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Published: Friday, 11 October 2024 at 11:38 AM


In 1995, Seattle Opera experienced a minor crisis when patrons found its production of Georges Bizet’s opera Carmen too risqué. The Seattle Times published a series of impassioned letters to the editor that seem to anticipate modern social media fury.

‘This Carmen exudes violence and vulgarity,’ wrote one reader. ‘I would be ashamed to take my mother, and afraid to take my child.’ Another reader fumed: ‘Tasteful? I should say not! It was repulsive! Let’s keep everything in its place, and leave the operas the way the composers intended.’

Critics defended the production, which director Keith Warner set in 1950s Spain. But when Seattle Opera staged Bizet’s opera again earlier this year, visitors to its website were met with a warning label of sorts: a PG-13 rating, which in the US system of movie ratings signifies that ‘some material may be inappropriate for children under 13’. The stated reasons for the rating included a sexually explicit staging, violence against women, and cigarette smoking.