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OPERA

Paris Opera perks: Bosses rebuked over €100k taxi bill

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.

Paris Opera perks: Bosses rebuked over €100k taxi bill
Photo: AFP

They criticised around 10 directors who had worked up taxi bills of nearly €100,000 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 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 Friday that its taxi bill for management and guest artists had been reduced by nearly a third since.

“The cost of work lunches also dropped by 10 percent 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 percent of its budget.
 
It's not the first time Paris Opera staff have been rebuked over spending.
 
In October last year The Local reported how a union rep working at the Paris Opera House has racked up a €52,000 phone bill after using his cellphone while on holiday to organise a strike.
 
And unexpectedly large taxi bills also made headlines in France last year, when Agnès Saal, the head of France's National Audiovisual Institute, resigned after she built up €40,000 worth of taxi bills in just ten months.
 
 

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OPERA

A Masked Ball: Madrid opera forced to cancel show after protest over social distancing

Spain's main opera house, the Teatro Real in Madrid, defended itself Monday after it had to cancel a performance when a small group of spectators loudly protested against being seated too close to each other amid a spike in Covid-19 infections.

A Masked Ball: Madrid opera forced to cancel show after protest over social distancing
View of the Teatro Real in Madrid. Photo: Claudia Schillinger/ Flickr

The performance of Giuseppe Verdi's “A Masked Ball” on Sunday night was called off after a “minority” of spectators repeatedly jeered and clapped despite being offered the chance to be relocated or get a refund for the value of their tickets, the theatre said in a statement.

Videos shared on social media by several spectators who were at the performance showed full rows in the upper sections where seats are cheaper, while in the pricier floor section many empty seats could be seen.

Clapping and calls of “suspension!” could be heard even after the actors tried to begin their performance.

The Teatro Real had “respected the health norms” put in place by the regional government of Madrid to prevent the spread of Covid-19 and “even reinforced them”, the chairman of the body which manages the theatre, Gregorio Marañon, told a news conference on Monday.

Attendance at the performance had been reduced to just 51.5 percent of the total, well below the  limit of 75 percent set by the regional government, he added.

The regional government does not require there to be an empty seat between spectators, but it does require there to be a distance of 1.5 metres (five feet) between people, or if this is not possible, that they wear face masks, which is mandatory at the theatre, Marañon said.

The Teatro Real, which celebrated its bicentenary in 2018, is studying “what measures we can take for those spectators who… clearly felt in an uncomfortable situation,” he added.

The incident comes as the regional government of Madrid has imposed a partial lockdown in several densely-populated, low income areas mainly in the south of the Spanish capital where virus infections are surging, sparking a debate about inequality and triggering protests in these neighbourhoods over the weekend before the new measures took effect on Monday.

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