
-
Putin says recession in Russia 'must not be allowed to happen'
-
Ton-up Jaiswal makes England toil in first Test as India take control
-
NBA star Durant takes minority PSG stake
-
US enters first major heat wave of 2025
-
Macron says Europe must become 'space power' again
-
Big-name porn sites back online in France after age check row
-
Zverev battles into Halle semis, joined by Medvedev
-
Romania names pro-EU PM after months of instability
-
UK MPs vote in favour of assisted dying bill in historic step
-
Indonesia President denies G7 snub in Russia visit
-
European powers meet Iran in Geneva as war with Israel rages
-
Armenia PM to meet Erdogan on 'historic' Turkey visit
-
Staff shortages bite as Greeks shun low-paid tourism jobs
-
EU plans to scrap anti-greenwashing rules after pushback
-
Iranian foreign minister says Israel attack 'betrayal' of diplomacy with US
-
Oil drops, stocks climb as Trump delays Iran move
-
UK MPs vote in favour of assisted dying law in historic step
-
Bangladesh's lead over Sri Lanka nears 200 in first Test
-
Dutch footballer Promes extradited over cocaine smuggling case
-
World Bank and IMF climate snub 'worrying': COP29 presidency
-
Liverpool agree deal for Bournemouth's Kerkez: reports
-
UK probes Amazon over suspected late payments to food suppliers
-
Sinner says early Halle exit gives him more time to prepare for Wimbledon
-
England strike back against India in first Test
-
Netanyahu's other battle: swinging Trump and US behind Iran war
-
French champagne makers face prison in human trafficking trial
-
Europe to offer Iran 'diplomatic solution' to war with Israel
-
Oil drops, European stocks climb as Trump delays Iran move
-
Kiwi sailing legend Burling joins Italy's America's Cup team
-
US singer Chris Brown pleads not guilty in UK assault case
-
UK MPs debate assisted dying law ahead of key vote
-
Second woman accuses French senator of drugging her
-
Russian government, central bank spar over economic downturn
-
Thai PM meets army commander in attempt to defuse political crisis
-
More microplastics in glass bottles than plastic: study
-
Top Iran, EU diplomats to hold nuclear talks
-
Armenia PM arrives in Turkey for 'historic' visit
-
Salah among nominees for PFA Player of the Year award
-
EU bars Chinese firms from major state medical equipment contracts
-
Three-time world champion figure skater Sakamoto to retire
-
Crude sinks as Trump delays decision on Iran strike
-
Two dead in Mexico as Hurricane Erick moves on from Mexican coast
-
US appeals court allows Trump control of National Guard in LA
-
Monsters and memes: Labubu dolls ride China soft-power wave
-
Chad hopes 'green charcoal' can save vanishing forests
-
'Turkish salmon': the Black Sea's new rose-coloured gold
-
Rays pitcher Bigge hospitalized after being struck by foul ball
-
PSG stunned by Botafogo after Messi lights up Club World Cup
-
Thunder ready to play for all the marbles - Gilgeous-Alexander
-
Europe's lithium quest hampered by China and lack of cash

'Nixon in China': an opera with fresh relevance
Opera rarely feels like a topical medium but modern classic "Nixon in China" is growing in popularity and offering a pointed reminder of how much geopolitics has shifted in the past 50 years.
It recounts the historic moment in 1972 when US president Richard Nixon travelled to Beijing and established diplomatic ties with Chinese leader Mao Zedong.
The irreverent opera received mixed reviews when first performed in 1987 but has since become a beloved part of the canon in the United States.
It is increasingly a hit abroad, playing in at least five European opera houses this year.
It carries a new poignancy at a time of growing East-West tensions.
An illustrious Paris production opens on Saturday in the week that Chinese President Xi Jinping held a state visit to Moscow.
"We take it seriously right now because China and the US are in the news every day, and in a way that kind of highlights the fragility of world peace," said Renee Fleming, the superstar soprano who plays Nixon's wife in the Paris production.
She is disheartened by current affairs, having always been "tremendously welcomed" in China and Russia.
"This is a time where I'm thinking please hold it together. Let's everybody calm down and resume the fantastic relationship -- not without challenges... but it's still worth keeping the peace," she told AFP.
- No more 'yellowface' -
One big change these days -- insisted upon by composer John Adams -- is that companies use Asian singers for the Chinese roles.
Scottish Opera was accused of "yellowface" in 2021 for staging the play with white actors, as was previously typical.
"It's right that now, when things are so sensitive, we work hard to find Asian singers," Adams, 76, told AFP.
"But ultimately I want to believe that it doesn't matter."
The play was controversial for different reasons when it first opened.
"Opera was always considered to be about Greek myths or Norse gods or melodrama like Puccini," Adams recalled.
"But I thought this subject matter was something that opera could treat very well, because... it's about the collision of the two main philosophies of how life should be lived."
The Paris production uses elaborate and symbolic staging, such as the choir split into opposing table tennis teams, referencing the "ping-pong diplomacy" that helped thaw relations at the time.
It does not shy away from criticism of Mao's regime, with an underground prison revealed beneath the library where the politicians are meeting and a mini-documentary, screened halfway through, about the horrific repression of Chinese musicians during the Cultural Revolution.
But Xiaomeng Zhang, who plays the Chinese premier Zhou Enlai, told AFP the opera was above all "a stark reminder... that making peace, not war, despite ideological and political differences, is not only a strategical choice but also a moral choice".
D.Qudsi--SF-PST