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Wikipedia

Plácido Domingo

José Plácido Domingo Embil[a] (born 21 January 1941)[1] is a Spanish opera singer, conductor, and arts administrator. He has recorded over a hundred complete operas and is well known for his versatility, regularly performing in Italian, French, German, Spanish, English and Russian in the most prestigious opera houses in the world. Although primarily a lirico-spinto tenor for most of his career, especially popular for his Cavaradossi, Hoffmann, Don José and Canio, he quickly moved into more dramatic roles, becoming the most acclaimed Otello of his generation.[2][3][4] In the early 2010s, he transitioned from the tenor repertory into exclusively baritone parts, most notably Simon Boccanegra. As of 2020, he has performed 151 different roles.[5][6]

Plácido Domingo
Domingo in June 2019
Born
José Plácido Domingo Embil

(1941-01-21) 21 January 1941 (age 83)
Alma materNational Conservatory of Music, Mexico
Occupations
Years active1957–present
Spouses
Ana María Guerra Cué
(m. 1957; div. 1958)
(m. 1962)
Children3, including Plácido Jr.

Domingo has also achieved significant success as a crossover artist, especially in the genres of Latin and popular music. In addition to winning fourteen Grammy and Latin Grammy Awards, several of his records have gone silver, gold, platinum and multi-platinum. His first pop album, Perhaps Love (1981), spread his fame beyond the opera world. The title song, performed as a duet with country and folk singer John Denver, has sold almost four million copies[7] and helped lead to numerous television appearances for the tenor. He also starred in many cinematically released and televised opera movies, particularly under the direction of Franco Zeffirelli. In 1990, he began singing with fellow tenors Luciano Pavarotti and José Carreras as part of The Three Tenors. The first Three Tenors recording became the best-selling classical album of all time.[8][9]

Growing up working in his parents' zarzuela company in Mexico, Domingo has since regularly promoted this form of Spanish opera. He also increasingly conducts operas and concerts and was the general director of the Los Angeles Opera in California from 2017 to 2019.[10][11] He was initially the artistic director and later general director of the Washington National Opera from 1996 to 2011. He has been involved in numerous humanitarian works, as well as efforts to help young opera singers, including starting and running the international singing competition, Operalia. In the years 2019-2021 he has performed continuously on stages in Berlin, Budapest, Cologne, Graz, Madrid, Mérida, Milan, Monte Carlo, Moscow, Munich, Palermo, Rome, Salzburg, Sofia, Verona, Versailles, Vienna and Zurich.

Early life edit

 
Seventeen-year-old Plácido Domingo as the tenor Rafael the bullfighter in El gato montés with Rosa Maria Montes (Mexico City, 1958)

Plácido Domingo was born on 21 January 1941 in the Retiro district of Madrid, Spain.[12] His mother recalled that she and her husband knew he would be a musician from the age of five, due to his ability to hum complex music from a zarzuela after seeing a performance of it.[13] In 1949, just days before his eighth birthday, he moved to Mexico with his family. His parents, both singers, had decided to start a zarzuela company there after a successful tour of Latin America. Soon after arriving in Mexico, Domingo won a singing contest for boys, and his parents occasionally recruited him and his sister for children's roles in their zarzuela productions.[14] Domingo studied piano from a young age, at first privately and later at the National Conservatory of Music in Mexico City, which he entered when he was fourteen. At the conservatory, he also attended conducting classes taught by Igor Markevitch and studied voice under Carlo Morelli, the brother of Renato Zanelli. The two brothers were famous practitioners of both baritone and tenor roles.[15] Domingo's conservatory classes constituted the entirety of his formal vocal instruction; he never studied privately with a singing teacher.[16]

In 1957, at age sixteen, Domingo made his first professional appearance, accompanying his mother on the piano at a concert at Mérida, Yucatán. The same year he made his major zarzuela debut in Manuel Fernández Caballero's Gigantes y cabezudos [es], singing a baritone role.[17] At that time, he was working with his parents' zarzuela company, eventually taking several baritone roles and acting as an accompanist for other singers.[18] The following year, the tenor in another company's touring production of Luisa Fernanda fell ill. In his first performance as a tenor, Domingo replaced the ailing singer, although he feared the part's tessitura was too high for him.[18] Later that same year, he sang the tenor role of Rafael in the Spanish opera El gato montés, illustrating his willingness to assay the tenor range, even as he still considered himself a baritone. On 12 May 1959 at the Teatro Degollado in Guadalajara, he appeared in the baritone role (sometimes sung by basses) of Pascual in Emilio Arrieta's Marina [es]. Like El gato montés, Marina is an opera composed in the zarzuela musical style rather than a zarzuela proper, although both are usually performed by zarzuela companies. In addition to his work with zarzuelas, among his earliest performances was a minor role in the first Latin American production of the musical My Fair Lady, in which he was also the assistant conductor and assistant coach.[19] While he was a member, the company gave 185 performances of the musical in various cities in Mexico.

