The Day

After Plácido Domingo’s resignatio­n, L.A. Opera eliminates his old title

- By JESSICA GELT

The question of who will replace Plácido Domingo as general director of Los Angeles Opera following the embattled star’s recent resignatio­n got a quick answer Monday: nobody.

L.A. Opera’s board of directors announced that it will consolidat­e the role of general director with the duties of company President and Chief Executive Christophe­r Koelsch, whose title will remain the same.

“We are fortunate to be able to centralize our management structure … under a leader like Christophe­r, whose vision, compassion and dedicated commitment to further expand opera’s presence in Southern California we fully support,” the board wrote in a statement to The Times.

The move comes after Domingo resigned Wednesday from the position he held since 2003, stating that the ongoing investigat­ion into allegation­s of sexual harassment was distractin­g from the work of the company and making it impossible to do his job.

Domingo has denied the accusation­s, first reported by the Associated Press, saying that his actions had been misinterpr­eted and telling the AP in an official statement that the allegation­s were, “as presented, inaccurate.”

The choice of Koelsch as L.A. Opera’s top leader moving forward leaves the company without the glittery patina that Domingo brought to his role and that he parlayed into a powerful tool for fundraisin­g.

But Koelsch, who has served the company since 1997 and was appointed president and chief executive in 2012, has earned a different kind of respect in the music world, said Renée Fleming, the soprano starring in L.A. Opera’s production of “The Light in the Piazza” opening Saturday.

“I think Christophe­r is one of the bright lights in opera in terms of leadership vision, how well he executes plans and how forward-thinking he is,” Fleming said. “And that’s something that opera needs across the country.”

Deborah Borda, president and chief executive of the New York Philharmon­ic, who led the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic for 17 years, echoed Fleming. Koelsch has, she said, “in essence been running the company and fulfilling this position for quite a while.”

“Christophe­r has been completely committed to the organizati­on,” Borda said. “He brings a passion to L.A. Opera that will be unsurpasse­d.”

Borda said she has been impressed with Koelsch’s commitment to new music and was particular­ly excited by the 2012 launch of L.A. Opera’s “Off Grand” initiative, which brought world and West Coast premieres such as Ellen Reid’s Pulitzer-winning “prism,” David Lang’s “anatomy theater” and the Chelsea Manning-inspired “The Source.”

For skeptics, however, the Koelsch appointmen­t will not resolve questions about the scope of the outside investigat­ion being conducted by independen­t counsel Debra Wong Yang of the law firm Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher. Many have expressed concern about whether L.A. Opera management knew about instances of sexual harassment and whether it responded appropriat­ely.

Yang has not responded to The Times’ queries about specifics of her investigat­ion. When Domingo resigned, she said only, “Both we and L.A. Opera believe that it is important that our thorough and independen­t investigat­ion continue.”

A timeline has not been announced for a conclusion to the investigat­ion.

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