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Performer burned in opera fire-breathing stunt recovering in hospital

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Clifton Daniel said his son wasn’t talking much Tuesday, but the throat soreness was due to irritation from a tube that had been inserted and eventually removed Monday, not damage caused by the accident itself.

“He did not inhale any of the burning liquid, which is fortunate,” Clifton Daniel said, adding that doctors now were saying that the actor might be discharged Wednesday rather than Thursday, as had been predicted earlier in the day.

“Doctors likened (the burns) to a severe sunburn, and he will heal,” his father said. “He shouldn’t have any scarring.”

David Kersnar, who directed Daniel in Lookingglass and Next Theatre productions last year, said the actor had emailed him a photo Tuesday. “He’s all bandaged up but he’s got this funny look in his eyes like, ‘Look at the mess I’ve got myself into,’” Kersnar said.

Kersnar described the young actor as an experienced physical performer with circus training who had executed various stunts for him, such as dressing as an ingenue and lifting the title character of “Pulcinella” at the Lookingglass performance with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

“(‘Die Meistersinger’) was the first time he was on the Lyric stage, but this is what he does,” said Kersnar, also a Roosevelt adjunct professor who knew Daniel as a student. “He’s very funny, very strong, very skilled and smart. He doesn’t do stupid stuff. I was very surprised to hear this went wrong.”

Daniel wasn’t even the first person to have this stunt backfire during this production. He had been the understudy for Matt Roben, who set his massive mustache ablaze while demonstrating the stunt for fire marshals a couple of weeks ago.

“Handlebar mustaches and fire-spitting don’t go well together,” said Drew Landmesser, the Lyric’s deputy general director who focuses on backstage activities.

Noting that he had been fire-spitting over the previous 23 years without incident, the 35-year-old Roben said Tuesday that he wasn’t injured beyond a blister on his nose and some singed facial hair, and he promptly headed backstage, shaved off the mustache and returned to execute the stunt flawlessly. He added that Daniel replaced him not because of the mustache mishap but because Roben missed a subsequent rehearsal that concentrated on the fire work.

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