Pictured: Choir singer 'punched' by world renowned conductor

Pictured: Choir singer ‘punched and slapped by world renowned conductor Sir John Eliot Gardiner for leaving stage on the wrong side’ – as famed musician pulls out of performance at BBC Proms

  • Sir John Eliot Gardiner allegedly attacked 29-year-old singer William Thomas 

This is the first picture of a choir singer who was ‘punched and slapped’ by a world renowned conductor in an incident dubbed ‘The Fight at the Opera’. 

William Thomas, 29, was allegedly attacked by Sir John Eliot Gardiner during an opera in southern France on Tuesday.

Classical music website Slipped Disc reported that Sir John – a close friend of King Charles – was annoyed that Mr Thomas exited the podium on the wrong side after the first part of the performance at the Berlioz Festival. 

He is said to have told off the singer backstage in front of the rest of the cast before slapping and punching him in the face. 

Sir John has now pulled out of the Proms, where he was scheduled to perform on September 3. The BBC had investigated the incident and decided it would not have been comfortable with him performing if he had insisted on doing so, according to The Telegraph. 

William Thomas, 29, was allegedly attacked by Sir John Eliot Gardiner during an opera in southern France on Tuesday

Sir John  (pictured) is said to have told off the singer backstage in front of the rest of the cast before slapping and punching him in the face

A source close to Sir John said the scorching 39C heat in La Côte-Saint-André, near Grenoble, had affected his behaviour, along with a recent change in medication. 

The 80-year-old is thought to have left the town soon after the alleged incident to return to Britain to see his doctor. His assistant, Dinis Sousa, reportedly took up his place for a following performance.

Sir John, known to his colleagues as ‘Jiggy’, has previously provoked criticism in the industry for his exacting standards and desire for control.

In an interview with the Financial Times in 2010, he said: ‘I can be impatient, I get stroppy, I haven’t always been compassionate. I made plenty of mistakes in my early years.’

He reportedly failed to land the job as musical director of Opera North because the musicians refused to work with him. 

And during his time with the London Symphony Orchestra, he was reported to have become furious with a brass player.

Despite this, Sir John is believed to have struck up a friendship with King Charles after meeting him at an event in Sandringham due to a shared love of organic farming and music.

A source close to Sir John said the scorching 39C heat in La Côte-Saint-André had affected his behaviour

The conductor lives on and manages a 500-acre organic farm in north Dorset which was established by his great uncle, the composer Henry Balfour Gardiner.

Speaking of his friendship with the King, Sir John told the Telegraph: ‘For his 50th birthday I gave him a couple of breeding heifers, and when he knighted me in 1998, he leant forward and whispered, ‘Thanks for the heifers.’

Sir John contributed to the musical accompaniment at King Charles’ Coronation, conducting the orchestra during the arrival of guests at Westminster Abbey.

Tuesday’s alleged incident occurred midway through a performance with the Monteverdi Choir, which Sir John founded in 1964. The choir is still scheduled to perform in Austria and Germany before heading to the Royal Albert Hall for the Proms.

A BBC spokesman said yesterday: ‘We take allegations about inappropriate behaviour seriously and are currently establishing the facts about the incident.’ Representatives of Sir John and Mr Thomas were contacted for comment.

Sir John, known to his colleagues as ‘Jiggy’, has previously provoked criticism in the industry for his exacting standards and desire for control

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