A productn of Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Oneg has ed a ntroversy over Rsia’s anti-gay laws. But should art get volved polics? Jason Farago reports.
Contents:
THE MET’S STORM OVER GAY RIGHTS, POLICS AND PUT
* eugene onegin gay *
Earlier this month an terviewer asked Vladimir Put about Rsia’s dranian crackdown on the rights of gays and lbians, who have suffered vlent reprisals sce the passage of a discrimatory law this May. Put fend the law, but sisted he had no problems wh gay people – and chose a surprisg example to prove . “They say that Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was a homosexual, ” the Rsian print said.
EUGENE ONEG, A RSIAN GAY GENTLEMAN
Opera pani plan their schl years advance, of urse, but now the Met fds self mountg a productn by a gay Rsian poser, featurg two noted Put supporters. What rponsibili do the Met, as an arts anizatn, have to global gay rights and to the polil realm more generally? In rejectg the onle petn, which garnered the signatur of several major figur at the Met, the hoe’s general manager Peter Gelb ployed a ‘some-of-my-bt-iends-are-gay’ fence to sistep any awkwardns.