he considered recasting it, but instead decided to "scrap this and start fresh with a clean slate."
Although some actors were disappointed, Brindisi said "every person said they got it and that they respected the very hard decision we had to make."
The theater made a similar statement following the death of George Floyd last year, with Brindisi saying it was time to "change our culture and make us more diverse and more equitable as a company."
"We’ve really dug in on diversity, equity and inclusion, the commitment to social justice and getting more diversity into our business across the board."
The theater hired a diversity consultant to address how the theater operates in the future, and added in this week's scrapping of "Cinderella," it would be paying "BIPOC artists to analyze the production with our creative teams through a new DEI lens."
"We wanted to meet it head on," Brindisi said. "We need to fix things and we’re going to do just that."
Brindisi said he's also taken his work home with him.
"I’ve taken on some specific things in my personal life and some longtime issues I’ve had with family members," he added.
"I’ve confronted some things that I haven’t confronted before. I’m on a journey to find out where I can be a better person and even an activist and ally."
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