A live audience is hard to impress, perhaps even more so in the age of social estating.
An opera in Madrid was interrupted on Sunday night after members of the public protested, fearing that the seats would be too crowded in the room.
The Teatro Real of the Spanish capital was forced to cancel the functionality of Giuseppe Verdi’s “Un Ballo in maschera” after an organization of spectators demonstrated the functionality, ending the exhibition and finishing the place of the night.
The police were at the site on Sunday.
On Monday he said he “regrets what happened,” but attributed the turmoil to adjustments to the city’s fitness regulations.
In July, the theater hosted performances of another Verdi opera, “La Traviata”, and separated audience members through sealing chairs and empty chairs pounding between a couple of occupied seats, he said.
But he is at ease with his seating policy after the city eased restrictions on coronaviruses, allowing some sites to accommodate a wider audience. 75% of the overall capatown, he said. Members of the public could freely decide on their seats, even if they wore masks in acting.
The Teatro Real stated on a Monday that some spectators felt unsafe in their seats, “even though existing fitness regulations were scrupulously complied with, verified through the police who attended the [Royal Theatre] last night.
He added: “The Teatro Real needs to reiterate its commitment to the protection of the public, artists and workers, in which it works with dedication, duty and wonderful energy, since April, with its own medical commission and scrupulous follow-up. Government of Spain and Community of Madrid. ‘
He also stated that the place “will take all mandatory measures to make the public feel safer [and] also communicate with the public. “
Madrid has noticed a recent increase in coronavirus cases, which account for about one-third of all new cases, according to the knowledge of the Spanish Ministry of Health. On Monday, strict estating regulations were re-imposed in various parts of the city.
Spain has already recorded more than 30,000 deaths since the start of the epidemic, with more than 600,000 cases in total.
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