Lifestyle
Wiener wonderland: Hundreds of dachshunds chase record in Hungary

BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — Throngs of dachshunds strut their stubby stuff in Hungary on Thursday as they tried to fetch a record for the country’s biggest ever single-breed dog walk.
Hundreds of dogs and their owners gathered at the Budapest City Park and walked in a long, noisy loop in the spring sun. The parade of pups was under the observation of the Hungarian Records Association, which was tasked with determining whether the canine cavalcade could be officially entered into the record books.
István Sebestyén, registrar and president of the association, said his organization would carefully tally the number of participating dogs — a challenge, he said, when so many hounds and humans were gathered in one place.
“We don’t usually take dachshunds on walks in droves, so this experiment has to correspond to our system of rules,” he said.
Dachshunds, a short, muscular breed with stubby legs, were first bred in Germany, and remain one of Hungary’s most popular dog breeds.
Also known as “wiener dogs” or “sausage dogs” for their long, low-slung bodies, they were initially bred for hunting badgers and other burrowing creatures. But their loyal, curious and playful nature has also made them popular as family pets.
In Munich, Germany in 1972, a rainbow-colored dachshund named Waldi became the first official mascot in the history of the Olympic Summer Games.
Last September, the German city of Regensburg set the current world record for the largest dachshund dog walk as hundreds of the breed paraded through the medieval town center.
While some counts from Regensburg put the number of dogs at 1,175, Guinness World Records could only confirm 897.
On Thursday, Lili Horváth and her 1-year-old dachshund Zabos participated in the walk in Budapest. She said her furry friend “has very deeply human qualities and is very loyal, he’s really a love bomb.”
Valeria Fábián, who was walking her dachshund Zsebi, saw it differently.
“Few people are capable of giving this kind of selflessness, because people don’t have as much love and self-sacrifice as a dog can give a human,” she said.
By the end of the record-seeking walk, the Hungarian Records Association determined that 500 dachshunds had been present — enough to set a Hungarian record, but still short of the Guinness mark set in Regensburg.
Organizers, undeterred, vowed to try again next year — giving them plenty of time to muster more mutts for another shot at the title.
Lifestyle
AP PHOTOS: Artists in this former pasta factory preserve Italian opera traditions
ROME (AP) — A faded, four-story building that was once a pasta factory now houses the warehouse and bustling workshop of the Rome Opera House. The building is home to a trove of scenic backdrops and 70,000 costumes from over a century of performances.
This year, the opera house’s costume designers, tailors and seamstresses have working to reconstruct the original outfits of Giacomo Puccini’s Opera “Tosca.” It is a tale of passion and deception set in Rome in the 1800s, featuring a dark-haired beauty forced to commit murder to protect her dignity and the man she loves. This year marks the 125th anniversary of its first-ever performance.
This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.
Musicians of the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house orchestra practice in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Set designers work on a stage canvas in the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house warehouse, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
A tailor works on a stage costume for Giacomo Puccini’s “Tosca” opera in the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house costumes warehouse, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Anna Biagiotti, head of tailoring at the Rome’s Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house, walks in the house’s costumes warehouse, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
A tailor works on a stage costume for Giacomo Puccini’s “Tosca” opera in the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house costumes warehouse, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
A set designer works on a stage canvas in the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house warehouse, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
A tailor works on stage costumes in the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house costumes laboratory, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Set designers work on a stage canvas in the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house warehouse, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Michele Mariotti, right, director of the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house orchestra, practices in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Michele Mariotti, right, director of the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house orchestra, practices in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
A set designer prepares paint for a stage canvas in the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house warehouse, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Photos of projects and stage canvases used for previous performances of Giacomo Puccini’s “Tosca” opera are hang on a wall of the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house warehouse, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Set designers work on a stage canvas in the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house warehouse, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Buckets of paint used for stage canvases are seen in a laboratory of the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house warehouse, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Danilo Mancini, director of set production, left, oversees designers as they work on the project of stage canvases in the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house warehouse, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Tailors work on stage costumes in the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house costumes laboratory, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Historical costumes from Giacomo Puccini’s “Tosca” opera are on display inside the foyer of the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Anna Biagiotti, the costume director for the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house shows drawings, sketches and notes for the costumes made 125 years ago for the first ever performance of Giacomo Puccini’s opera “Tosca”, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Historical costumes from Giacomo Puccini’s “Tosca” opera are on display inside the foyer of the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
A tailor works on stage costumes in the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house costumes laboratory, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
A view of the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
A plate celebrates the 125th anniversary of the first ever performance of Giacomo Puccini’s “Tosca” opera in the foyer of the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Lifestyle
Artists in this former pasta factory are preserving Italian opera traditions

ROME (AP) — Behind a rusty gate near Rome’s Circus Maximus is a building passed daily by hordes of tourists. They’re oblivious to the fact that behind its faded, flaking paint is a hive of activity sustaining one of Italy’s grandest cultural institutions.
