Luciano Pavarotti Is Dead at 71
By BERNARD HOLLAND
Posted: September 6, 2007
Andres Leighton/Associated Press
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Luciano Pavarotti at the National
Theater in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, in 2002. |
Luciano Pavarotti, the Italian singer whose ringing, pristine
sound set a standard for operatic tenors of the postwar era,
died early this morning at his home in Modena, in northern Italy.
He was 71.
His death was announced by his manager, Terri Robson. The cause
was pancreatic cancer. In July 2006 he underwent surgery for
the cancer in New York and had made no public appearances since
then. He was hospitalized again this summer and released on
Aug. 25.
“The Maestro fought a long, tough battle against the
pancreatic cancer which eventually took his life,” said
an e-mail statement that his manager sent to The Associated
Press. “In fitting with the approach that characterized
his life and work, he remained positive until finally succumbing
to the last stages of his illness.”
Like Enrico Caruso and Jenny Lind before him, Mr. Pavarotti
extended his presence far beyond the limits of Italian opera.
He became a titan of pop culture. Millions saw him on television
and found in his expansive personality, childlike charm and
generous figure a link to an art form with which many had only
a glancing familiarity.
Early in his career and into the 1970s he devoted himself with
single-mindedness to his serious opera and recital career, quickly
establishing his rich sound as the great male operatic voice
of his generation — the “King of the High Cs,”
as his popular nickname had it.
By the 1980s he expanded his franchise exponentially with the
Three Tenors projects, in which he shared the stage with Plácido
Domingo and José Carreras, first in concerts associated
with the World Cup and later in world tours. Most critics agreed
that it was Mr. Pavarotti’s charisma that made the collaboration
such a success. The Three Tenors phenomenon only broadened his
already huge audience and sold millions of recordings and videos. And in the early 1990s he began staging Pavarotti and Friends
charity concerts, performing side by side with rock stars like
Elton John, Sting and Bono and making recordings from these
shows.
Throughout these years, despite his busy and vocally demanding
schedule, his voice remained in unusually good condition well
into middle age.
Even so, as his stadium concerts and pop collaborations brought
him fame well beyond what contemporary opera stars have come
to expect, Mr. Pavarotti seemed increasingly willing to accept
pedestrian musical standards. By the 1980s he found it difficult
to learn new opera roles or even new song repertory for his
recitals.
And although he planned to spend his final years, in the operatic
tradition, performing in a grand worldwide farewell tour, he
completed only about half the tour, which began in 2004. Physical
ailments, many occasioned by his weight and girth, limited his
movement on stage and regularly forced him to cancel performances.
By 1995, when he was at the Metropolitan Opera singing one of
his favorite roles, Tonio in Donizetti’s “Daughter
of the Regiment,” high notes sometimes failed him, and
there were controversies over downward transpositions of a notoriously
dangerous and high-flying part.
Yet his wholly natural stage manner and his wonderful way with
the Italian language were completely intact. Mr. Pavarotti remained
a darling of Met audiences until his retirement from that company’s
roster in 2004, an occasion celebrated with a string of “Tosca”
performances. At the last of them, on March 13, 2004, he received
a 15-minute standing ovation and 10 curtain calls. All told,
he sang 379 performances at the Met, of which 357 were in fully
staged opera productions. In the late 1960s and 70s, when Mr.
Pavarotti was at his best, he possessed a sound remarkable for
its ability to penetrate large spaces easily. Yet he was able
to encase that powerful sound in elegant, brilliant colors.
His recordings of the Donizetti repertory are still models of
natural grace and pristine sound. The clear Italian diction
and his understanding of the emotional power of words in music
were exemplary. Mr. Pavarotti was perhaps the mirror opposite of his great
rival among tenors, Mr. Domingo. Five years Mr. Domingo’s
senior, Mr. Pavarotti had the natural range of a tenor, leaving
him exposed to the stress and wear that ruin so many tenors’
careers before they have barely started. Mr. Pavarotti’s
confidence and naturalness in the face of these dangers made
his longevity all the more noteworthy.
Mr. Domingo, on the other hand, began his musical life as a
baritone and later manufactured a tenor range above it through
hard work and scrupulous intelligence. Mr. Pavarotti, although
he could find the heart of a character, was not an intellectual
presence. His ability to read music in the true sense of the
word was in question. Mr. Domingo, in contrast, is an excellent
pianist with an analytical mind and the ability to learn and
retain scores by quiet reading.
Yet in the late 1980s, when both Mr. Pavarotti and Mr. Domingo
were pursuing superstardom, it was Mr. Pavarotti who showed
the dominant gift for soliciting adoration from large numbers
of people. He joked on talk shows, rode horses on parade and
played, improbably, a sex symbol in the movie “Yes, Giorgio.”
