November 2005 Contents
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People Like Them
By Robert Mason Lee
It Makes the World Go Round
By Stéphanie Verge
Starting Over
By Denise Balkissoon
Extreme Spending
By Judith Muster
Going for Broke
By Amy Verner
COLUMNS
Making History
Stylized, restrained—some might say precious—baroque opera is an unlikely genre to attract modern audiences. But Opera Atelier's shows are almost always sold out. Why we crave 300-year-old song and dance By Alec Scott
Big Band Theory
They play swoony music, have a cult-like following and are so non-hierarchical they call themselves a collective. How Broken Social Scene became the world's coolest indie band By Jason McBride
Click here for an interview with BSS producer Dave Newfeld. On-line only!
THIS CITY
Plotting Tim Horton's colonization of latte land • Toronto: Canada's scamming capital • Inside Adrienne Clarkson's not-quite-royal new residence
CITY SURVIVOR
24 hours with Floria Sigismondi
By Gillian Grace
Super Shopper
On the Block
Rosedale's Main Drag By Olivia Stren
Dining
Amuse-bouche—that tiny, edible greeting from the chef By James Chatto
Food
The pomegranate club By Sasha Chapman
Drink
Wine from the West By David Lawrason
Restaurants
A $7-million sushi bar • Seven incarnations of chocolate at Luce • Quest for the creamiest clam chowder • Plus, our star-rated reviews
This Month
Regis Philbin takes his singing schtick on the road • Electric violin virtuoso Eugene Draw hammers out high-octane concertos • The Devil and Daniel Johnston examines an alt-rock icon onscreen
DEPARTMENTS
Letters
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