Russian director Serebrennikov attends closed hearing in fraud case

Russian director Serebrennikov attends closed hearing in fraud case
AFP

Moscow (AFP) – The trial of Russian stage and screen director Kirill Serebrennikov began Wednesday with a closed hearing, more than a year after he was placed under house arrest in a controversial embezzlement probe.

Prosecutors say Serebrennikov embezzled over $2 million of state funding for a theatre project. 

He has dismissed the charges against him as “absurd” and insists the money went on mounting productions.

Supporters see the probe as part of a crackdown on artistic independence under President Vladimir Putin.

The closed hearing at Moscow’s Meshchansky court saw both sides present their arguments before a judge. October 25 was set as the date for the first full hearing.

Serebrennikov’s lawyers asked the judge to call as witnesses the 400 people involved in the theatre project, but said this request was refused.

A request for the 49-year-old director to be freed from house arrest was also turned down.

“The main thing is for people who present no danger to society is to be able to work,” lawyer Dmitry Kharitonov told journalists.

Serebrennikov came to court wearing sunglasses and dressed in black and did not speak to journalists. He has been held under a repeatedly extended house arrest since August 2017. 

A number of his collaborators were detained and are facing charges.

– Angered cultural conservatives – 

Serebrennikov’s movie “Leto” (Summer), based on the story of a cult late-Soviet rock group, was screened in competition at the Cannes film festival this year in his absence.

He was unable to attend the premiere of his ballet based on the life of Russian dance legend Rudolf Nureyev at the Bolshoi Theatre late last year.

The production was itself mired in controversy and its opening was delayed by six months. 

Management cited an under-rehearsed cast but others said the ballet’s explicit homosexual themes or the criminal case against its director were the real cause.

In 2012 Serebrennikov was appointed to oversee a failing, state-run theatre now known as the Gogol Centre. 

Under his management it became one of Moscow’s best theatres and a hotspot for the capital’s liberal intelligentsia.

But his appointment and experimental work there — frequently featuring nudity and strong language — angered cultural conservatives. 

“There was a battle against him ever since he took over the Gogol Centre,” John Freedman, a Moscow-based expert on contemporary Russian theatre, told AFP. 

Four months after he was placed under house arrest, a court seized his assets, including his apartment and car.

Dozens of prominent figures in Russia and international stars, including Cate Blanchett and Ian McKellen have called for Serebrennikov to be freed without charge.

Since the criminal case against him Serebrennikov has become the most recognisable face of Moscow theatre, with calls for his release at premieres and curtain calls in the capital.

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