In a series of concerts, some held in stadiums, Mr. Pavarotti
entertained tens of thousands and earned six-figure fees. Presenters,
who were able to tie a Pavarotti appearance to a subscription
package of less glamorous concerts, found him a valuable loss
leader.
The most enduring symbol of Mr. Pavarotti’s Midas touch,
as a concert attraction and a recording artist, was the popular
and profitable Three Tenors act created with Mr. Domingo and
Mr. Carreras. Some praised these concerts and recordings as
popularizers of opera for mass audiences. But most classical
music critics dismissed them as unworthy of the performers’
talents.
Ailments and Accusations
Mr. Pavarotti had his uncomfortable moments in recent years.
His proclivity for gaining weight became a topic of public discussion.
He was caught lip-synching a recorded aria at a concert in Modena,
his hometown. He was booed off the stage at La Scala during
1992 appearance. No one characterized his lapses as sinister;
they were attributed, rather, to a happy-go-lucky style, a large
ego and a certain carelessness.
His frequent withdrawals from prominent events at opera houses
like the Met and Covent Garden in London, often from productions
created with him in mind, caused administrative consternation
in many places. A series of cancellations at Lyric Opera of
Chicago — 26 out of 41 scheduled dates — moved Lyric’s
general director in 1989, Ardis Krainik, to declare Mr. Pavarotti
persona non grata at her company.
A similar banishment nearly happened at the Met in 2002. He
was scheduled to sing two performances of “Tosca”
— one a gala concert with prices as high as $1,875 a ticket,
which led to reports that the performances may be a quiet farewell.
Mr. Pavarotti arrived in New York only a few days before the
first, barely in time for the dress rehearsal. The day of the
first performance, though, he had developed a cold and withdrew.
That was on a Wednesday.
From then until the second scheduled performance, on Saturday,
everyone, from the Met’s managers to casual opera fans,
debated the probability of his appearing. The New York Post
ran the headline “Fat Man Won’t Sing.” The
demand to see the performance was so great, however, that the
Met set up 3,000 seats for a closed-circuit broadcast on the
Lincoln Center Plaza. Still, at the last minute, Mr. Pavarotti
stayed in bed.
Luciano Pavarotti was born in Modena, Italy, on Oct. 12, 1935.
His father was a baker and an amateur tenor; his mother worked
at a cigar factory. As a child he listened to opera recordings,
singing along with tenor stars of a previous era, like Beniamino
Gigli and Tito Schipa. He professed an early weakness for the
movies of Mario Lanza, whose image he would imitate before a
mirror.
As a teenager he followed studies that led to a teaching position;
during these student days he met his future wife. He taught
for two years before deciding to become a singer. His first
teachers were Arrigo Pola and Ettore Campogalliani, and his
first breakthrough came in 1961 when he won an international
competition at the Teatro Reggio Emilia. He made his debut as
Rodolfo in Puccini’s “Bohème” later
that year. In 1963 Mr. Pavarotti’s international career began: first
as Edgardo in Donizetti’s “Lucia di Lammermoor”
in Amsterdam and other Dutch cities, and then in Vienna and
Zurich. His Covent Garden debut also came in 1963, when he substituted
for and Giuseppe di Stefano in “La Bohème.”
His reputation in Britain grew even more the next year, when
he sang at the Glyndebourne Festival, taking the part of Idamante
in Mozart’s “Idomeneo.”
A turning point in Mr. Pavarotti’s career was his association
with the soprano Joan Sutherland. In 1965 he joined the Sutherland-Williamson
company on an Australian tour during which he sang Edgardo to
Ms. Sutherland’s Lucia. He later credited Ms. Sutherland’s
advice, encouragement and example as a major factor in the development
of his technique.
Further career milestones came in 1967, with Mr. Pavarotti’s
first appearances at La Scala in Milan and his participation
in a performance of the Verdi Requiem under Herbert von Karajan.
He came to the Metropolitan Opera a year later, singing with
Mirella Freni, a childhood friend, in a production of “La
Bohème.”
A series of recordings with London Records had also begun,
and these excursions through the Italian repertory remain some
of Mr. Pavarotti’s lasting contributions to his generation.
The recordings included “L’Elisir d’Amore,”
“La Favorita,” “Lucia di Lammermoor”
and “La Fille du Régiment” by Donizetti;
“Madama Butterfly,” “La Bohème,”
“Tosca” and “Turandot” by Puccini; “Rigoletto,”
“Il Trovatore,” “La Traviata” and the
Requiem by Verdi; and scattered operas by Bellini, Rossini and
Mascagni. There were also solo albums of arias and songs.
