Reflections Magazine Issue #66 - Summer 2007 | Page 18

Feature Article BEING BOLD. THINKING HIGHER. Most of the time, Lackey plays the role of the Auctioneer, who opens the macabre musical by setting the stage for the main story. However, Lackey is also the understudy for the Phantom. This summer, he is getting several opportunities to play the lead role as the “man behind the mask.”And when he does take the stage in the $40 million Venetian Resort theater as the Phantom, all eyes are on him. “When the drum roll begins,”Lackey said, describing the emotions playing the Phantom, “your heart is pounding out of your chest. When you’re ready to sing your first note, the Phantom is behind this one-way mirror. The audience can’t see you but you can see them. … They just hear the voice coming out from all around but they can’t see you until the mirror comes up. It’s very, very exciting.” But for the former art student-turned-theatre major-turned-pizzeria owner, forging an acting career is not all about excitement. In fact, except for the exhilarating 95 minutes or so he has on stage during each performance, Lackey approaches his career in workmanlike fashion. Before each performance, whether as the Auctioneer or the Phantom, there’s an extensive process of makeup and costumes to undergo. As the Phantom, it may mean having a dressing assistant or two shove a skull cap over his matted down hair and then begin the detailed process of putting on the makeup and prosthetics to complete the transformation. Once he is in costume, then comes the preparation to get in character. Even though Lackey is approaching 500 Vegas performances, he has to perform as if it’s his very first time in the role. “It honestly doesn’t get tired,”Lackey said of his role. “On one hand, yes, some days you go to work and it’s a job. But once the music starts and you put on your costumes and see the audience there…” In other words, he enjoys what he’s doing. Typically Michael opens the show as the Auctioneer, seen above. But he also serves as the Phantom understudy to Brent Barrett, seen at right. The Phantom of the Opera has grossed more than $3 billion worldwide since its London premiere in 1986. Photos by Joan Marcus. 18 Reflections Summer ’07 It’s not what he envisioned as a boy raised on a farm outside of Hillsdale, Mich. After graduating from high school, Lackey enrolled at Eastern Michigan University, where he said he felt out of place from the start. A friend introduced him to Siena Heights, and he enrolled there the next fall as a sophomore art major. He used his art and woodworking skills to help build sets in the theater department. But that’s not what eventually attracted him to performing. “What attracted me to theater, first of all, was the fact that I loved to sing,”Lackey said. “I was rather introverted (as a college student), but then I took a speech class at Siena. I didn’t realize I had a penchant for speaking in front of a crowd. Suddenly, I was one of the teacher’s favorite students.” His very first show at Siena Heights was playing the role of Woody Mahoney in the musical Finian’s Rainbow. From there, Lackey’s interest in acting grew so much, he soon couldn’t imagine himself doing anything else. “Some people say if you’re going into something like theater or the arts, you need a backup,”Lackey said of his career aspirations. “To be perfectly honest, I went on to my acting career because I didn’t have a backup.”