Is Lydia Tr a real person? The story behind Cate Blanchetts new role, explained

Posted by Larita Shotwell on Sunday, April 28, 2024

In Tár, Cate Blanchett plays a renowned composer whose carefully crafted persona is destroyed through a series of choices she makes both during and before the events of the film. The movie feels like a biopic; it opens with an interview listing all of Tár’s achievements and portrays celebrity and fame in a way that feels all too familiar to an audience that grew up in a world obsessed with tabloids and social media. When Tár ambushes a composer on stage, we expect the YouTube video to be just a Google search away.

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Given the realistic environment of the film, viewers have been leaving the theater curious to know more about the titular character. Many internet-savvy audience members might be wondering how they could miss what must have been a heavily-documented fall from grace; how could such a famous, world-renowned composer slip through the cracks like that?

Who is Lydia Tár?

willing to bravely admit online that I thought Lydia Tár was a real person and the movie was a real biopic until 15 minutes into the post-movie discussion with my husband

— Lauren Wilford (@lauren_wilford) October 25, 2022

It’s easy to not have your antics memorialized online when you’re not a real person.

Lydia Tár is a fictional composer but the movie does market itself as though it were based off a true story: the film description describes Tár as “widely considered one of the greatest living composer/conductors and first-ever female chief conductor of a major German orchestra.” Her accomplishments in the movie are cemented in reality as well; she was the music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, then the New York Philharmonic, and even an elusive EGOT winner. While she has the kind of celebrity a conductor-composer hasn’t seen since Leonard Bernstein (who was her mentor in the film, of course), it’s not unheard of for people to be highly celebrated in their niche but relatively unknown to the masses.

If you watched the movie and believed Tár was a real person, you’re not alone. Many viewers took to Twitter to discuss the film and how they were bamboozled into thinking it was a real biopic about an actual composer. Watching Tár’s facade crumble is a dramatic spectacle, but the film does such a good job of placing her firmly in reality that it’s hard to not feel as if you’re watching a real woman’s life fall apart. Tár is power-hungry and corrupt in a way that feels reminiscent of other people in power (think #MeToo) that it’s not impossible to see her actions playing out in real life as they do in the film.

(passionately arguing with my friends as we walk out of a movie theater) No, no, I think Tár is real. I think the world of Tár actually exists

— Brooks Otterlake (@i_zzzzzz) October 20, 2022

While Lydia Tár might not be real, there are definitely people in power like her. And while we want to see more women composer-conductors in the orchestral world, it’s probably better that the very corrupt Tár is not one of them.

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