Metropolitan Opera suspends James Levine over sexual abuse allegations
The man, who is now 48 and whose name has not been revealed, said the abuse continued for years and drove him to the brink of suicide.
New York: New York's Metropolitan Opera said on Sunday, it was suspending its famed long time music director James Levine after multiple allegations of sexual misconduct.
The premier US opera house said Levine would no longer appear at the Met this season and that it had hired a former US prosecutor to investigate the accusations.
"Based on these new reports, the Met has made the decision to act now, while we await the results of the investigation," Peter Gelb, the general manager of the Met, said in a statement.
"This is a tragedy for anyone whose life has been affected," he said.
Gelb said that Robert J Cleary, the former US attorney for New Jersey best known for prosecuting the anti-technology mail-bomb assailant dubbed as the Unabomber in the 1990s, would lead the Met's probe.
The suspension marks a spectacular fall from grace for Levine, who had guided the Met's orchestra for 40 years before retiring at the end of the 2015-16 season as he struggled with Parkinson's disease.
The 74-year-old has stayed in a role of music director emeritus and conducted what may turn out to be his final Met performance on Saturday - fittingly, Verdi's "Requiem."