TOKYOâIn an exclusive interview with The Daily Beast, an employee for a company that helped produce the Olympics Opening Ceremony says that the Tokyo Organizing Committee lied in official statements about its reasons for cutting an African performer from the event.
On July 22, the day before the Tokyo 2020 Opening Ceremony, Senegalese percussionist Latyr Sy posted on Facebook that his performance in the event had been abruptly canceled in May. According to Sy and his team, after repeatedly asking for an explanation, representatives from the Japanese advertising monolith Dentsuâthe Gamesâ exclusive marketing partnerâeventually told them that the Tokyo Organizing Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games had raised concerns that âpeople will ask: Why is there an African in it?â
Syâs post went viral, and the backlash over his allegations forced a response from the committee. Its spokesperson, Masanori Takaya said in a July 24 press conference that Syâs allegations were ânot factualâ and that due to âbudgetary constraints and COVID-19 countermeasures, a number of musicians and performances had to be canceled.â
But according to a Dentsu employee who spoke to The Daily Beast on the condition of anonymity, removing Sy from the ceremony was at least just as expensive as keeping him.
âWas any money actually saved by cutting him from the ceremonies? Not really because we paid a generous kill fee. You could also look at it as hush money. He was supposed to stay quiet,â said the employee. âThe head of the Olympic Committee, [Toshiro] Muto, said that the African was cut due to budget restraints. Thatâs kind of a lie. You canât unilaterally cancel a contract without paying most of it. And in this case, Iâve heard the artist was paid more than originally promised.â
The employee added that while âSy wasnât the only performerâ cut from the ceremony, âitâs true, someone in the Tokyo Olympic Organizing Committee was miffed about having an African performer in a Japanese Ceremony. There was, of course, opposition to even having Naomi Osaka light the torch, but she is a naturalized Japanese and she is a winner. Everyone loves a winner.â
Responding to a request for comment from The Daily Beast regarding Syâs removal, the Tokyo Organizing Committee provided the same reasoning it initially did. âChanges were made to the Ceremony for reasons entirely different to the situation described in the article. Plans for the Opening Ceremony originally included a musical segment in which many musicians, including the musician in question, would perform,â the statement read. âHowever, due to budget constraints as well as the necessity for COVID-19 countermeasures, the creative plans for the Ceremony were changed.â
The committee declined to respond to the specific allegations made by the Dentsu employee. âWe have reviewed the addressed questions. However, our previously submitted comment will be all. Please refer to it once again,â it said in an email.
Sy told The Daily Beast that, initially, he had no intention of making public what happened. However, constantly seeing rehearsal footage on television in the days leading up to the ceremony, which was practically identical to the one he was removed from, compelled him to speak up.
âYou see it on the news, and you think, âIâm supposed to be there.â And you wonder, what were all the months of effort I put into preparations, and the 25 years I have worked in and contributed to Japan for?â he said. âI donât hate this country. Iâve spent half of my life here. How can I hate it? But this kind of thinking? It has to stop. It must end. Itâs 2021.â
Syâs original Facebook post, which was written in both Japanese and English, caught the attention of the local and international media, and was shared over 1,200 times on the platform. The tabloid Nikkan Gendai wrote a full page article on Syâs dismissal from the ceremony. The blunt headline read, âOrganising Committee accused of blatant racial discrimination! An African performer was excluded from the opening ceremony.â
The prominent musician is a permanent resident of Japan and has lived and worked in the country for over two decades. He has appeared alongside the nationâs top artists in concerts and television programs both domestic and abroad. He performed in front of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who was called âthe face of the Tokyo Olympicsâ for his role in bringing the games to Japan, and met Emperor Naruhito at the Seventh Tokyo International Conference on African Development in 2019.
Sy told The Daily Beast that due to an agreement with Dentsu, he could not comment on any details of his contract with the company or discuss payments. His team memberâwho was involved in managing the logistics of the canceled performanceâsaid the COVID-19 explanation given in official statements do not make sense either, because the musician was invited to perform at the opening ceremony back in December 2020, when Tokyoâs coronavirus situation was as severe as it is now.
The opening ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics was supposed to present a new, more progressive Japan that celebrated âdiversity and harmonyâ to the world, but it was steeped in controversy well before it even began. A creative director of the ceremony, Hiroshi Sasaki, had to resign for fat-shaming a female celebrity whom he intended to dress in pig ears as an âOlympigâ for the event. The ceremonyâs original composer, Keigo Oyamada, stepped down after his history of abusing disabled children resurfaced. Another creative director, Kentaro Kobayashi, was fired for past Holocaust jokes. And on top of that, despite warnings, the ceremony featured the music of Koichi Sugiyama, a homophobic war-crimes denier.
âI never tried to blame Japanese society. I was afraid to say anything because people might hate me. But, as soon as I posted on Facebook, the thing just kept going off,â said Sy, referring to the hundreds of notifications of likes and shares he received that day. âI thought people would blame me but everyone from all around the world is sending me messages of âDonât give up.ââ
Sy said that although he is not giving up on his musical career, this incident has made him consider expanding his sphere outside of Japan. âIf it continues to go on like this, I might leave this country I love so much,â he told The Daily Beast. âI donât want to, but this mentality is not good for anyone.â
âJake Adelstein contributed reporting to this article.