 
Domingo made his debut in Verdi's Otello at Bellas Artes in the comprimario rôle of Cassio in 1962

In 1959, Domingo auditioned for the Mexico National Opera at the Palacio de Béllas Artes as a baritone, but was then asked to sight-read the tenor aria "Amor ti vieta" from Fedora. He was accepted at the National Opera as a tenor comprimario and as a tutor for other singers.[20] In what he considered his operatic debut, Domingo sang the minor role of Borsa in Verdi's Rigoletto on September 23 at the Palacio de Bellas Artes in a production with veteran American baritone Cornell MacNeil and bass-baritone Norman Treigle. He later appeared as the Padre Confessor in Dialogues of the Carmelites, Altoum and Pang in Turandot, Normanno and Arturo in Lucia di Lammermoor among other small parts. While at the National Opera, he also appeared in a production of Lehár's operetta, The Merry Widow, in which he alternated as Camille and Danilo (both originally created as tenor roles, although the latter is often sung by baritones). Domingo made his debut in Verdi's Otello at Béllas Artes at age 21 in the summer of 1962 not in the title rôle for which he has now been internationally famous for decades as one of its greatest interpreters, but in the small comprimario part of Cassio.

 
Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City, where Domingo began his operatic career

To supplement his income, the young Domingo played the piano for a ballet company, as well as for a program on Mexico's newly founded cultural television station. The program consisted of excerpts from zarzuelas, operettas, operas, and musical comedies. He acted in a few small parts while at the theater in plays by Federico García Lorca, Luigi Pirandello, and Anton Chekhov.[21] He also provided song arrangements and backup vocals for Los Camisas Negras in the late 1950s, a rock-and-roll band led by César Costa.[22] In his autobiography, Domingo reflected on the benefits of his busy and varied career as a teenager: "Today, when people ask me how I manage to hold up under my extremely heavy work load, I answer that I became accustomed to intense activity very early in my life and that I love it now as I loved it then."[23]

Career edit

1960s–1980s edit

Establishing a career in opera edit

In 1961, Domingo made his operatic debut in a leading role as Alfredo in La traviata at the Teatro de la Ciudad in Monterrey.[24] Later the same year, he made his debut in the United States with the Dallas Civic Opera, where he sang the role of Arturo in Lucia di Lammermoor opposite Joan Sutherland in the title role and Ettore Bastianini as Enrico. In 1962, he returned to Texas to sing the role of Edgardo in the same opera with Lily Pons at the Fort Worth Opera.[25] It would be the soprano's final operatic performance. That November Domingo sang the second tenor role of Cassio to Mario del Monaco's celebrated Otello in Hartford, Connecticut. At the end of 1962, he signed a six-month contract with the Israel National Opera in Tel Aviv, but later extended the contract and stayed for two and a half years, singing 280 performances of 12 different roles.

In June 1965, after finishing his contract in Tel Aviv, Domingo auditioned at the New York City Opera. He was hired to make his New York debut as Don José in Bizet's Carmen with the company, but his debut came earlier than expected on 17 June 1965 when he filled in for an ailing tenor at the last minute in Puccini's Madama Butterfly. In February 1966, he sang the title role in the U.S. premiere of Ginastera's Don Rodrigo at the New York City Opera, to much acclaim.[26] The New York Times review noted: "Mr. Domingo was as impressive as ever—a big, burly, large-voiced singer who looks exactly as one would visualize a hero from Gothic Spain."[27] The performance also marked the opening of the City Opera's new home at Lincoln Center.[28]

