NY opera fires stage director for ‘inappropriate behaviour’
New York’s Metropolitan Opera said Thursday that it had fired world-renowned British stage director John Copley for what the company called “inappropriate behaviour” during a rehearsal.
The 84-year-old Copley was let go two months after the Met suspended its music director emeritus, James Levine, pending an investigation into sexual abuse allegations against him.
“Following a complaint from a chorister about inappropriate behaviour in the rehearsal room that was received on Monday, January 29, John Copley is no longer directing the revival of (Copley’s own 1990 production of Rossini’s) ‘Semiramide’ that will open on February 19,” the Met said in a statement released to The Associated Press.
The director was fired on Tuesday after he was called to the office of Met General Manager Peter Gelb, according to a person familiar with the company’s decision who spoke on condition of anonymity because that information was not publicly revealed.


