Giuliani joins opera protesters

Former New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani speaks during a demonstration across from Lincoln Centre and the New York Metropolitan Opera in New York on October 20, 2014. New York's Metropolitan Opera was bracing for its most tumultuous opening in decades on Monday as protestors demonstrated against The Death of Klinghoffer. Picture: Mike Segar

Former New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani speaks during a demonstration across from Lincoln Centre and the New York Metropolitan Opera in New York on October 20, 2014. New York's Metropolitan Opera was bracing for its most tumultuous opening in decades on Monday as protestors demonstrated against The Death of Klinghoffer. Picture: Mike Segar

Published Oct 21, 2014

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New York - Rudy Giuliani, a former New York City mayor, led a rally outside the Metropolitan Opera on Monday to protest the company's production of The Death Of Klinghoffer, which some have called anti-Semitic and sympathetic to terrorism.

The 1991 opera depicts the murder of Leon Klinghoffer, a disabled Jewish American man who was killed by four Palestinian hijackers aboard the Achille Lauro cruise ship in the Mediterranean in 1985. After killing him, they ordered his body be thrown overboard along with his wheelchair.

Some have hailed the work as a masterpiece by American composer John Adams.

But protesters outside the Met opening on Monday, several of whom admitted they had never seen the opera, say Adams pointedly gave Klinghoffer's killers some of the most beautiful songs in the work in an attempt to rationalise their crimes.

"This romanticising of terrorism has only made it a greater and graver threat," Giuliani, a noted opera aficionado, told a crowd of protesters. He said he had listened to the work five or six times and that the music was "quite excellent", but the words distorted history.

About 100 protesters were lined up in wheelchairs wearing signs around their neck reading "I am Leon Klinghoffer”.

The crowd carried signs calling the work "Snuff Opera”, and cheered loudly at the news that the production had not sold out.

Adams, the Met and the Anti-Defamation League have all insisted the work is not anti-Semitic, although the Met cancelled plans for international broadcasts of the production.

For a night at the opera, security was tight, with dozens of police officers stationed both inside and around the opera house at Lincoln Centre in Manhattan.

A few protesters sporadically booed and heckled during quieter moments in the first half. Adams joined performers onstage at the opera's close to a standing ovation.

Klinghoffer's daughters, Lisa and Ilsa, have condemned the work ever since its US premiere in 1991. They wrote a short message that is being printed in the new production's Playbill criticising the work's "false moral equivalencies”.

"It rationalises, romanticises, and legitimises the terrorist murder of our father," they wrote.

Tom Morris, the director of the new production, said the work no more endorses Klinghoffer's murder than Macbeth does regicide. He said the opera's closing moments are a long, searing aria of grief by Klinghoffer's wife, Marilyn.

"There's a crime at the centre of the drama, and it's the job of our dramatic artists to investigate such crimes because they're traumatic and because they're such crimes," he said.

The production made its premiere in 2012 at the English National Opera in London, where a single man with a placard protested opening night. The opera last played in New York City in 2009 at the Juilliard School with little controversy. - Reuters

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