His official debut at the Metropolitan Opera in New York occurred on 28 September 1968, when he substituted with little notice for Franco Corelli in Cilea's Adriana Lecouvreur with Renata Tebaldi. Two years before this Adriana Lecouvreur, he had already performed with the Metropolitan Opera at Lewisohn Stadium in Mascagni's Cavalleria rusticana and Leoncavallo's Pagliacci. Since then, he has opened the season at the Metropolitan Opera 21 times, more than any other singer, surpassing the previous record of Enrico Caruso by four.[29] He has appeared with the company every season since 1968–1969. He made his debut at the Vienna State Opera in 1967; at the Lyric Opera of Chicago in 1968; at both La Scala and San Francisco Opera in 1969; at Arena di Verona on July 16, 1969 as Calaf (his first) in Turandot with Birgit Nilsson; at the Philadelphia Lyric Opera Company in 1970; and at Covent Garden in 1971. In 1975, Domingo debuted at the prestigious Salzburg Festival, singing the title role in Don Carlo in an all-star cast with Nicolai Ghiaurov, Piero Cappuccilli, Mirella Freni and Christa Ludwig with Herbert von Karajan conducting. Thereafter Domingo frequently returned to Salzburg for a number of operas, as well as for several concert performances. He has now sung at practically every important opera house and festival worldwide.

 
Domingo in Argentina (1979)

Domingo first sang Mario Cavaradossi in Puccini's Tosca in a 1961 performance in Mexico City.[30] He sang Cavaradossi at the Met on February 15, 1969 with Nilsson (broadcast). 1971 he made his Covent Garden debut in the role. He continued to sing the part for many years, especially at the Met and in Vienna, eventually performing it more than any other of his roles.[31] In September 1975, Domingo debuted in the title role of Verdi's Otello at the Hamburg State Opera. It soon became his signature role and one of operas he performed most frequently (over 200 times).[32] He recorded the part three times in the studio and appeared in four officially released filmed versions of the opera. Oscar-winning Shakespearean actor, Laurence Olivier, declared after seeing the tenor in the role: "Domingo plays Othello as well as I do and he has that voice."[33]

Domingo has also conducted operas and occasionally symphony orchestras as well. On 7 October 1973 he conducted his first opera performance, La traviata starring Patricia Brooks at the New York City Opera. The same year he released his debut album as a conductor, Domingo Conducts Milnes/Milnes Conducts Domingo, with baritone Sherrill Milnes. Domingo increasingly began to appear as a conductor at major opera houses around the world. In late 1983, he led a performance of Johan Strauss's Die Fledermaus at Covent Garden, which was televised. Three years later, he made a studio recording of the operetta, in which he both conducted and sang the role of Alfred.

Growing celebrity edit

The 1980s were a time of growing success and fame for Domingo. In 1981 he gained considerable recognition outside of the opera world when he recorded the song "Perhaps Love" as a duet with the American country/folk music singer John Denver. He followed this success with many more albums of popular and Latin music. Domingo expressed the hope that his popular albums would expand his fan base in a way that would eventually lead more people to discover opera.[34] These forays outside of the opera world led to numerous television appearances for the tenor, who was no longer known only by classical music lovers. In 1987, he and Denver joined Julie Andrews for an Emmy Award-winning holiday television special, The Sound of Christmas, filmed in Salzburg, Austria. He was interviewed on many talk shows and news programs, including The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and 60 Minutes. Increasingly substantial numbers of his operatic performances were also shown on television during the 1980s.

After gaining experience acting for the cameras in numerous televised operas, Domingo performed in his first cinematically released opera movie, La Traviata, in 1982. He had worked with the film's director, former Academy Award nominee Franco Zeffirelli, previously in staged opera productions. Even as filming continued in Rome, he commuted back and forth to perform live in Vienna, Buenos Aires, Barcelona, and Madrid.[35] In 1984, Domingo filmed the role of Don José in Francesco Rosi's movie version of Carmen in his native Spain.[36] Zeffirelli reunited with the tenor two years later for another version of an opera, Otello, that ran in movie theaters worldwide. Domingo considered Carmen the best of the three, although he disagreed with the director's "low conception" of his character. He found La traviata to be "impressive", but expressed displeasure over cuts to the music in Zeffirelli's Otello.[37]