In 1981 Mr. Pavarotti established a voice competition in Philadelphia
and was active in its operation. Young, talented singers from
around the world were auditioned in preliminary rounds before
the final selections. High among the prizes for winners was
an appearance in a staged opera in Philadelphia in which Mr.
Pavarotti would also appear.
He also gave master classes, many of which were shown on public
television in the United States. Mr. Pavarotti’s forays
into teaching became stage appearances in themselves, and ultimately
had more to do with the teacher than those being taught.
An Outsize Personality In his later years Mr. Pavarotti became as much an attraction
as an opera singer. Hardly a week passed in the 1990s when his
name did not surface in at least two gossip columns. He could
be found unveiling postage stamps depicting old opera stars
or singing in Red Square in Moscow. His outsize personality
remained a strong drawing card, and even his lifelong battle
with his circumference guaranteed headlines: a Pavarotti diet
or a Pavarotti binge provided high-octane fuel for reporters.
In 1997 Mr. Pavarotti joined Sting for the opening of the Pavarotti
Music Center in war-torn Mostar, Bosnia, and Michael Jackson
and Paul McCartney on a CD tribute to Diana, Princess of Wales.
In 2005 he was granted Freedom of the City of London for his
fund-raising concerts for the Red Cross. He also received the
Kennedy Center Honors in 2001, and holds two spots in the Guinness
Book of World Records — one for the greatest number of
curtain calls (165), the other, held jointly with Mr. Domingo
and Mr. Carreras, for the best-selling classical album of all
time, the first Three Tenors album (“Carreras, Domingo,
Pavarotti: The Three Tenors in Concert”). But for all
that, he knew where his true appeal was centered.
“I’m not a politician, I’m a musician,”
he told the BBC Music Magazine in an April 1998 article about
his efforts for Bosnia. “I care about giving people a
place where they can go to enjoy themselves and to begin to
live again. To the man you have to give the spirit, and when
you give him the spirit, you have done everything.”Mr.
Pavarotti’s health became an issue in the late 1990s.
His mobility onstage was sometimes severely limited because
of leg problems, and at a 1997 “Turandot” performance
at the Met, extras onstage surrounded him and literally helped
him up and down steps. In January 1998, at a Met gala with two
other singers, Mr. Pavarotti became lost in a trio from “Luisa
Miller” despite having the music in front of him. He complained
of dizziness and withdrew. Rumors flew alleging on one side
a serious health problem and, on the other, a smoke screen for
Mr. Pavarotti’s unpreparedness.
The latter was not a new accusation during the 1990s. In a
1997 review for The New York Times, Anthony Tommasini accused
Mr. Pavarotti of “shamelessly coasting” through
a recital, using music instead of his memory, and still losing
his place. Words were always a problem, and he cheerfully admitted
to using cue cards as reminders.
A Box-Office Powerhouse It was a tribute to Mr. Pavarotti’s box-office power
that when, in 1997, he announced he could not or would not learn
his part for a new “Forza del Destino” at the Met,
the house scrapped its scheduled production and substituted
“Un Ballo in Maschera,” a piece he was ready to
sing.
Around that time Mr. Pavarotti also made news by leaving his
wife of more than three decades, Adua, to live with his 26-year-old
assistant, Nicoletta Mantovani, and filing for divorce, which
was finalized in October 2002. He married Ms. Mantovani in 2003.
She survives him, as do three daughters from his marriage to
the former Adua Veroni: Lorenza, Christina and Giuliana; and
a daughter with Ms. Mantovani, Alice.
Mr. Pavarotti had a home in Manhattan but also maintained ties
to his hometown, living when time permitted in a villa outside
Modena.
He published two autobiographies, both written with William
Wright: “Pavarotti: My Own Story” in 1981, and “Pavarotti:
My World” in 1995.
In interviews Mr. Pavarotti could turn on a disarming charm,
and if he invariably dismissed concerns about his pop projects,
technical problems and even his health, he made a strong case
for what his fame could do for opera itself.
“I remember when I began singing, in 1961,” he
told Opera News in 1998, “one person said, ‘run
quick, because opera is going to have at maximum 10 years of
life.’ At the time it was really going down. But then,
I was lucky enough to make the first ‘Live From the Met’
telecast. And the day after, people stopped me on the street.
So I realized the importance of bringing opera to the masses.
I think there were people who didn’t know what opera was
before. And they say ‘Bohème,’ and of course
‘Bohème’ is so good.’ ”
About his own drawing power, his analysis was simple and on
the mark.
“I think an important quality that I have is that if
you turn on the radio and hear somebody sing, you know it’s
me.” he said. “You don’t confuse my voice
with another voice.” Article at: nytimes.com
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