It was a pasta factory until almost a century ago, when the Rome Opera House transformed the four-story building into a sprawling warehouse and workshop. It is home to a trove of scenic backdrops and 70,000 costumes from over a century of performances. Even more are being created — the traditional way.
For this year, the opera house’s costume designers, tailors and seamstresses have been scouring archives and working to reconstruct the original outfits of Giacomo Puccini’s Opera “Tosca.” It is a tale of passion, cruelty and deception set in Rome in the 1800s, featuring a dark-haired beauty forced to commit murder to protect her dignity and the man she loves. This year marks the 125th anniversary of its first-ever performance.
“Fortunately, all the sketches for each costume exist and are very detailed and we have reconstructed them, respecting as much as possible the taste of the time from the point of view of the fabrics, the shapes and all the materials used,” Anna Biagiotti, the opera house’s costume director, said in an interview inside the warehouse.
Anna Biagiotti, head of tailoring at the Rome’s Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house, walks in the house’s costumes warehouse, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Behind each sketch Biagotti found detailed notes. She compiled a binder her team refers to as “the bible,” filled with copies of the originals. To help her roughly 30 tailors, Biagotti painstakingly transcribed the tightly scrawled cursive notes of then-lead costume designer Adolph Hohenstein into legible, capital letters.
They work in a cramped space above the opera house — sewing, pinning, stitching, cutting, ironing. Each year, they churn out some 700 costumes for opera and ballet performances, which are later stored in the warehouse, hanging inside plastic dry cleaning covers. There is no digitalized system to track them once there; they can only be located by the designers and tailors who have spent their lives in the trade.
A tailor works on a stage costume for Giacomo Puccini’s “Tosca” opera in the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house costumes warehouse, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
And on the warehouse’s top floor, set designers in a giant loft space walk atop a canvas, dragging grey wagons loaded with buckets of paint. On April 10, they used brushes with handles so long they looked like brooms to paint ancient doors, archways, statues and frescoes to conjure a three-dimensional Roman palazzo upon the flat surface. An overhead walkway provided a view to ensure the optical illusion was coming out just right.
Set designers work on a stage canvas in the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house warehouse, in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
It’s a dying craft, said Danilo Mancini, director of set production. In other places, painted sets have been replaced by LED walls, projections and back-lit screens — but not at the Rome Opera House. For Tosca, set designers also worked off Hohenstein’s sketches for the original show.
Both Mancini and music director Michele Mariotti credit Puccini for keeping their passions alive.
“Puccini was a genius, not only in terms of the beauty of the music, but precisely because of the theatrical and cinematographic flair he gives to his works,” said Mariotti. “If we are all here, we must be grateful to him, not so much for the rebirth of the work, but for its survival. Because he understood that if it was not regenerated in some way, opera would have disappeared.”
Musicians of the “Teatro dell’ Opera” opera house orchestra practice in Rome, Thursday, April 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Lifestyle
Black dandyism etches place into Met Gala history — and global visibility

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Black dandyism is taking center stage at the Met Gala, with cultural powerhouses leading this subversive, sharply tailored style into the global fashion spotlight.
As a gala host committee member, Janelle Monáe and other trendsetters are helping shape the conversation, framing Black dandyism as a proud tradition — rather than a mere trend — claiming its long-overdue moment of visibility.
“It’s always important to educate and reeducate to the world as much as we possibly can through art and through our greatness,” said Monáe, the Grammy-nominated performer who had made dandy style a signature of her fashion.
