On Friday, the Boston Symphony Orchestra announced that an independent investigation into a sexual assault claim made against conductor Charles Dutoit by one of its former interns has found the woman's claim credible.
The accusation that triggered the BSO investigation came from a woman named Fiona Allan, who at the time of the alleged assault in 1997 was working as an intern at the orchestra's summer home at Tanglewood in Lenox, Mass., when Dutoit was appearing with the symphony as a guest conductor.
Allan made her allegation public last December in the comments section of writer Norman Lebrecht's classical music blog, "Slipped Disc." Allan, who is now artistic director and chief executive of the Birmingham Hippodrome theater in the U.K., made her assertion after Lebrecht
posted
At the time that she wrote on Lebrecht's blog, Allan claimed that after Dutoit allegedly assaulted her in his Tanglewood dressing room, where she had been sent to drop off papers, she tried to report him to BSO management. She continued, "I alerted the orchestra manager, who told me (too late...) that they usually advised women not to enter his dressing room unaccompanied, as there had been previous complaints. So they knew what was going on... I have never felt angrier or less protected by an organisation. They continued to employ him, whilst knowing he harassed women."
Since the initial AP report chronicling allegations against the conductor,
ten women
As Allan was a BSO employee at the time she says she was assaulted, the BSO launched an independent investigation into her allegation. In its
statement
The orchestra says that it will not reveal information about the incidents involving the three other women, in order to protect their identities.
However, the BSO investigator also found that neither Allan nor the three other women made complaints about Dutoit's behavior to the BSO, and that there were no indications that management was aware of allegations of misconduct involving Dutoit prior to Allan coming forward.
Dutoit has denied the allegations. In December, he issued a statement that said in part: "Whilst informal physical contact is commonplace in the arts world as a mutual gesture of friendship, the serious accusations made involving coercion and forced physical contact have absolutely no basis in truth."
The BSO ended its relationship with Dutoit in December, following the AP report. Based on the investigator's newly released findings, the orchestra says that it has also revoked an honorary title, the Koussevitzky Artist, which the BSO granted to Dutoit in 2016.
After the ten women came forward to accuse the Swiss-born Dutoit, other major orchestras around the world shed their affiliations to him, including the symphony orchestras of New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, San Francisco, Cleveland and Sydney, Australia.
This is the
second statement
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