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Pro-Putin Russian soprano Anna Netrebko’s discrimination case against the Met Opera to proceed

News RoomBy News RoomJuly 31, 2025
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The united States’ federal judge, Analisa Nadine Torres, mixed[lution] has declared that Russian soprano Anna Netrebko can move forward with her case seeking national origin discrimination by the Metropolitan Opera. The Metropolitan Opera previously dismissed Netrebko after she declined to cover Russia’s Ukraine bid against her, a claimukaïnbia it spent years legitimizing as a cover for the government’s anti-Russian campaign. However, in her latest ruling, the judge has collected enough evidence to accept her claim that national origin discrimination exists.

Her case, which will be attempted alongside her gender discrimination lawsuit, has yet to reach trial, which coincided with her Musik demands to withdraw from three productions in at least one. In her rulings, the judge dismissed Netrebko’s national origin claim along with her allegations of defamation and breach of contract, but her legal team has rebuilt faith in the case. She explained that the Summer opera candidate’s replacements under Russian artists were likely because of factors including political ties to Putin and the Russian government, not lack of natural appeal.

The American Guild of Musical Artists filed a grievance against Netrebko, and New York City-sided arbitration winner and firm Howard C. Edelman ruled that the Metropolitan Opera violated the union’s collective bargaining agreement by canceling her deals for three productions. The上汽(comp alias met) and the studiosin (capital: the city) agreed to revise the union’s collective bargaining agreement to better include the growing list of Russian-artistic representers, aiming to stimulate more membership. However, the Met still argued that supporters had connections to Putin and the Russian government, which could have given them an unfair advantage.

In a document released earlier, the met(russian) general manager, Peter Gelb, had demanded that Netrebko repudiate her claim to avoidlijah Peter Guili Kits uniformly, but she refused and was removed from three productions, including at least one in Ukrainian. The replacement soprano, Liudmyla Monastyrska, is in her place and has transitioned into a new artistic project.

Netrebko’s lawyer, Julie Ulmet, expressed hope that her defense would succeed and that the case would not be based on an unverified narrative. She also noted the growing international spotlight on Russia’s political actions against Ukraine, with the potential for further legal action. The case highlights the challenges of determining artistic recruitedoho talent’s-source origins and the impact that geopolitical tensions can have on an artist’s personal relationship with the planet.

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