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Opera Has a Sustainability Problem. One Company Wants to Fix It.

Opera Has a Sustainability Problem. One Company Wants to Fix It.

New York Times25-03-2025

Opera is an art form made of other art forms: music, theater, dance, visual art, film. It brings together performers, creative teams and audiences from around the world for what, at its finest, is a glorious but ephemeral experience.
Imagine, then, the carbon footprint for this grandest of performing arts.
It's not just about the globalized nature of opera today. If companies want to go green, they have to think beyond plane tickets to how productions are made, what materials are used in costumes and sets, and how the theater operates. They have to think about what food they serve, what dishes they use, and whether water comes from glass or plastic bottles. They even have to think about how audience members, often thousands at a time, travel to and from performances.
In an age of tighter budgets and rising expenses, it can be difficult for houses to know where to start. But the Dutch National Opera in Amsterdam is setting an example with the great leaps it has made in recent years toward sustainability. The dream, distant for now, is carbon neutrality; the reality may still be a work in progress, yet changes have been adopted with remarkable speed.
Under the banner of its Green Deal program, the opera house has brought sustainability to virtually every corner of its operation. This year, it even updated its contracts for creative teams to include a commitment that their productions use at least 50 percent recycled material.
'If an artist says, 'Sorry, but I'm not interested in your Green Deal,' that's fine,' said Sophie de Lint, who has been the director of the Dutch National Opera since 2018. 'We shake hands and move on. But that hasn't happened. People are actually really open and want to go there.'
The Dutch National Opera, to be clear, has the advantage of its Green Deal efforts being backed by generous state funding, as well as the luxury of operating in the Netherlands, a country where sustainability is woven into daily life. It would be a much more difficult undertaking in the United States, where climate change is comparatively politicized and financially starved opera companies barely have the structural wiggle room to get rid of their plastic Champagne flutes.
De Lint, who was the artistic director of the Zurich Opera House in Switzerland before moving to Amsterdam, said that the city's culture is 'why I came to work here.'
'It's a country where you don't think about what was better before,' she added. 'It's about what could be better tomorrow.'
Kenza Koutchoukali, a 36-year-old Dutch director who is staging the premiere of 'Oum' at the company's Opera Forward Festival this year, said that the urgency of fighting climate change is 'something that everyone my age is aware of.'
The Dutch National Opera took an early step toward sustainability in 2019, when it received local certificates for the Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Method, better known as BREEAM. Similar to LEED certification in the United States, it requires things like installing solar panels, finding green methods of waste disposal and implementing programs to promote biodiversity. The opera house, for example, built boxes for bird nests, and gardens to attract and nurture local insects.
But that was just the start. The pandemic, de Lint said, helped opera companies see that entrenched habits could change quickly. In 2021, she hired a sustainability coordinator, Julie Fuchs (who, in a running joke and slight source of confusion, shares her name with the soprano Julie Fuchs). De Lint likes to refer to her as a coach because, rather than dictate changes, 'she so brilliantly coaches all of us.'
Fuchs got to work developing a way to calculate the carbon footprint of everything that goes into a performance at the opera house. In 2022, she discovered that the biggest sources of emissions were audience members and refreshments at the theater's bars.
It's difficult to move the needle on audience habits outside the theater: whether they commute by car, train, bike or even plane. But the Dutch National Opera was able to quickly change how it operated internally. The company, Fuchs said, bases its policies on the Paris Agreement, the international climate treaty that was signed in 2016 and aims to cut emissions by 50 percent by 2030.
Much of Fuchs's job has involved collecting data, which guides many of her targets for the opera house. For example, she found a way to determine whether going paperless in the office would be just as harmful as printing everything because of its reliance on cloud storage. (It's not.) Through calculations like that, the company has arrived at changes throughout the building.
It began offering only vegetarian options for food. Even bitterballen, the traditional Dutch snack of stew croquettes, are now made with mushrooms instead of beef. At one banquet with high-level donors, diners were deep into their meal before they realized, and asked why, there were no fish or meat dishes. 'They ended up eating all the bread,' de Lint said. 'It was a reminder that you really need to communicate, but it also takes some time to change habits.'
