Plácido Domingo takes to the stage at the first night of the Dubai Opera. Courtesy of Dubai Opera
Plácido Domingo takes to the stage at the first night of the Dubai Opera. Courtesy of Dubai Opera

I was bedazzled by a night at the Dubai Opera



I grew up listening to opera because my parents listened to it all the time. Naturally, I hated it. All that screeching and bellowing, the violins sawing away in the background – who could possibly enjoy all that noise? Amazing to think that I could have such strong opinions, given that my eight-track tape player featured a steady rotation of music that I’m now too embarrassed even to mention.

But as perhaps is the way with parents and children, now one of my chief pleasures is listening to opera – and going to the opera when I can. In New York, my husband and I inherited his mother’s season tickets to the Metropolitan Opera: good seats in the first balcony, just off centre. No matter how harried I’d been earlier in the day, there was something soothing about that magical moment when the chandeliers, which to me looked like rock crystal candies, dimmed and the audience grew still in anticipation.

I'm not the sort of opera fan who can rattle off the names of this or that performer from this or that production. Truth be told, I occasionally get my Rossini confused with my Verdi, but I love the music, which is why we found ourselves last week speeding towards the brand-new Dubai Opera to see The Barber of Seville.

Of course, getting to the opera house from Abu Dhabi means once again trying to teach the GPS that in Dubai you frequently go left to make a right turn, or you need to go up, U-turn and come back down, or that what Siri thinks is a cross street is in fact a four-lane bridge going over your current position. Once we’d negotiated that, however, we found ourselves at the Dubai Opera, which gleams like a bubble at the foot of the Burj Khalifa. The lobbies on every floor offer stunning views of the Burj and the fountains, and many operagoers took advantage of those views as backgrounds for that 21st-century art form known as the selfie.

I won’t try to explain the plot of the opera, in part because there are very few 19th-century opera plots that will bear sustained scrutiny. Opera plots, actually, sort of resemble Dubai traffic patterns: knots, loops, curlicues and unexpected resolutions. You may know The Barber, however, because it contains the aria sung by the cartoon character Woody Woodpecker: “Fi-ga-ro, Fi-ga-ro.”

The performances onstage, however, were matched – perhaps even exceeded – by the performances going on in the lobbies before the show and during intermission. Even in New York, in our not-so-expensive seats, we would see people in gowns and tuxedoes: there is something about opera that makes people want to dress to the nines. You can imagine, then, what happened when opera met the dress-to-the-elevens sensibility of Dubai. Diamonds! Gowns! Skitteringly high heels! Bejewelled abayas! Eyelashes out to here and hair piled up to there! The Kardashians would have felt right at home. Call me cynical, but I think it’s entirely possible that some people were there for the selfies, not the music.

Regardless, the theatre was packed; diamonds and iPhones gleamed as we waited for the performance to begin. People snapped photos of the auditorium, which evokes the history of the Arab peninsula – curved wooden stalls that echo the shape of dhows, and arabesque latticework on the walls. Looking around the auditorium, I had one of those moments that can only happen in a place like Abu Dhabi or Dubai: there we were, in a 21st-century auditorium whose architecture evokes the ancient world, listening to a 19th-century opera written and sung in Italian but set in Spain, with captioning in English and Arabic, for an audience who, if my eavesdropping in the lobby was accurate, spoke just about every language in the world.

It was, all in all, an amazing evening.

And the singing was pretty good too. My parents, and my mother-in-law, would have loved it.

Deborah Lindsay Williams is a professor of literature at NYU Abu Dhabi

Game Changer

Director: Shankar 

Stars: Ram Charan, Kiara Advani, Anjali, S J Suryah, Jayaram

Rating: 2/5

The burning issue

The internal combustion engine is facing a watershed moment – major manufacturer Volvo is to stop producing petroleum-powered vehicles by 2021 and countries in Europe, including the UK, have vowed to ban their sale before 2040. The National takes a look at the story of one of the most successful technologies of the last 100 years and how it has impacted life in the UAE. 

Read part four: an affection for classic cars lives on

Read part three: the age of the electric vehicle begins

Read part two: how climate change drove the race for an alternative 

The specs
Engine: 77.4kW all-wheel-drive dual motor
Power: 320bhp
Torque: 605Nm
Transmission: Single-speed automatic
Price: From Dh219,000
On sale: Now
Dubai Bling season three

Cast: Loujain Adada, Zeina Khoury, Farhana Bodi, Ebraheem Al Samadi, Mona Kattan, and couples Safa & Fahad Siddiqui and DJ Bliss & Danya Mohammed 

Rating: 1/5

Oppenheimer
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The specs

Engine: Four electric motors, one at each wheel

Power: 579hp

Torque: 859Nm

Transmission: Single-speed automatic

Price: From Dh825,900

On sale: Now

COMPANY PROFILE
Name: Almnssa
Started: August 2020
Founder: Areej Selmi
Based: Gaza
Sectors: Internet, e-commerce
Investments: Grants/private funding
Formula Middle East Calendar (Formula Regional and Formula 4)
Round 1: January 17-19, Yas Marina Circuit – Abu Dhabi
 
