Michael Grandage's "Le Nozze di Figaro" is Glyndebourne's seventh production of the Mozart opera with which it opened in 1934, and the best of the many of those I've seen.
Madcap liasons and mischievous flirtations are based on opera scenes first created by Mozart and one of his librettists, Lorenzo Da Ponte, primarily from "Cosi Fan Tutte, " ''Le Nozze di Figaro" and "Don Giovanni.
The women behind the wine at 45 Park Lane in London, Le Meurice in Paris, and Hotel Principe di Savoia all have at least ten years of sommelier experience under their (very chic) belts.