Arab Times

‘Russian opera’ is not propaganda for Putin

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MILAN, Nov 23, (AP): Italy’s premier opera house, Teatro alla Scala, on Tuesday defended its decision to stage the Russian opera “Boris Godunov’’ for its gala Dec. 7 season opener.

The opera house is pushing back against protests by Ukrainian officials in Italy who insists that highlighti­ng Russian culture during Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine sends the wrong message.

The Russian title was chosen to open the 2022-23 season three years ago, and “contains no propaganda for the Russian government,’’ La Scala general manager Dominique Meyer told reporters.

Written by Modest Petrovic Musorgskij and based on a play by Russian poet and playwright Alexander Pushkin, it tells the story of a Russian czar whose manipulati­on of power haunts both him and his family.

“The Ukrainian consul wanted to us to cancel. From a certain point of view, I understand because the Ukrainians are wounded, every family has some dead, destroyed homes,’’ Meyer said. “I understand this attitude, but I cannot agree with it because we must do concrete things for the Ukrainian people.’’

He said that there is “nothing in this production that goes against Ukraine.”

He emphasized that La Scala was the first to cancel engagement­s by Russian conductor Valery Gergiev, who was conducting at the Milan opera house when Russia invaded Ukraine in February, after he failed to express a desire for a peaceful solution to the violence.

La Scala also has raised 400,000 euros ($410,000) in a benefit concert for Ukraine, and the theater has taken in children from a Kyiv dance school and their families, he said.

“It is a drop in the ocean for people in difficulty, but it is what a theater like La Scala can do,’’ Meyer said.

Meyer said he has not met with the Ukrainian consul in Milan, who lodged the complaint.

The two institutio­ns have exchanged letters, which have not been made public.

Disappoint­ment

An official speaking for the Ukrainian consul general in Milan, Andrii Kartysh, told The Associated Press that the choice of “Boris Godunov” was seen negatively in Ukraine. He said that the difficulty of reprogramm­ing the gala season opener was understand­able, but there was disappoint­ment over “the lack of willingnes­s” to consider it.

“Boris Godunov” was chosen for La Scala’s gala season by chief conductor Riccardo Chailly three years ago, and features Russian bass Ildar Abdrazakov in the title role, making his sixth La Scala season premier performanc­e. The opera has previously been conducted at La Scala by Arthur Toscanini and Claudio Abbado.

Meyer said the mood among the Russian cast at rehearsals was “excellent.”

“They are working really hard,’’ Meyer said, adding that the war also weighed on them. “We know there are Russian victims. There are also Russian victims in Ukraine. It is a much more complicate­d thing than what is said, we all know it. These are great artists, and they are happy because they know they are participat­ing in a production at the highest level.’’

Danish theater director Kasper Holten, who is handling he stage direction, said it would be wrong to cancel the opera, “which is about unmasking power.”

Also:

NEW YORK: One of Australia’s hottest exports is doing a walkabout through America.

The first-ever theatrical adaptation of the popular animated children’s TV show “Bluey” starts a multi-state tour this month.

“It’s the one time you really get to share the show with an audience. It doesn’t just disappear onto the screen,” says the show’s creator Joe Brumm who provided a new script for the theatrical event. “I hope America enjoys it.”

The Brisbane-produced “Bluey,” which centers on an eponymous 6-year-old Blue Heeler pup, her sister, Bingo, and their parents, Chilli and Bandit, has in just a few years grown into a worldwide phenomenon.

The show has been praised for its ability to speak honestly about parenting and childhood, with realistic dialogue and creative games. It won an Internatio­nal Emmy Kids Award for best preschool program.

It was up to Brumm to turn his seven-minute animated TV show into a 56-minute stage performanc­e and hand it over to a director, actors and the creative team, something that was a tad jarring.

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Meyer

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