Dear Lara is a 2026 documentary film written and directed by violinist Lara St. John on the subject of sexual abuse at classical music conservatories and symphony orchestras.[1][2] It premiered as an entry at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival in February 2026.[3]

Dear Lara
Directed byLara St. John
Produced byPatrick Hamm
Edited byChristie Herring
Release date
  • February 6, 2026 (2026-02-06) (SBIFF)
Running time
95 minutes
CountriesCanada
United States
LanguageEnglish

Synopsis

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Narrated by St. John, the film describes her own experience of having been raped as a minor by her instructor at the Curtis Institute of Music and then introduces the stories of additional victims of abuse from other institutions in North America and Europe.[4] Each of the accounts addresses the institutional complicity that has made it extremely difficult to implement lasting cultural change at any of the institutions in question.[5] Interviewees include survivors and subject matter experts.

Reception

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The film was praised by multiple sources following its premiere. Originally scheduled for three screenings at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival, a fourth was added due to audience demand.[6] Reviewer Jackie Spafford described it as "an infuriating, queasy, shocking, inspiring and powerful watch."[7] Richardine Bartee called it "one of the most urgent and emotionally devastating documentaries of the year."[8] Peter Wilson, on Violinist.com, called it "a beautiful film about horrifying events."[9]

Interviewees

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  • Lusiana Lukman, pianist
  • Frank Powdermaker, fiancée of cellist Robie Brown
  • Lisamarie Vanna, violinist
  • Mascha van Sloten, violinist
  • Heather Bird, double bassist
  • Zeneba Bowers, violinist
  • Katherine Needleman, oboist
  • Samuel Schultz, opera singer
  • Scott St. John, violinist
  • Anne Midgette, journalist
  • Sammy Sussman, journalist
  • Okke Westdorp, conservatory administrator
  • Marci Hamilton, founder of ChildUSA

References

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