Andrew Lloyd Webber has said he once called on a priest to help remove a poltergeist from his London home.
The acclaimed composer, whose hit musicals include The Phantom Of The Opera, believed the spirit had taken up residence in a 19th-century property he owned in Belgravia.
In an interview with The Telegraph, Lord Lloyd-Webber claimed the poltergeist would take theatre scripts and place them in neat piles in odds places.
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Discussing whether any of his theatres were haunted, Lloyd Webber told the newspaper he had never seen a ghost but had witnessed some unusual activity in the central London home.
The 75-year-old said: “I did have a house in Eaton Square which had a poltergeist.
“It would do things like take theatre scripts and put them in a neat pile in some obscure room.
“In the end we had to get a priest to come and bless it, and it left.”
A poltergeist is described as a spirit or force which is supposed to manifest its presence by making noise or moving objects around in a house.
The theatre impresario created the music for The Phantom of the Opera, which first opened on the West End in 1986.
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However, the phantom in the production and the source novel by Gaston Leroux refers to a disfigured musical genius who haunts the Paris Opera House.
Lloyd Webber has also composed the scores for a number of other celebrated musicals including Cats, Jesus Christ Superstar and Joseph And The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.
Actor Sir Patrick Stewart has also reportedly claimed he saw a figure on stage at the Haymarket Theatre in London while he was performing with Sir Ian McKellen during their 2009 production of Waiting for Godot.
He said: “(The spectre) was wearing a belted Norfolk jacket.
“I think he had a shirt – a rather old-fashioned check shirt with a tie underneath.”