Actress

The Phantom of the Opera at the Royal Albert Hall, 2h40
Origin United-kingdom
Genres Drama, Horror, Musical, Romance
Themes Films about music and musicians, Musical films, Films based on plays, Films based on musicals
Actors Ramin Karimloo, Sierra Boggess, Hadley Fraser, Wynne Evans, Earl Carpenter, Garðar Thór Cortes
Rating87% 4.3943454.3943454.3943454.3943454.394345
Prologue At the fictional Opera Populaire (based on the Paris Opéra House) in 1905, an auction of old theatre props is underway. Lot 665, purchased by the elderly Raoul, Vicomte de Chagny, is a music box in the shape of a monkey; it is familiar to him, and he speaks of a mysterious "she" - that the details of the strange little music box appear "exactly as she said." Lot 666 is a shattered chandelier that is claimed by the auctioneer to have been related to "the strange affair of the Phantom of the Opera, a mystery never fully explained," having appeared in some great disaster in years past. As the chandelier - which has been replaced, in part, with new electric wiring - is uncovered, it illuminates as the years roll back and the Opéra returns to its 1880s' grandeur ("Overture").