Bangkok Post

Russia’s Bolshoi drops shows by two anti-war directors

- MARK TREVELYAN

Russia’s Bolshoi Theatre has upset opera and ballet fans by abruptly cancelling a series of shows this week by directors who have spoken out against the war in Ukraine.

The theatre gave no reason for dropping Timofey Kuliabin’s production of the opera Don Pasquale and Kirill Serebrenni­kov’s ballet Nureyev.

Kuliabin used his Instagram account to express solidarity with Ukraine and ridicule Russia’s descriptio­n of its actions. In one post, he showed a mocked-up version of the cover of Leo Tolstoy’s War And Peace, replacing the first word with “Special Operation” — the term used by the Kremlin to describe the invasion.

Serebrenni­kov said in an interview last month that “it’s quite obvious that Russia started the war”, and that it was breaking his heart.

“It’s war, it’s killing people, it’s the worst thing that ever might happen with civilisati­on, with mankind. It’s a humanitari­an catastroph­e, it’s rivers of blood,” he said.

Both directors are currently outside Russia.

The replacemen­t of the two shows with The Barber Of Seville and Spartacus, two longstandi­ng staples of the Bolshoi’s repertoire, drew hundreds of mostly critical online comments from tickethold­ers. Many demanded in vain to know the reason.

“What disrespect to the spectators and artists!” one woman, Valeria, wrote on the Bolshoi’s Telegram channel.

There was particular outrage at the cancellati­on of Serebrenni­kov’s Nureyev, a controvers­ial production that premiered at the Bolshoi in 2017. The story of dancer Rudolf Nureyev, who defected to the West in 1961, included a tender scene with his gay lover that tested the Kremlin’s tolerance for what it calls “homosexual propaganda”.

 ?? ?? Russian director Kirill Serebrenni­kov.
Russian director Kirill Serebrenni­kov.

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