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The music documentary ‘Lilith Fair: Building a Mystery’ premiered on CBC and CBC Gem.Sammy Kogan/The Canadian Press

Sarah McLachlan cancelled musical performances planned for the Sunday premiere of her Lilith Fair documentary in Los Angeles, saying it was a gesture of solidarity to support free speech.

The Halifax-born singer-songwriter took the stage before the screening of Lilith Fair: Building a Mystery, telling the crowd that she and her fellow musicians had “collectively decided not to perform.”

The music documentary premiered on CBC and CBC Gem in Canada. It is distributed in the U.S. by ABC News Studios and Hulu, both of which are owned by Disney.

Last week, the company became embroiled in controversy over pulling late-night comedian Jimmy Kimmel from its ABC stations, after he said in his monologue that some supporters of the Make America Great Again movement were trying to capitalize on conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s assassination.

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Disney’s decision came after two companies that operate a quarter of its ABC affiliates said they would no longer air Kimmel’s show, and Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr suggested his agency would look into what he said.

Reports in the Hollywood Reporter and Puck said that McLachlan and Jewel were the artists set to take the stage, with a surprise appearance by Olivia Rodrigo, who also appears in the documentary about the all-women music festival from the late 1990s.

“It’s a gift for all of us to see (this film), but also I’ve grappled with being here tonight and around what to say about the present situation that we are all faced with, the stark contraction to the many advances we’ve made watching the insidious erosion of women’s rights, of trans and queer rights, the muzzling of free speech,” McLachlan was quoted in the Hollywood Reporter as saying. 

A spokesperson for McLachlan declined to comment but said the trade publication’s story was accurate. 

“I think we’re all fearful for what comes next, and none of us know, but what I do know is that I have to keep pushing forward as an artist, as a woman to find a way through,” the singer added.

“And though I don’t begin to know what the answer is, I believe we all need to work toward a softening to let in the possibility of a better way, because I see music as a bridge to our shared humanity, to finding common ground.”

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