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LeadershipDonald Trump

Delta and Bank of America Have Withdrawn Support For Julius Caesar Over Trump-Like Portrayal

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Reuters
Reuters
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Reuters
Reuters
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June 12, 2017, 4:03 AM ET

Delta Air Lines (DAL) and Bank of America(BAC) pulled financial support on Sunday for the Shakespeare in the Park production of Julius Caesar in New York over its portrayal of the assassinated ancient Roman leader that resembles U.S. President Donald Trump.

The contemporary staging of William Shakespeare’s tragedy, by the nonprofit Public Theater, portrays Caesar as a powerful, blond-haired man wearing a business suit with an American flag pin, while his wife, Calpurnia, has a Slavic accent and dresses in designer fashions.

Shakespeare’s play focuses on the fatal stabbing of Caesar by former associates, and the subsequent fate of democratic institutions.

Delta said in a statement on Sunday that the Public Theater’s “artistic and creative direction crossed the line on the standards of good taste” and that it was ending its four-year run as official airline of the Public Theater.

Bank of America, which has sponsored Shakespeare in the Park for 11 years, is withdrawing funding for Julius Caesar, a bank spokeswoman said. The bank did not address whether it would keep supporting other Shakespeare in the Park productions.

The Public Theater chose to present Julius Caesar “in a way that was intended to provoke and offend. Had this intention been made known to us, we would have decided not to sponsor it,” the spokeswoman added.

The Public Theater and the White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Sunday.

In announcing the production in Manhattan’s Central Park earlier this year, the Public Theater said the play had “never felt more contemporary,” and described the Roman leader as “magnetic, populist, irreverent, he seems bent on absolute power.”

The New York Times review on Friday said the “depiction of a petulant, blondish Caesar in a blue suit, complete with gold bathtub and a pouty Slavic wife, takes onstage Trump-trolling to a startling new level.”

New York’s Daily News said the production “imagines the Roman ruler as a blond, swaggering, egotist who’s a dead ringer for the current occupant of the Oval Office. And he gets murdered for his hubris and hunger for power.”

The production, which opened May 23 in previews and runs through June 18 at Central Park’s Delacorte Theater, has its defenders. Author Joyce Carol Oates wrote on Twitter on Sunday that “Delta should not be interfering in a theater’s presentations” and urged theater supporters not to patronize the airline.

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