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- <text id=94TT1271>
- <title>
- Sep. 19, 1994: Music:Maestro Zinger
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 19, 1994 So Young to Kill, So Young to Die
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/MUSIC, Page 75
- Maestro Zinger
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> History is repeating itself as farce at the Paris Opera as the
- conductor is forced out and a new director seizes power
- </p>
- <p>By Thomas A. Sancton/Paris
- </p>
- <p> Eventually, the whole thing deteriorated to the point that the
- antagonists were calling each other names--actual proper names.
- "I don't want to live under another Kim Il Sung," said Myung-Whun
- Chung, referring to Hugues Gall, the official who last week
- forced Chung out of his job as musical director of the Paris
- Opera. For his part, Gall said of Chung, "He's a good conductor,
- but he's no Seiji Ozawa or Daniel Barenboim." And "Mr. Chung
- is neither Mother Teresa nor Florence Nightingale."
- </p>
- <p> What do the late North Korean autocrat and the founder of modern
- nursing have to do with an opera house? The French take their
- civilization very, very seriously, so Parisian cultural conflicts
- tend to become impassioned and bizarre. In America it's the
- fight between baseball players and owners that fills the front
- pages; in France it's the death struggle between a conductor
- and his boss.
- </p>
- <p> No artistic battlefield has seen more bloodshed over the past
- few years than the Paris Opera. An earlier victim, in fact,
- was Barenboim himself. In 1986 the celebrated pianist and conductor
- was appointed by the then Cultural Minister to be the opera's
- musical director, two years before the company would move into
- its lavish, modernistic new quarters at the Place de la Bastille.
- But French President Francois Mitterrand had asked his friend
- Pierre Berge, who runs the Yves Saint Laurent fashion house,
- to be the head of the opera, and Berge thought Barenboim's reported
- $1.1 million-a-year salary was too rich. Amid great turmoil
- and acrimony, Berge fired Barenboim in 1989. Then Berge hired
- Chung, a little-known 36-year-old from South Korea by way of
- Juilliard.
- </p>
- <p> In the time since, Chung has proved to be both a gifted conductor
- and a skillful politician. Despite his unfamiliarity with much
- of the standard opera repertoire, he managed to pull together
- a fractious band of musicians and, even by Gall's reckoning,
- bring it into the "first rank" of lyric orchestras. "Our five
- years under Chung put us at a world-recognized level," says
- violinist John Cohen. "He's a magnificent leader."
- </p>
- <p> The reasons why this "magnificent leader" is now out of work
- are the usual ones: money and ego. Berge renegotiated Chung's
- contract last year and gave the maestro a pay package that started
- at $660,000 a year and would have risen to $1.5 million by the
- year 2000--breathtaking sums for an organization that was
- losing more than $9 million a year. When he made the agreement,
- Berge knew that a new government would be coming in and that
- he himself would most likely lose his job; cynics believe his
- generosity to Chung was a way of handing the new administrators
- a problem.
- </p>
- <p> Right on cue, Berge was let go, and Gall, who had run Geneva's
- Grand Theatre for 14 years, was appointed to take his place
- starting in August 1995. Gall didn't wait, however, before getting
- involved. He labeled the compensation for Chung "extravagant,
- out of all proportion to his value on the world market." Moreover--and this is where the ego part comes in--Gall said he wanted
- control over all artistic decisions. "I can't cohabit with someone
- else who has the power," he says. "We need a director at the
- center with full authority."
- </p>
- <p> After months of negotiations, Gall in late June offered Chung
- a take-it-or-leave-it arrangement that would have frozen his
- pay and taken away his power of veto over choices of repertoire,
- performers, directors and so forth. Chung rejected it. On Aug.
- 12, the opera abrogated his contract and engaged Australian
- conductor Simone Young to lead the fall premiere of Verdi's
- Simon Boccanegra. Chung went to court, and a judge ordered the
- opera to restore him to his post pending a decision about his
- contract--or face a $10,000-a-day fine. The option taken by
- the opera company was illustrated in the most forceful way:
- when Chung showed up for rehearsals the day after the decision,
- acting executive director Jean-Paul Cluzel physically barred
- him from entering the rehearsal room. Cluzel had the locks changed
- on Chung's office for good measure.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, last week, Chung forced a resolution with a dramatic
- gesture of his own. He announced that he was willing to forgo
- his entire salary if he could remain as musical director until
- 2000. "I was sick and tired of them claiming this was all about
- money," he says. "I told them they can keep their dirty money.
- I just wanted a minimum of respect." The opera declined this
- offer, but the next day a deal was made. Chung would conduct
- the season premiere and then leave his position. He would be
- paid the full indemnities stipulated by his contract--estimated
- at $1.3 million.
- </p>
- <p> Gall says he intends to retire the title of musical director
- and replace Chung with a "permanent conductor." But who will
- believe that under Gall, permanent means permanent?
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-