Why the panic over ENO? We name the source

Why the panic over ENO? We name the source

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norman lebrecht

December 10, 2015

Another letter* appears today in the Guardian, signed by 14 musicians, appealing for a removal of unstated threats to the existence of English National Opera. Letters in The Times likewise relied on ‘rumours flying around’ about the company’s future. No-one has anything specific to go on. This morning, on the BBC’s Today programme, arts editor Will Gomperts did nothing but waffle.

Slipped Disc can name the source of the threat to ENO. It is a real and present danger.

The Arts Council has indicated to a weak ENO chairman and an inexperienced chief executive that they must shrink the payroll. Specifically, they need to cut the size of the chorus and orchestra if they want to receive future funding.

Cressida Pollock, the chief exec, has hired a man to to the job. His name is Gary Smith and he previously demolished the performing staff at Scottish Opera, which now hobbles along as a part-time shadow of its former self.

Smith is the go-to hatchet man for arts companies in trouble.

His title at ENO is ‘HR advisor’.

He is a man with an axe, and he is being paid out of ENO’s public subsidy, the money it receives to put opera on the stage. He is the reason for the rumours, the cause of a justified anxiety among the community of artists.

 

cressida pollock

 

*Guardian letter:

Recent reports in the press suggest that the board of English National Opera has agreed to present only eight operas next season and to cut the contracts of its chorus. Such changes threaten its very existence and we wish to express our opposition to anything that threatens the company of great musicians and singers who are currently giving world class performances under their music directorMark Wigglesworth. Without them there is no ENO. We call on the board to engage in a public consultation process to find ways of preserving and enhancing the work of this beloved company that plays such a crucial role in the country’s creative life.
David Alden
Marin Alsop
Richard Armstrong
Susan Bullock
Sarah Connolly
John Eliot Gardiner
Gwynne Howell
Richard Jones
James MacMillan
Felicity Palmer
Stuart Skelton
Keith Warner
Willard White
John Wilson

Comments

  • Philip Connolly says:

    I’d have more sympathy if I’d enjoyed any of the last half dozen times I went to ENO.

  • Stephen Llewellyn says:

    The last four productions I attended at ENO were: Pirates of Penzance (an excellent night out!) Mastersinger of Nuremberg (Who knew nearly 6 hours could fly by? I saw it twice.) Otello (Managed to persuade me I could enjoy Verdi and starred the wonderful Leah Crocetto, a world-class star on the rise and Stuart Skelton – already risen!) and Peter Grimes – perhaps the finest performance of this opera I have ever seen, with Skelton staking his claim to be THE Grimes of this generation. I just don’t get the complaints, I really don’t.

  • William says:

    Likewise the artistic quality of late for me has been second to none.

  • Humphrey Burton says:

    What I deplore is the absence of any public statement from the ENO “board” despite a week of external pressure. The chorus and orchestra need to be told what is going on. Their unions should state their positions. The silence is deafening. HB

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