Round 2: January 22-23, Yas Marina Circuit – Abu Dhabi
 
Round 3: February 7-9, Dubai Autodrome – Dubai
 
Round 4: February 14-16, Yas Marina Circuit – Abu Dhabi
 
Round 5: February 25-27, Jeddah Corniche Circuit – Saudi Arabia
UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
UAE squad

Ali Kashief, Salem Rashid, Khalifa Al Hammadi, Khalfan Mubarak, Ali Mabkhout, Omar Abdelrahman, Mohammed Al Attas (Al Jazira), Mohmmed Al Shamsi, Hamdan Al Kamali, Mohammad Barghash, Khalil Al Hammadi (Al Wahda), Khalid Eisa, Mohammed Shakir, Ahmed Barman, Bandar Al Ahbabi (Al Ain), Adel Al Hosani, Al Hassan Saleh, Majid Suroor (Sharjah), Waleed Abbas, Ismail Al Hammadi, Ahmed Khalil (Shabab Al Ahli Dubai) Habib Fardan, Tariq Ahmed, Mohammed Al Akbari (Al Nasr), Ali Saleh, Ali Salmeen (Al Wasl), Hassan Al Mahrami (Baniyas)

Company%20Profile
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Engine: 2.7-litre 4-cylinder Turbomax
Power: 310hp
Torque: 583Nm
Transmission: 8-speed automatic
Price: From Dh192,500
On sale: Now
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Paatal Lok season two

Directors: Avinash Arun, Prosit Roy 

Stars: Jaideep Ahlawat, Ishwak Singh, Lc Sekhose, Merenla Imsong

Rating: 4.5/5

COMPANY PROFILE
Name: Airev
Started: September 2023
Founder: Muhammad Khalid
Based: Abu Dhabi
Sector: Generative AI
Initial investment: Undisclosed
Investment stage: Series A
Investors: Core42
Current number of staff: 47
 
COMPANY PROFILE
Name: ARDH Collective
Based: Dubai
Founders: Alhaan Ahmed, Alyina Ahmed and Maximo Tettamanzi
Sector: Sustainability
Total funding: Self funded
Number of employees: 4
Emergency

Director: Kangana Ranaut

Stars: Kangana Ranaut, Anupam Kher, Shreyas Talpade, Milind Soman, Mahima Chaudhry 

Rating: 2/5

Hidden killer

Sepsis arises when the body tries to fight an infection but damages its own tissue and organs in the process.

The World Health Organisation estimates it affects about 30 million people each year and that about six million die.

Of those about three million are newborns and 1.2 are young children.

Patients with septic shock must often have limbs amputated if clots in their limbs prevent blood flow, causing the limbs to die.

Campaigners say the condition is often diagnosed far too late by medical professionals and that many patients wait too long to seek treatment, confusing the symptoms with flu. 

The specs

Engine: four-litre V6 and 3.5-litre V6 twin-turbo

Transmission: six-speed and 10-speed

Power: 271 and 409 horsepower

Torque: 385 and 650Nm

Price: from Dh229,900 to Dh355,000

CRICKET%20WORLD%20CUP%20QUALIFIER%2C%20ZIMBABWE%20
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UAE v Gibraltar

What: International friendly

When: 7pm kick off

Where: Rugby Park, Dubai Sports City

Admission: Free

Online: The match will be broadcast live on Dubai Exiles’ Facebook page

UAE squad: Lucas Waddington (Dubai Exiles), Gio Fourie (Exiles), Craig Nutt (Abu Dhabi Harlequins), Phil Brady (Harlequins), Daniel Perry (Dubai Hurricanes), Esekaia Dranibota (Harlequins), Matt Mills (Exiles), Jaen Botes (Exiles), Kristian Stinson (Exiles), Murray Reason (Abu Dhabi Saracens), Dave Knight (Hurricanes), Ross Samson (Jebel Ali Dragons), DuRandt Gerber (Exiles), Saki Naisau (Dragons), Andrew Powell (Hurricanes), Emosi Vacanau (Harlequins), Niko Volavola (Dragons), Matt Richards (Dragons), Luke Stevenson (Harlequins), Josh Ives (Dubai Sports City Eagles), Sean Stevens (Saracens), Thinus Steyn (Exiles)

The Year Earth Changed

Directed by:Tom Beard

Narrated by: Sir David Attenborough

Stars: 4

Business Insights
  • As per the document, there are six filing options, including choosing to report on a realisation basis and transitional rules for pre-tax period gains or losses. 
  • SMEs with revenue below Dh3 million per annum can opt for transitional relief until 2026, treating them as having no taxable income. 
  • Larger entities have specific provisions for asset and liability movements, business restructuring, and handling foreign permanent establishments.