
Photo by Heidi Bohnenkamp, 2012
While Delta Air Lines and Bank of America have dropped their sponsorships of New York's Public Theater over a President Trump-inspired staging of Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar," corporate sponsors at the Guthrie Theater had no public reaction to a 2012 staging that featured a black actor in the role of Caesar.
That production, part of a national tour done in collaboration with the Acting Company of New York, starred Bjorn DuPaty, a tall basketball aficionado who resembles then-President Barack Obama (pictured above).
Caesar is stabbed to death in the middle of the play.
The New York production, staged by Twin Cities-born director Oskar Eustis, was questioned in a tweet by the president's son, Donald J. Trump, Jr.
"I wonder how much of this 'art' is funded by taxpayers?" he asked. "Serious question, when does 'art' become political speech & does that change things?"
The reaction from corporate sponsors was swift.
"No matter what your political stance may be, the graphic staging of 'Julius Caesar' at this summer's free Shakespeare in the Park does not reflect Delta Air Lines' values," Delta said Sunday in a statement.