Et tu, Delta?
The airline has become the latest underwriter of New York’s Shakespeare in the Park to pull its sponsorship over a production of Julius Caesar.
The protagonist was portrayed as a Donald Trump lookalike.
#ShakespeareinthePark production of Julius Caesar, with Caesar and Calpurnia reimagined as Donald and Melania Trump pic.twitter.com/0Zl8GVuuYe
— stuart emmrich (@StuartEmmrichNY) June 2, 2017
That’s too much for the airline which tweeted its disapproval.
This summer's Free Shakespeare in the Park does not reflect Delta Air Lines’ values. Their artistic and creative… 1/3
— Delta (@Delta) June 12, 2017
…direction crossed the line on the standards of good taste. We have notified them of our decision to end our… 2/3
— Delta (@Delta) June 12, 2017
…sponsorship as the official airline of The Public Theater effective immediately. *HJW 3/3
— Delta (@Delta) June 12, 2017
Caesar, of course, is knifed in the third act. Spoiler alert: Cassius and Brutus are responsible.
“I don’t love President Trump, but he’s the president. You can’t assassinate him on a stage,” Laura Sheaffer, a sales manager at Salem Media, who attended the play tells Mediaite.
“Kathy Griffin got so much coverage for what she did, everyone was horrified, so why is no one horrified by this, which is essentially the murder of the President of the United States in front of 2,000 people?” Sheaffer said.
“The performance was well done, and the actors did a good job. It was fascinating to see the parallels between the Trump administration and Caesar’s rule, but murdering the president on stage was just too far,” Sheaffer said.
Delta sponsored a similar Caesar in the Twin Cities during the Obama administration with a presidential theme.
Bank of America also dropped its support.
We are withdrawing our funding pic.twitter.com/MlaONF82FN
— Bank of America News (@BofA_News) June 12, 2017
The show’s director, Oskar Eustis, posted a statement saying it is the “extraordinary quality of Shakespeare’s writing to seem fresh whenever we encounter it again.”
Twitter, of course, provided the hot takes.
throwback to that time a NYC theater did Julius Caesar as Obama and the American Conservative called it "riveting" https://t.co/2Gasa4iicm
— Daniel Radosh (@danielradosh) June 11, 2017
1. Can someone please find Fox News a safe place from Shakespeare? https://t.co/ptySYw0KHp pic.twitter.com/cBhfynoqBi
— Judd Legum (@JuddLegum) June 11, 2017
When Shakespeare becomes too controversial to attract corporate sponsorship…
It's the sponsors who have it wrong. pic.twitter.com/Mpk152234Z
— Andrew Robinson (@AndrewR_Physics) June 12, 2017
If you had told me in my college English major days that there would come a time when everyone was really into politics and Shakespeare…
— Abigail Brooks (@_abigailbrooks) June 12, 2017
But it's ok for everyone to abandon @kathygriffin for essentially the same thing. O, Liberals! Shakespeare in the park OK. Lone comedy, no. https://t.co/QrtAOO5uFW
— Jay E. Korman (@twodogsing) June 12, 2017
There was a Julius Caesar in 2012 featuring an Obama figure killed by Cantor and McConnell, and no one made a fuss. pic.twitter.com/WpBE799giO
— Harry Baals (@MayorBaals) June 12, 2017
Vicious like a school-pickup ICE raid vicious? Or vicious like kicking 23 million of health insurance vicious? https://t.co/aObcMgBjny
— Sarah Milov (@allofmilov) June 12, 2017
First off, they chose the wrong Shakespeare. You cast Trump in the lead of King Lear, not Julius Caesar. This much is obvious.
— Will McAvoy (@WillMcAvoyACN) June 12, 2017
Meanwhile, NBC’s Megyn Kelly is giving airtime to Alec Jones, who insists that the Sandy Hook school massacre didn’t happen. The corporate underwriters are quiet on the subject.
The interview will air on Father’s Day.