The theater's bar doesn't use any disposable dishes, and there isn't a plastic bottle in sight. Inside and out, the building is outfitted with LED lights. And for staff, air travel has been drastically reduced. 'Now I have no points,' Bob Brandsen, the house's technical director, said playfully.
Directors also travel less than they used to. Ideally, they do what they can by video call, then come to Amsterdam for a long stretch before opening night. It's more complicated for singers, some of whom are used to leaving town on days off, often to visit family. That could limit the artists wanting to appear at the house; some are known to balance their work with caregiving or needing to be close to their children.
'Amsterdam is a hyper-international, multicultural city, and I want us to remain an international opera house,' de Lint said. 'But we have to try to do this in the most responsible way, and again, you must have this conversation with artists, as early as possible.'
It is also crucial to discuss sustainability efforts with creative teams early, even before they sign their contracts to take on a production. To help them reuse materials, Fuchs has worked to create a database of props, costumes and more that the Dutch National Opera keeps in storage.
The Green Deal also provides artists with a pyramid-shaped diagram of building materials. At the top is the worst sustainability offender: aluminum. (One suggested replacement is steel, which is less harmfully extracted and can also be recycled.) Near the bottom is wood, a renewable resource, and even better is something generic from another production that can simply be used again.
De Lint said the Green Deal has also affected how a season is planned, with a move toward what she called 'short-term programming.' If a project doesn't seem to be working out, if artistic vision and sustainability goals appear irreconcilable, 'we can be a bit radical and say 'No, we are not doing this anymore.''
'It's tough,' she said, 'but it's important.'
There is no exact template for how the house's policies work. Approaches are as varied as the repertoire, from a new chamber opera to Puccini's enormous 'Il Trittico,' directed by Barrie Kosky last season. At any rate, the company learns more with each production. 'Basically,' Brandsen said, 'we're making prototypes every time.'
A notable case was Ellen Reid's 'The Shell Trial,' which premiered at the Opera Forward Festival last year. As a work about climate change, it also aspired to be as close to carbon-neutral as possible. But it hit a snag when the creative team decided it wanted fire and ice in the production.
Fuchs said a simple solution would have been to say no. Instead, she began to research the carbon footprint of using gas to light a fire onstage. The company could purchase 'green' gas, but it would have to be shipped from Belgium. Then she found that it would not be much of a problem to use the local gas, but to minimize emissions the amount would have to be reduced. The artists agreed to cut it by 50 percent, which satisfied them as well as Fuchs's goals.
'We try to do this for every project,' de Lint said. 'I'm not saying it always succeeds, but we are really trying.'
For the Opera Forward Festival this year, the house challenged itself to present three productions, all premieres, on its main stage using sustainable methods. It began on March 14 with 'We Are the Lucky Ones,' for eight singers and a large orchestra, and continued the next week with 'Oum' and 'Codes,' an immense work conceived by the director Gregory Caers.
There were signs of the Green Deal throughout. Both 'We Are the Lucky Ones' and 'Oum' were performed on a shallow stage, and designed with the kind of portability that could allow them to be assembled and struck quickly, but also to travel widely, whether to an opera house or a concert hall. Koutchoukali said that because of the guidelines, she knew to avoid materials like silk in the costumes and scenic design for 'Oum.'
That opera's score, by Bushra El-Turk, wasn't printed until it was in its most final form. But, she said, it wasn't a problem. 'That's the goal, right?' she added. 'With a leading opera house like this, you let it become part of the work, and eventually it becomes the culture.'
Caers was hoping for a similar cultural shift with 'Codes,' which is performed by a cast of about 170 singing and dancing students projecting sheer energy from a bare stage. 'Of course, we have an ecologic way of building a performance, but there's more,' he said. 'When we gather and talk about this, we create a dialogue with these youngsters that, maybe, they take to their kitchen tables at home. And slowly these waves begin to change the world a little bit.'
For all the optimism at the Dutch National Opera, people there acknowledge that a lot of work remains, along with an open question about how other houses can adopt their own version of the Green Deal. Fuchs went straight from an interview in Amsterdam to Barcelona, Spain (by train of course), to share her findings at the latest Opera Europa conference. And through co-productions, the company's peers will naturally take on its practices.
'This work is easier with others next to you,' Fuchs said. 'We all know that it's going to take years, that we're at the bottom of a mountain that we need to climb. But we just need to start.'

