Northrop Auditorium in Minneapolis has canceled two performances Tuesday by a South Korean dance company after the troupe was unable to secure U.S. travel visas in time.
President Trump's recent attempts to restrict international travel do not appear to be a factor, a Northrop official said.
Bereishit is a four-year-old company whose profile has quickly risen on the international dance scene thanks to an unusual fusion of modern dance, martial arts and hip-hop. The Feb. 28 dates were supposed to be the first of three stops on the company's third American tour.
Northrop had filed a visa petition in October on behalf of the seven dancers, three technicians, a tour manager and artistic director Soon-Ho Park. Because it takes three days for artists to complete the visa process at a U.S. embassy, and the dancers were scheduled to fly from Seoul on Saturday, Northrop decided Thursday that it had no choice but to cancel not only the evening performance but a matinee for 1,900 high school students.
Approval finally came Friday — too late for Northrop, which had paid a fee to expedite the applications.
"It is just miserable," said Northrop director Christine Tschida. The venue has had visas "come down to the wire" before, she said, but never had to cancel.
Sophie Myrtil-McCourty, Bereishit's agent, said the seven dancers and their tour personnel are all South Korean nationals who have had no previous difficulties obtaining visas. The dance company traveled to Texas in 2015 and performed last year at the prestigious Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival in Massachusetts.
"We've had no problems," Myrtil-McCourty said. "This is just silliness."