FILE PHOTO: Opera singer Placido Domingo speaks during an event at the Manhattan School of Music in New York, U.S., May 11, 2018. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
February 27, 2020
MADRID (Reuters) – Spanish opera star Placido Domingo has withdrawn from planned performances of “La Traviata” at Madrid’s Teatro Real following complaints he sexually harassed women, defending himself in a statement on Thursday in which he partly walked back an earlier apology.
Domingo had apologized on Tuesday to the women who accused him of sexual misconduct after an investigation by the American Guild of Musical Artists (AGMA) labor union concluded he had behaved inappropriately with female performers.
But the 79-year-old singer said the apology had since created a “false impression” as European venues weighed whether to cancel planned engagements with him.
“My apology was sincere and heartfelt, to any colleague who I have made to feel uncomfortable, or hurt in any manner, by anything I have said or done,” Domingo’s new statement said. “But I know what I have not done and I’ll deny it again. I have never behaved aggressively toward anyone, and I have never done anything to obstruct or hurt anyone’s career in any way.”
He said he was withdrawing from the Teatro Real engagements scheduled for May in order to spare his friends and colleagues “harm or any additional inconvenience.”
The AGMA investigation found that some of Domingo’s female colleagues, including singers and other performers, had feared retaliation if they complained about his misconduct, which stretched back decades.
The investigation began after an Associated Press report last year in which several women complained that Domingo, who is married, forced wet kisses on them, groped them and sought to pressure them into meeting him privately for sex.
Many U.S. institutions, including the Metropolitan Opera in New York and the San Francisco Opera, canceled planned engagements with Domingo soon after, and he resigned as general director of the Los Angeles Opera.
In Europe, however, many venues stood by the singer, at least until this week.
Since the AGMA report and Domingo’s original apology, Spain’s culture ministry has canceled his performances in the operetta “Luisa Fernanda” at Zarzuela Theatre in Madrid. The organizers of the Salzburg Festival in Austria also said they were reconsidering plans to have Domingo perform in August.
He was still due to perform at some of Europe’s most prestigious opera houses this year, including London’s Royal Opera House and La Scala in Milan. However, in his statement on Thursday, Domingo offered to withdraw from other engagements if the venues would “find it difficult” to have him perform.
(Reporting by Emma Pinedo in Madrid and Jonathan Allen in New York; Editing by Inti Landauro, Angus MacSwan and Daniel Wallis)