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Champagne shades: The NBA-inspired trend that's taking over soccer celebrations
Champagne shades: The NBA-inspired trend that's taking over soccer celebrations

New York Times

time8 hours ago

  • New York Times

Champagne shades: The NBA-inspired trend that's taking over soccer celebrations

Trophies and rings are the renowned physical marks of success in American sports, but there's an accessory that has become just as prevalent in championship-winning locker rooms as the shine of platinum or gold: 'champagne goggles'. Champagne has a long-term association with sporting glory. A bottle of Moet & Chandon, from one of the world's most prominent champagne houses, was passed to Italian motorsports driver Tazio Nuvolari after winning the Vanderbilt Cup in 1936. By 1969, honouring success with a bottle of champagne became part of the formal victory celebrations in Formula One, establishing a relationship between triumph in the sporting arena and sparkling wine. Advertisement It turned out to be a lasting one, with this niche motorsport tradition spreading across the sporting sphere in the United States and Europe. During the Premier League era, it was standard practice for man-of-the-match recipients to be handed a large bottle of champagne as a prize until 2012, when the league switched to a trophy in acknowledgement of the multi-faith diversity of its players. Still, drinking and spraying champagne to mark sporting success has remained, with soccer clubs Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool even bringing non-alcoholic versions into the locker room to ensure everyone could participate in celebrating their respective Europa League and Premier League successes. Until recently, the 'champagne goggles' phenomenon was an entirely American one. However, it's inspired a trend that has been adopted by some of soccer's biggest names — and sometimes, champagne isn't even involved. It's unclear where the trend started but baseball hall-of-famer David 'Big Papi' Ortiz is probably the first influential figure to bring goggles to the locker room. The designated hitter was a star of the famous 2004 Boston Red Sox team that swept the St Louis Cardinals 4-0 in the World Series to end their 86-year wait for a title. As is customary in the MLB, they celebrated that triumph with champagne but long before ski goggles became the champion's eyewear du jour, Ortiz protected his eyes with swimming goggles. According to former team-mate Torii Hunter, Ortiz learned a lesson from their divisional title in 2002 with his previous club, the Minnesota Twins, where they celebrated without eye protection. As reported on the MLB website, 'their eyes burned enough from the champagne that they still hurt the next day'. Corks flying around the locker room at up to 30mph present a real danger, too. In 2022, Eritrean cyclist Biniam Girmay suffered an eye injury when a prosecco cork hit him after he won the 10th stage of the Giro d'Italia. The injury forced him to withdraw from the competition. 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Casey Elsass shares recipes perfect for any gathering from new cookbook 'What Can I Bring?'

time2 days ago

Casey Elsass shares recipes perfect for any gathering from new cookbook 'What Can I Bring?'

