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The adventure of Bravi begins at the London opera, which is the most emblematic building in Covent Garden. A place where love and passion for opera light friendships. Bravi is inspired by all the goodness of the attributes of trust, friendship and loyalty.
The final chapter of the Covent Garden trilogy deals with divos aspirants and a diva. Combined with Christopher Chong's unconventional artistic touch, the story of friends who go to the opera adapts to a pantomime script full of magic and setbacks to color Bruno Jovanovic's imagination.
History deals with the celebration of friendship at the Royal Opera House, all lived by a group of friends who meet regularly at the opera to share their love and passion for music and productions.
The nardo intoxicator is seasoned with an overdose of ginger and dramatized with a novel chord of walnut milk. The notes are mixed in a way that accentuates the tension between them.
Chong concludes: “Bravi is an Italian word to express approval with applause and shouting when an interpreter has performed an excellent performance. We use the plural form, bravi, to strengthen our gender spirit to include all genders, identities and divas and unbearable divas. Bravi, who represents the pantomime spirit of “well, well it ends,” addresses those who have exemplified loyalty and friendship during and after the pandemic.
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