Renowned University of Michigan professor who has taught at the school since 1995 is removed from his post after woke freshman complains about him showing Oscar-nominated acting legend Laurence Olivier in blackface in 1965 film Othello

  • Bright Sheng, who teaches composition at the School of Music, Theatre & Dance in Ann Arbor, Michigan, showed the 1965 film Othello starring Laurence Olivier
  • Olivier appeared in blackface throughout the film which 'shocked' students
  • Sheng apologized listing occasions when he had worked with people of color
  • The apology then offended students and Sheng stepped down from his role
  • American critics were no fan of Olivier's blackface when the film came out at the height of the civil rights movement and the movie only played for two days

By James Gordon

9 October 2021

A music professor from the University of Michigan has been removed from his teaching post after a student at the college complained about him showing the 1965 color film Othello starring Laurence Olivier in blackface.

Bright Sheng, who teaches composition at the School of Music, Theatre & Dance in Ann Arbor, Michigan, showed students the movie - which garnered four Academy Award nominations - last month.

Shortly after the screening, one of those taking the class complained to higher-ups at the university.

Professor Sheng, who was born in Shanghai, China and has been at the university for 26 years, penned an apology in which he proceeded to list occasions where he had worked with 'people of color' throughout his career in an effort to display diversity, but that too was rejected by the student body.





Sheng, who is an accomplished conductor, composer and pianist, has earned many honors for his music and compositions over the years and has been a two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist.

His music has been commissioned and performed by virtually every major American symphony orchestra including the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, the Chinese National Symphony Orchestra and the New York City Ballet Orchestra.

The first Sheng knew something was amiss with his teaching came after the September 10th showing of the film - which earned Olivier an Oscar nomination - as part of a class on Shakespeare's works.

Sheng wanted to 'show how the opera composer Giuseppe Verdi had adapted Shakespeare’s play into an opera.'

Olivia Cook, a freshman student said she thought there was something 'strange' about the film and noticed how the four-time Academy Award winner Olivier was in blackface as he played the titular role as a Moorish king.

'I was stunned,' Cook told Michigan Daily. 'In such a school that preaches diversity and making sure that they understand the history of people of color in America, I was shocked Sheng would show something like this in something that's supposed to be a safe space.'

What shocked Cook even more was the fact students were simply shown the film without any warning or context as to why they were were to watch the work which some might deem offensive.

One graduate student said they thought Sheng's stepping down was 'the bare minimum' that he should do.

'I feel like the thing that we all actually needed (was) a true and honest and genuine understanding that he did something wrong, not just (him) trying to defend himself. I feel like there's still a lack of trust there because none of us think he is actually sorry.'

Hours after the class, Sheng issued an apology acknowledging the casting and portrayal on the film to be 'racially insensitive and outdated.'



The following week, David Gier, the Dean of the music school sent an email to the department, including all students, where he apologized for what happened.

'Professor Sheng's actions do not align with our School's commitment to anti-racist action, diversity, equity and inclusion,' Gier said.

Almost one week after the screening, Sheng addressed a second apology to the department in which he noted how after carrying out 'further research', including the impact of racism on American culture, he failed to recognize the racist connotations of blackface.

'In a classroom, I am a teacher representing the university and I should have thought of this more diligently and fundamentally; I apologize that this action was offensive and has made you angry,' Sheng wrote. 'It also has made me lost (sic) your trust.'



But the apology only served to inflame things further as Sheng listed examples of the times he had worked with people of color in his career.

'At the world premiere of my opera The Silver River in South Carolina in 2000, I casted an African American actress (for the leading role), an Asian female dancer and a white baritone for the three main characters,' Sheng wrote.

Sheng added he had 'never thought of himself as being discriminating against any race.'

The apology did not wash with Cook who said the letter was shallow and failed understand the point.

'He could have taken responsibility for his actions and realized that this was harmful to some of his students that are within his class. Instead, he tried to make excuses. Instead of just apologizing for it, he tried to downplay the fact that the entire situation happened in the first place,' Cook said.

More than 40 students and staff from across the undergraduate and graduate programs wrote a formal response to Professor Gier calling for Sheng to be removed from teaching his seminar on the undergraduate course, adding he failed to create a safe environment.

'Professor Sheng responded to the events by crafting an inflammatory 'apology' letter to the department's students in which he chose to defend himself by listing all of the BIPOC individuals who he has helped or befriended throughout his career,' the letter reads. 'The letter implies that it is thanks to him that many of them have achieved success in their careers.'

Sheng has now stepped down following the open letter and his composition class has been suspended. He will remain employed at the school.

He admitted to The Daily that he was 'very sorry' and had made a mistake stating he did not believe Olivier's performance was 'intended to be the same as the minstrel performances which did degrade African Americans.'

'I thought that in most cases, the casting principle was based on the music quality of the singers,' Sheng wrote. 'Of course, time (sic) has changed, and I made a mistake in showing this film. It was insensitive of me, and I am very sorry.'



Addressing his initial apology, he also recognized that his response could have been better.

'In my formal apology letter to the whole composition department … I simply try to say that I do not discriminate In retrospect, perhaps I should have apologized for my mistake only.'

'To show the film now, especially without substantial framing, content advisory and a focus on its inherent racism is in itself a racist act, regardless of the professor's intentions. We need to acknowledge that as a community.' said fellow professor of composition, Evan Chambers, to The Daily, suggesting that students should have been properly forewarned about instances of racism within the film.

American critics were no fan of Olivier's blackface portrayal when the movie came out in 1966 in the middle of the Civil Rights Movement.

The New York Times said the film gave the 'outrageous impression of a theatrical Negro stereotype', and that Olivier resembled an 'end man in an American minstrel show.'

The film played for just two days, yet the production later received eight Oscar nominations, the highest ever for a Shakespeare film.

Last month, a Portland State University professor resigned in a scathing public letter in which he slammed the university for not allowing any type of thought that doesn't suit its liberal agenda, calling it a 'social justice factory' that drives 'intolerance of divergent beliefs'.

Peter Boghossian was a full-time assistant professor of philosophy at Portland State University for ten years until his resignation letter was published in September.

He shared the letter with Bari Weiss, a former New York Times columnist who quit her role at the paper after claiming to encounter the same refusal to consider non-liberal ideas that Boghossian describes at PSU.

Boghossian said college staff were abdicating their 'truth seeking mission' and instead driving intolerance of 'divergent reliefs' by squashing any view that was not liberal.

'Students at Portland State are not being taught to think. Rather, they are being trained to mimic the moral certainty of ideologues,' he wrote.

Boghossian previously penned a collection of hoax papers and submitted them to academic journals to prove that they would print anything that went along with their ideals, even if the theories in them were fake.



They included papers on dog rape and an adaptation to Hitler's Mein Kampf. The left reacted badly to it, saying he'd wasted editors' time.

Boghossian says he was harassed on campus with swastikas written on bathroom walls with his name next to them, purely because he had challenged the university's ideas.

He claims that at one time flyers went around campus depicting him with a Pinocchio nose, that he was spit on and that colleagues told students not to take his class.

In a statement to DailyMail.com, a spokesman for the university said: 'Portland State has always been and will continue to be a welcoming home for free speech and academic freedom.

'We believe that those practices are not in conflict with our core institutional values of student success; racial justice and equity; and proactive engagement with our community.

'As with all personnel matters, we have no comment on Dr. Boghossian's statement of resignation.'