Casey Elsass is here to take the stress out of every partygoer's favorite question with recipes from his new cookbook, "What Can I Bring?: Recipes to Help You Live Your Guest Life." The veteran food and cookbook writer joined " Good Morning America" and "GMA3" on Friday to share a few standout dishes from the book, which includes 75 crowd-pleasing recipes designed with portability and ease in mind. Elsass showed us how to make pasta salad, "scrunchy bread" and party Krispie treats, complete with tips for packing and serving with minimal stress on-site. Check out the recipes below. Pasta Salad Servings: 6 "I could write an entire book about pasta salad, I just think it's so perfect. Pasta is the blankest canvas for whatever you want -- for evidence, please see 1 million pasta dishes everywhere -- so I really don't think there is a wrong answer here. But I do need to take a moment of your time to speak my truth about pasta salad. It often has cherry tomatoes and they're rarely good ones. It usually has raw red onion, which is immediately too pungent 3 seconds after dicing." "It usually has a chopped herb of some kind that just withers into brownness as it sits. And most people fumble the best window of flavor by not letting the hot pasta soak in the flavors of the sauce! To all these ends, I've made three sauces that hit the mark for my dream salad: a spicy red sauce made with broiled cherry tomatoes, an Italian sub – inspired dressing made with lightly pickled red onions, and a quick little pesto for a vibrantly green chopped herb. And you better believe all three versions get tossed with the pasta hot out of the pot so the noodles can slightly soften and extremely saturate." Ingredients Pasta sauce (see below) Kosher salt 12 to 16 ounces dried pasta in a fun shape, such as fusilli, gemelli, orecchiette, radiatori or rigatoni 8 ounces mozzarella pearls, drained 4 ounces sliced salami, cut into 1/4-inch strips (optional) 1 cup lightly packed fresh basil leaves 1 cup lightly packed fresh parsley leaves 1/2 cup sliced kalamata olives 1/2 cup sliced banana peppers, hot or mild 2 ounces Parmesan cheese Directions 1. Make your pasta sauce and keep it close by. In a large Dutch oven, combine 12 cups water and 1 tablespoon salt. Set over high heat and bring to a boil. Stir in the pasta and cook until just al dente, according to the directions on the box. Drain in a colander and give it a few good shakes to get the water out. 2. In a large bowl, toss the pasta with about a third of the sauce. (Just eyeball it, it's all going in there eventually anyway.) Let the pasta sit for about 15 minutes to cool down. Then add any combo of the mozzarella, salami, basil, parsley, olives and peppers, and toss to combine. I need all of them to function, but this is your salad. 3. Finally, toss in the last of the sauce. Cover the bowl tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 2 hours or up to 24 hours -- the flavor really improves the longer the ingredients mingle. Let it sit at room temperature, covered, for 30 minutes before serving. My only request is to save the Parm until just before serving and use a vegetable peeler to shave it directly into the bowl. Toss lightly, but mostly leave it on top. Pasta sauce Red Sauce Preheat the oven to 500 F. In an 8-by-8-inch baking pan or oven-safe skillet, stir together 10 ounces whole cherry or grape tomatoes, 8 sun-dried tomatoes that have been finely chopped, 1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil, 2 grated garlic cloves, 1 tablespoon red wine vinegar, 1 tablespoon tomato paste, an optional 1 tablespoon Calabrian chile paste if you like it spicy, 1 teaspoon sugar, 1 teaspoon kosher salt and 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper. Broil until the tomatoes are bursting, about 6 minutes. Oil + Vin In a medium bowl, combine 1/2 of a medium red onion that's been very thinly sliced, 2 grated garlic cloves, and 1/4 cup red wine vinegar. Let the onions soak for 5 minutes to soften. Whisk in 1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil, 1/4 cup mayonnaise, 1 teaspoon dried oregano, 1 teaspoon kosher salt and 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper. Pesto In a food processor, combine 2 cups baby spinach, 1 cup fresh basil leaves, 1/3 cup pine nuts or walnuts, 2 ice cubes, the juice of 1 lemon, 2 grated garlic cloves, either 2 teaspoons white miso or 1 teaspoon kosher salt, and 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper. Process until the ice cubes stop rattling around and everything is nicely chopped. Add 1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil and pulse 2 times just to combine. Tips from Elsass: If you're going to use cherry tomatoes, roast them or at least toss them with salt so their flavors concentrate. Skip the raw onion. There's always time to let it mellow out in a little vinegar. Instead of chopping the herbs, which will wither and brown, use whole leaves for a visual punch. Save the Parmesan until just before serving, and use a vegetable peeler to create nice big strips. Scrunchy Bread Makes an 8-inch round "Welcome to Part Two of freezer dough reinvented. Phyllo is our focus this time for a round loaf that's all crispy, shattering layers on the outside, all warm and savory on the inside. Blending up sun-dried tomatoes with feta will get you a perfectly salty, rich center and then it's just dabbing a little olive oil as you layer up the phyllo and filling. This is the 'Wow, what is in this?' moment we all fantasize about." Ingredients 16-ounce box frozen phyllo dough, thawed 8-ounce jar sun-dried tomatoes in oil 6 ounces feta 2 tablespoons fresh oregano leaves 1 1/2 cups extra-virgin olive oil Sesame seeds and freshly ground black pepper Directions 1. ​​Remember to set the phyllo dough in the refrigerator overnight to thaw. 2. Preheat the oven to 375 F and set a rack in the center. Dip a pastry brush into the sun-dried tomato oil and lightly brush the bottom and sides of an 8-inch (or 9-inch) cake pan. Fold a piece of parchment in half lengthwise and press to adhere across the cake pan (for an easy lift later) and brush that too. 3. 