Monáe, inspired by family members who proudly sported the look throughout her upbringing, views the spotlight as an opportunity to pay homage to the past and inspire the future.
“Dandyism is pretty much a part of my fashion DNA through tailoring and suiting,” the singer-actor said. “I’ve honored my ancestors and my family who wore their uniforms, wore their suits to serve our community. It fell right in line with who I am, and the people I want to bring with me that helped build this country.”
On Monday, with the world watching, a wave of fashion disruptors and stylists will usher Black dandyism from the margins to the Met Gala, as the Metropolitan Museum of Art unveils its new costume exhibit, “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style.” It marks the Met’s first show centered exclusively on Black designers and the first in more than two decades to spotlight menswear. It’s also a tribute to the rich legacy of dandyism, a style that has long carved space for radical self-expression, especially for those overlooked or misunderstood.
“It’s been a long time coming,” said Kyle Smith, the NFL’s first-ever fashion editor, who has styled the league’s top players, including Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow, Los Angeles Rams wideout Puka Nacua and receiver Kenny Stills.
“It’s great to see the recognition that Black culture is having or has in fashion for years,” Smith said. “It’s been there and very subtle, or just not recognized. I think this year’s theme is long overdue. I’m excited to see everybody’s outfits and how they interact with the idea of Black dandyism.”
Pillars of Black dandyism
This year’s Met Gala co-chairs include Pharrell Williams, Lewis Hamilton, Colman Domingo, A$AP Rocky and honorary chair LeBron James, with Monáe joining the host committee alongside the likes of Simone Biles, Spike Lee, Ayo Edebiri and André 3000.
“I think honoring minorities, honoring Black and brown people in these spaces and outside every day, is important,” said Monáe, who plans to use the red carpet to debut an exclusive collaboration with 1800 Tequila. “The ones who have dedicated their lives to this country to serve, build and give us art to sustain us for a lifetime. We should continue to honor them and push forward and stand on their shoulders.”
Several trailblazers helped popularize Black dandyism, a style whose roots trace back to the trans-Atlantic slave trade. From the beginning, dandyism served as a sartorial declaration, reclaiming elegance and luxury as tools of empowerment, challenging stereotypes and honoring Black legacy.
This Met Gala moment stands on the shoulders of icons like Frederick Douglass, who wielded sharp dress as a form of power, and Duke Ellington, who transformed suiting into cultural brilliance.
Host committee member Dapper Dan reimagined Harlem fashion, remixing luxury into bold statements of Black pride, while the late André Leon Talley — with his capes and commanding presence — redefined fashion authority.
Today’s Black dandies carry that legacy forward, blending tradition and rebellion in every lapel for a style that speaks volumes before a word is ever spoken.
“We are the walking versions that they imagined,” said El Lewis, an Atlanta-based stylist, who has worked with several entertainers including Usher, Young Thug, Chloe and Halle Bailey, and Justin Skye. “A lot of these people died not being able to have these realities come to fruition. We have a lot of autonomy to ourselves, and I think that’s what they were probably seeking. They wanted to be able to do anything at any moment at any time. And I think that’s what they get to see us do.”
Met Gala pushes dandyism forward
Stylist Brian Robinson said that if Talley were alive, he would have left an unforgettable mark on the gala’s defining looks.
“He would definitely be behind conversation pieces underneath the restraint to educate,” Robinson said of Talley, the influential former creative director and editor at large at Vogue magazine. He died at the age of 73 in 2022.
“He would have been able to put dandyism in a positive light for people to understand the importance of being able to celebrate and highlight our culture,” said Robinson, who has worked with Keyshia Cole and Naturi Naughton. “He would push for the understanding of the agricultural aesthetic of style, being able to understand how it highlights not only your personality, but how it can also make you feel good as a person.”
Smith hopes the Met Gala inspires people to embrace the joy of dressing up, because that’s the heart of dandyism. He’s eager to see that spirit reflected both on the streets and in the player tunnels at professional games.
“I want to see it more in our tunnel fits in the NFL,” he said. “Take some fashion tips from the Met. Look at what everybody’s wearing and how they’re exploring fashion. I want to see how everybody expresses themselves and how they leave their mark in the fashion world.”
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For more coverage of the Met Gala, visit https://apnews.com/hub/met-gala.
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