The Metropolitan Opera has invited 70 influencers to help convince a younger, online audience that opera isn’t scary or even ...
Five decades in, Andrew Lloyd Webber's mega-musical has an infuriating storyline and an impressive everything else. Cue the chandelier.
The year of AI browsers is ending with Opera opening up its own version to everyone. First unveiled in May, Opera Neon has been available for testing via a waiting list since early October. Now, after ...
Source: Pexels. The Phantom of the Opera is one of those things that everybody has heard of, but not everyone can explain.
As announced via a blog post on Opera's Newsroom, the browser company has officially opened public access to Opera Neon. You ...
Following a couple of months' testing, Opera has finally made its AI-powered browser, Neon, available to the public — though you'll have to shell out for a $19.90-per-month subscription to use it.
Opera One, the latest iteration of the Opera browser, announced in April, is now officially out of testing and available for download for desktop and Android devices. One of the main features that ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by If opera at its best aspires to a different world, then we need to cultivate an anti-elite approach to how it is created and performed. By Yuval ...
It was a year for outstanding individual performances, especially from relative newcomers, and at least three flawless ...