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Start folding the overhang into the center a couple pieces at a time and lightly brushing the top with the tomato oil. I like to spread the first few pieces flat so the filling is covered, then start making pretty scrunches around the surface with the rest. (You can even trim off some of the overhang to twist and scrunch and place around the top.) 10. Brush any remaining tomato oil over the top, then generously sprinkle sesame seeds and some good cracks of pepper across the surface. 11. Slide the pan into the oven and set a timer for 45 minutes. 12. The phyllo should be golden brown and crispy, but give it another 5 minutes if you think it needs it. 13. Cool for 15 minutes (or completely) in the pan, then use the parchment to airlift it to a cutting board or serving plate. 14. Slide the parchment out from underneath before slicing and serving. Party tricks: This is perfect at room temperature, but if you really want to serve it hot, assemble everything at home and cover the top of the pan before transporting. Plan your oven space ahead of time with your host, bake it, cool for 15 minutes in the pan, then use the parchment to lift out and serve right away. Any leftover bread can be stored in a zip-top bag at room temperature for up to 2 days. Tips from Elsass: This is bread that repurposes freezer dough for anyone a little nervous to bake. With impressive layers and savory filling, this is the "Wow, what is in this?" moment we all fantasize about. Remember to set the phyllo dough in the refrigerator overnight to thaw. Because we're making layers that all bake together, you don't have to worry if the sheets tear. And any scraps can be used on the top layer. This is perfect at room temperature, but you can also assemble everything at home and bake when you get there. Party Krispie Treats Makes 12 squares "A quick toss with some lightly browned butter and toasted coconut shreds gives these krispies an unusually great depth of flavor. We could stop right there, but where's the fun in that? What makes these party krispies is the no rules, no limits toppings as you pile on everything sweet and gorgeous and fun. There's a long list of my favorites in the ingredient list, and the only advice I have for you is to think strategically when you're planning out what to buy, keeping in mind that you ideally want a mix of colors, sizes, textures, flavors, and shapes for maximum impact." 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In a large Dutch oven (see party tricks), melt the butter over medium heat. Once the butter is melted, add the coconut and use a rubber spatula to coat in the butter. We're going to lightly toast the coconut and lightly brown the butter at the same time, so stay sharp. 3. Let the mixture simmer and bubble, stirring occasionally. At about 4 minutes, it'll be pretty foamy. Start stirring continuously so you can see what's going on in there. Around 5 or 6 minutes in, the coconut will have a light golden toast and the butter will be tan. 4. Remove from the stove and immediately stir in the marshmallows and salt. Keep stirring until they're about 75 percent melted, then add the Rice Krispies. Very slowly and gently fold in the cereal as the marshmallows finish melting. (You'll hear some snap, crackle, and popping -- totally normal.) 5. Scrape into the prepared baking pan. Lightly coat a smaller piece of parchment with nonstick spray and use it to press the mixture into an evenly distributed rectangle (see Party Tricks). While it's still sticky, blanket the top with a mix of treats. 6. Slide the pan into the refrigerator for about 30 minutes to set. When the krispies feel firm, use the sling to lift them out of the pan and onto a large cutting board. 7. Slide the parchment out from underneath, then slice into 12 equal squares. Arrange them on a serving platter or store somewhere cool until it's go time. Party tricks: Rice Krispies are not gluten-free! A few brands are, like Nature's Path and One Degree Organic Foods. Just pay attention to your toppings if you're going GF. A light-colored enamel or stainless-steel pot will help you monitor the butter browning. Anything with a black surface will literally leave you in the dark. Leftover treats can be stored in a zip-top bag at room temperature for up to 3 days. 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ABC will receive a commission for purchases made through these links. SOME PRICES ARE DYNAMIC AND MAY CHANGE FROM THE DATE OF PUBLICATION. Have questions about ordering or a purchase? Click here. Caraway Baking Sheet Duo $115 Caraway Shop Now Amazon Overmont Enameled Cast Iron Dutch Oven $59.99 Amazon Shop Now

