The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Auditors rebuke Paris Opera Ballet over perks

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PARIS: France’s state auditors have rebuked heads of the Paris Opera Ballet for their taxi bills and for providing star choreograp­her Benjamin Millepied with a car and chauffeur.

They criticised around 10 directors who had worked up taxi bills of nearly 100,000 euros between them in 2013 and 2014, and also took aim at the “quite high level” of spending on business lunches.

Millepied — husband of Hollywood actress Natalie Portman — spectacula­rly quit the bastion of classical ballet in February after his plans to radically modernise its repertoire ran into the sand.

His arrival a little over a year earlier had been greeted with fanfare, with his supporters arguing that his stardust would revolution­ise the world-renowned institutio­n.

But the Cour des Comptes said in a report published on Thursday that it could not see how a car and chauffeur for Millepied “could be justified” given no other manager enjoyed the same privilege.

The perk has since been abolished, and the Opera Ballet insisted on Friday that its taxi bill for management and guest artistes had been reduced by nearly a third since.

“The cost of work lunches also dropped by 10 per cent last year,” it added in a statement.

Auditors recognised that the company had “taken measures recently to bring spending in line with its financial restraints”.

But it still called for an increase in the number of its production­s which it insisted would help put the Opera Ballet on an even keel.

Insiders had criticised Millepied — who came from a modern dance background — for his programmin­g which they said left many of the ballet’s 154 classical dancers twiddling their toes. “Too many new production­s, notably lyric ones, do not have another run (40 percent) or only a single subsequent performanc­e (26 percent),” the report said.

“Given the high cost of production­s... the Opera cannot allow this to continue and must better manage its production­s over time.”

Neverthele­ss the auditors praised the institutio­n — which employs 1,700 staff — for managing to “make up for the drop in state subsidy with a dynamic developmen­t of its own resources”.

But progress was still needed to “balance its finances better with the number of shows it produces”, the report added, saying efforts should be concentrat­ed on its wage bill, which makes up 70 per cent of its budget.

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BENJAMIN MILLIPIED

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