Three months after the invasion, the capital’s grand old venue stages an emotional comeback … met by a 10-minute standing ovation

The lights dimmed, a hush came over the auditorium and the orchestra struck up the first notes of the overture. This ritual has taken place thousands of times at Kyiv’s grand opera house over the past century, but the performance on Saturday afternoon was something out of the ordinary.

In a city that over the past three months became used to wailing air-raid sirens and the thuds of artillery from the suburbs, the audience was instead treated to the frothy melodies of Rossini’s The Barber of Seville.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

V&A insists it has ‘responsibility’ to tell truth about collections

Museum responds to government letter urging alignment with its stance on ‘contested…

Put an end to the Tory conveyor belt of sleaze and favours | Letters

Readers respond to the lobbying scandal engulfing the former prime minister David…

Ontario COVID cases

ontario covid, covid cases ontario, Doug Ford, covid cases in ontario today

UK agrees to negotiate with Mauritius over handover of Chagos Islands

Foreign secretary indicates major reversal of policy that could allow return of…