Report: Konate backs Frimpong to thrive in Liverpool right-back role
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Yahoo

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Report: Konate backs Frimpong to thrive in Liverpool right-back role

Konate Confident in Frimpong Chemistry Ahead of New Liverpool Era Liverpool's backline is preparing for a reshuffle this summer, with Jeremie Frimpong arriving from Bayer Leverkusen in a £29.5 million deal. One man unfazed by the change is Ibrahima Konate, who has shared his confidence in forming an effective partnership with the Dutch full-back. Advertisement For the first time since 2017, the right-back slot at Liverpool is set for a major overhaul. With Trent Alexander-Arnold expected to play a more advanced midfield role under new manager Arne Slot, the door has opened for either Frimpong or Conor Bradley to cement themselves as first-choice. Despite the uncertainty, Konate is not concerned about how things will gel in defence. Speaking to The Athletic, the Frenchman made it clear he trusts Frimpong's ability to settle quickly and meet Slot's demands. 'I think the coach's instructions to him will be clear because we'll do lots of video work,' he said. 'The fact he's signed for us means he must have spoken to the coach a lot, so he'll know what the coach expects from him. Advertisement 'It'll be different with him compared to Trent. That's for sure, because they're different players. 'But I'm happy for him. He's a good person, very funny, and I wish him every happiness at Liverpool when he arrives. I have no worries about him.' Photo: IMAGO New Dynamics at Right-Back Frimpong brings a very different profile to the role. Unlike the more measured and playmaking qualities of Alexander-Arnold, the former Leverkusen man is known for his explosive pace and forward thrusts. In truth, he has often played more as a wing-back or even an attacking winger. This gives Arne Slot plenty to work with as he begins shaping his system at Anfield. Whether Frimpong operates as a conventional right-back or provides width higher up the pitch remains to be seen, but the squad appears ready to embrace his qualities. Advertisement Konate's trust will be crucial. Defensive chemistry does not form overnight, but clear communication and understanding are the building blocks. Slot's video-heavy approach to coaching may also help speed up that process, especially with Frimpong's eagerness to learn. One of Frimpong's biggest assets may not even be his technical skill, but his presence in the dressing room. Multiple voices from his former club have highlighted the positive impact he brings to the group. Bayer Leverkusen winger Nathan Tella spoke highly of the 23-year-old in an interview with Sky Sports. 'He's probably one of my favourite teammates that I've had. Advertisement 'He's just got so much energy, he's always in a good mood, he's someone you always want to see. 'If you're doing well, he's one of the players you always want to have around you.' Tella also underlined Frimpong's upward trajectory. 'First of all he's a brilliant player. 'He wouldn't have been able to get the move or have the interest he's had without having great performances for a number of years now. 'He's just one of those players who gets better every game. I don't think it'll take him any time to adapt. 'I'm quite confident that his speed, his main asset, is going to give defenders a lot of problems and he'll be able to use it to get goals for Liverpool and to create chances as well.' Frimpong's Arrival Signals Tactical Evolution Frimpong's signing represents more than a new name on the team sheet. It signals a tactical evolution for Liverpool. Slot appears ready to depart from the patterns set by his predecessor and bring a faster, more fluid approach down the right. Advertisement The early signs suggest the chemistry between Konate and Frimpong could be crucial to that transition. Konate, now a senior figure in the backline, will likely act as a stabilising influence beside Frimpong, allowing the Dutchman to roam forward with confidence. If their understanding develops quickly, it could become one of Liverpool's most dynamic defensive partnerships in years.

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