Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Allegation­s of abuse of power at Berlin theater

Employees at the Maxim Gorki Theater in Berlin accuse artistic director Shermin Langhoff of bullying and abuse of power — and took the case to court.

- This article was translated from German.

Ideally, cultural institutio­ns like theaters have people debating and talking about their production­s. In Berlin these days, however, venues and their leadership are the focus of attention after complaints of sexual assault, bullying, age discrimina­tion and racist remarks.

In the most recent case, Shermin Langhoff, the artistic director of Berlin's Maxim Gorki Theater, is in the spotlight. According to media reports, several employees accused her of creating a toxic work environmen­t. Another article in Der Spiegel news magazine spoke of a "climate of fear."

One specific complaint was brought to court. A female dramatic adviser sued the theater because her contract was not renewed, a decision she believed resulted from a letter of complaint she wrote about Langhoff. The adviser also said she was discrimina­ted against for taking parental leave.

Before the Berlin Stage Arbitratio­n Court, the plaintiff and the theater agreed on a settlement on Wednesday: The adviser's contract is to end in the summer and she will receive €15,000 ($18,000) in compensati­on.

Langhoff has not commented on the accusation­s of abuse of power and bullying since the publicatio­n of reports and the court case.

Berlin theater scene shaken by series of allegation­s

The Maxim Gorki Theater scandal is the most recent chapter of a series of allegation­s of misconduct at various theaters.

In March, the interim artistic director of the Berlin Volksbühne, Klaus Dörr, resigned from his post after several female employees accused him of making lewd and sexist remarks.

In April, also before the Stage Arbitratio­n Court, a settlement was reached between the city's State Ballet and a Black member of the corps de ballet who had

accused her ballet mistress of racism.

An award-winning director Born in 1969 in Turkey, Shermin Langhoff was long considered a shining example of successful integratio­n and communicat­ion. She was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit, along with numerous theater and cul

tural prizes.

At Berlin's Ballhaus Naunynstra­sse Theater, where she was the artistic director from 2008 to 2013, she establishe­d through her projects a new approach, which she characteri­zed as "postmigran­t theater" — works dealing with the realities of second and third-generation members of immigrant families.

Langhoff has been at the head of the Maxim Gorki Theater since 2013. Six years later, employees approached Themis, an independen­t agency against sexual abuse and violence in theaters and the film industry that was establishe­d in 2018 in the wake of the #MeToo debate. Mediation was set up.

The mediation process at the Gorki Theater was completed at the end of that theater season and was concluded on the part of the cultural administra­tion and Themis in November 2020, according to a spokespers­on for the Senate Department for Culture and Europe, who also said that the theater made organizati­onal and structural changes.

Klaus Lederer, the city's senator for culture, was, therefore, aware of the situation for

some time. Langhoff's contract was neverthele­ss extended last year until 2026. According to the administra­tion, the renewal gave "the artistic work at the Gorki Theater, which is recognized beyond Berlin, a reliable planning perspectiv­e."

 ??  ?? The Maxim Gorki Theater was named twice German 'Theater of the Year' since Shermin Langhoff became director in 2013
The Maxim Gorki Theater was named twice German 'Theater of the Year' since Shermin Langhoff became director in 2013
 ??  ?? Shermin Langhoff, artistic director at the Berlin Maxim Gorki Theater
Shermin Langhoff, artistic director at the Berlin Maxim Gorki Theater

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany