“Venice on the Danube,” by Paul Du Quenoy
2 Articles
2 Articles
“Venice on the Danube,” by Paul du Quenoy
“Yesterday your mother offended me, so I drowned her,” snarls Barnaba, a ruthless government agent, at the end of La Gioconda, Amilcare Ponchielli’s sole opera to enter the standard repertoire, performed June 8–20 by the Hungarian National Opera in Budapest. Barnaba is addressing the unnamed title character, whose sobriquet simply means “the joyful one,” in the hope of terrorizing her in her last moments on Earth. Gioconda, who promised herself …
A restaurant in Gabicce Monte, between Marche and Romagna, where you look at the sea and the sunset but where there is also the deep and precise cuisine of Davide Di Fabio, for sixteen years at the court of Massimo Bottura all'Osteria Francescana. A magical place, that nourishes also the strong sense of welcome of the hosts, Allegra Tirotti Romanoff and Stefano Bizzarri
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