Arts Council England has said amid a growing row over its removal of funding for the English National Opera.
Darren Henley acknowledged that the decision to slash ENO’s funding to zero and insist it find a new home out of London “seems stark” and “nothing can take away the pain of artists, performers, technical teams and audiences who love the company”.
But, rather than sounding a death knell for ENO, the arts council wanted “to support a bright, if different, future” for the company.
ENO says it has the support of politicians from all parties, celebrities and audiences in its campaign for the arts council to reverse its decision.
Today workers in the culture sector will lobby the arts council to reconsider “devastating funding cuts” to arts organisations across the UK, including ENO. Ron Nairne, who sings in the ENO chorus and is a member of Equity , which is organising the protest, said the removal of ENO’s funding would be “catastrophic” for its 300 full-time employees and hundreds more freelancers.
The actor Maxine Peake said: “We must not believe this false narrative that pits London against the regions, but fight to ensure proper funding of the arts across the whole of the UK.”
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 14, 2022-Ausgabe von The Guardian.
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