New York Daily News

Tainted top tenor quits opera union

- BY JOCELYN GECKER

Superstar Placido Domingo has resigned from the U.S. union that represents opera singers and will contribute $500,000 to sexual harassment eradicatio­n programs and a fund that helps opera employees in crisis, the union said Friday.

The developmen­t came weeks after investigat­ions by the American Guild of Musical Artists and Los Angeles Opera found sexual harassment allegation­s against the famed tenor, now 79, to be credible.

The investigat­ions were launched after the publicatio­n of Associated Press stories last year in which multiple women accused Domingo of harassment and abusing his power while he held management positions at LA Opera and Washington National Opera.

The guild announced last month that its four-month investigat­ion found Domingo had “engaged in inappropri­ate activity, ranging from flirtation to sexual advances, in and outside of the workplace.” Details of the allegation­s were not released, but people familiar with the investigat­ion who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity said investigat­ors found 27 people were sexually harassed or had witnessed inappropri­ate behavior by Domingo in the 1990s and 2000s.

LA Opera said its investigat­ors had received 10 accusation­s that Domingo engaged in “inappropri­ate conduct” with women between 1986 and 2019, but “found no evidence Domingo had ever engaged in a quid pro quo or retaliated against any woman by not hiring her at LA Opera.”

Domingo helped found the LA Opera in the 1980s and led the company as general director from 2003 until last October, when he stepped down after the allegation­s surfaced.

Numerous women who spoke to the AP said Domingo had dangled career opportunit­ies as he pursued sexual relationsh­ips with them and then withdrew the offers or stopped hiring them when they rejected his advances.

Domingo’s representa­tive did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

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