New York's Metropolitan Opera Cancels Show After Powder Sprinkled Into Orchestra Pit

Police believe someone sprinkled cremated ashes during the second intermission.
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NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York City’s Metropolitan Opera canceled its Saturday afternoon performance of “Guillaume Tell” after an audience member sprinkled an unidentified powder, which police believe was cremated ashes, into the orchestra pit.

New York City Police officials said witnesses had heard a man say he was at the opera to spread the ashes of his mentor.

“An individual from out of town ... indicated that he was here to sprinkle ashes of a friend, his mentor in opera, during the performance,” John Miller, Deputy Commissioner for Intelligence and Counterterrorism told reporters at Lincoln Center.

Jack Vartoogian/Getty Images via Getty Images

The Met said on its Facebook page that it also canceled the Saturday evening performance of “L’Italiana in Algeri,” while police investigate the incident which happened in the second intermission.

There were no reports of any injuries or any bad reactions to the substance, though the theater was evacuated and the New York Police Department dispatched a special unit to investigate, Officer Tiffany Phillips said.

The suspect, a man who was not identified, had fled the scene and no arrests have been made, Phillips said.

The Metropolitan Opera has seen other bizarre episodes in the past, including one in 1988 when a patron died during a plunge from the top balcony during the intermission of a performance of “Macbeth.”

(Reporting by Frank McGurty and Chris Michaud in New York, additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Leslie Adler, G Crosse and Nick Macfie)

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