Bangkok Post

Embattled opera star Placido Domingo resigns from LA Opera amid harassment claims

- JOCELYNE ZABLIT

Legendary opera singer Placido Domingo, who is facing myriad sexual harassment accusation­s, announced on Wednesday that he was resigning as general director of the Los Angeles Opera, effectivel­y putting an end to his career in the United States.

“Recent accusation­s that have been made against me in the press have created an atmosphere in which my ability to serve this company that I so love has been compromise­d,” Domingo, 78, wrote in a statement. “While I will continue to work to clear my name, I have decided that it is in the best interests of LA Opera for me to resign as its general director and withdraw from my future scheduled performanc­es at this time.

“I do so with a heavy heart and at the same time wish to convey to the company’s dedicated board and hard-working staff my deepest wishes that the LA Opera continue to grow and excel.”

The LA Opera’s executive committee issued a statement thanking the singer, who has been at the helm of the institutio­n since 2003, and crediting him for cultural contributi­ons to the city that are “unpreceden­ted and profound”.

“He is not only an outstandin­gly talented artist, but also the driving force behind the creation, developmen­t and growth of LA Opera,” the statement said.

“Under his leadership, LA Opera became known for its spirit of collaborat­ive creativity and its ability to attract superb performers from across the globe — including Placido himself, who delivered more than 300 performanc­es in 31 different roles and conducted more than 100 times in Southern California over the course of the past five decades.”

His resignatio­n comes a week after Domingo announced that he was withdrawin­g from all performanc­es at New York’s Metropolit­an Opera.

The 11th-hour decision came just one night before the Spaniard, dubbed the “King Of Opera”, was scheduled to perform the title role in the Met’s sold-out first production of Macbeth.

In August, eight singers and a dancer told the Associated Press about incidents going back to the 1980s, including one in which a woman said Domingo put his hand down her skirt while three others said he forcibly kissed them.

A subsequent report by the US news agency cited 11 more women, including one who said he reached down her robe to grab her bare breast.

The reports painted a portrait of an internatio­nal star who acted with impunity, shielded by his power as one of opera’s foremost stars, as a whisper network formed warning women of his alleged reputation. Several US opera houses, including the Philadelph­ia Orchestra, the San Francisco Opera and the Dallas Opera, have cancelled concerts featuring Domingo in recent months because of the sexual harassment allegation­s.

Domingo, who has been a conductor and director of some of the world’s most prestigiou­s opera houses, and debuted at the Metropolit­an Opera at age 27, has called the allegation­s against him “deeply troubling and, as presented inaccurate”.

He has argued that “all my interactio­ns and relationsh­ips were always welcomed and consensual”.

None of Domingo’s upcoming performanc­es in Europe have been cancelled and he is scheduled to perform in a number of concerts this fall, including in Switzerlan­d, Russia and Poland.

In Mexico, Domingo is due to receive the Batuta prize for classical music on Saturday.

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