Even while diversifying his career, he continued to appear with great frequency in largely well-received operatic performances. By 1982 Newsweek declared Domingo "King Of The Opera" on its cover. The magazine's featured article, which recounted and analyzed his career, praised the singer for his "heroic voice, superb musicianship, fine acting skills and dashing Latin good looks".[33] That same year, Domingo appeared at the Metropolitan Opera's opening night performance of Bellini's Norma. It was the first time onstage that the tenor sang the part of Pollione, one of his rare excursions into the bel canto repertory. He was also set to open the Met's 1983-1984 centennial season debuting as Enée in a well publicized new production of Berlioz' Les Troyens, but a couple months in advance expressed uncertainty whether he could successful sing the role's high tessitura without harming his voice.[38] He asked to be released from his contract, but eventually decided to sing four of the six performances in the run with his friend James Levine conducting,[38] including one performance that was telecast.[39] He never sang the part again.[40]

During rehearsals for Les Troyens, Domingo rescued the opening night of the San Francisco Opera's season. The tenor scheduled to sing Otello, Carlo Cossutta, cancelled on the day of the performance. The company asked Domingo to replace him at 4 p.m. He quickly flew from New York to San Francisco, rushed to the opera house, and appeared in the role at 10:30 in the evening. A writer for the San Francisco Chronicle, among other journalists, reported extensively on the event. He observed the crowds gathering around the stage door for the tenor's arrival and remarked on how most of the waiting audience members "were breathless over the chance to see Placido Domingo, a star who draws the kind of rapt devotion that Mick Jagger inspires among rock fans."[41]

 
Backstage at the Washington National Opera after the opening night of Idomeneo on 3 November 2002

For the opening night of the following Met season, Domingo returned to the role of Wagner's Lohengrin, which he had last sung in early 1968. He had originally dropped the role from his repertoire after he felt his voice had been temporarily damaged by learning the challenging opera. The New York Times noted that the now more mature artist "lacked the chrome-plated, penetrating quality that one associates with German tenors", but praised him for bringing "an unusual legato grace to a role that is seldom sung so beautifully".[42] He also performed the role at the Vienna State Opera in 1985 and 1990. A performance during his last run of the opera was televised on 28 January 1990 and later released on VHS and DVD. He had just recovered from the flu at the time.[43]

On 19 September 1985 the biggest earthquake in Mexico's history devastated part of the Mexican capital. Domingo's aunt, uncle, nephew and his nephew's young son were killed in the collapse of the Nuevo León apartment block in the Tlatelolco housing complex. Cancelling several performances, Domingo himself labored to rescue survivors. During the next year, he performed benefit concerts for the victims and released an album of one of the events. Also in 1986 he appeared in a special gala concert for Queen Elizabeth II and in the world premiere of Goya, an opera that Gian Carlo Menotti composed specifically for him. Domingo had encouraged Menotti to make the opera about the Spanish painter Francisco Goya, whose life fascinated the singer.

Since 1990 edit

Changing repertoire edit

 
Domingo with American opera singer Stacey Robinson in 1994

Since the 1990s Domingo has continued adding new roles to his growing repertoire, while dropping earlier parts. The 1990s were the start of rapid change in the types of roles the tenor performed. During this decade he sang his last Cavaradossi, Don Carlo, Don José, Gustavo/Riccardo, Hoffmann, and Alvaro, among others, and he began instead to expand the breadth of his roles more substantially beyond the standard Italian and French repertory (Berlioz's Requiem in 1979). In particular, he increased his involvement in Wagnerian operas. Although he had already sung Lohengrin and recorded a few operas by the composer, he did not perform any of Wagner's works frequently onstage until he debuted as Parsifal in 1991 and Siegmund in 1992. He continued to sing these roles for almost two decades, including at the Bayreuth Festival.

Domingo sings "Empio, per farti guerra" from George Frideric Handel's Tamerlano at the Liceu in the 2010–2011 season

For the first time in over three decades, Domingo debuted in a Mozart opera, Idomeneo, in 1994 at the Met. During the nineties, he also appeared in the early Verdi opera, Stiffelio, the Brazilian Il Guarany, and the French grand operas, Hérodiade and Le prophète, all of which are rarely performed. Toward the end of the decade, he added his first Russian-language opera, Tchaikovsky's The Queen of Spades (although he had performed Eugene Onegin in translation while in Israel early in his career).

In the 2000s, he sang his last performances of some of the most successful operas from early in his career: Andrea Chénier, Samson et Dalila, Otello, La fanciulla del West, Fedora, Pagliacci, and Adriana Lecouvreur. In the twenty-first century, however, he has focused mostly on new roles. Early in the 2000s he sang the role of Arrigo in two concert performances of Verdi's rare La battaglia di Legnano and debuted in Wolf-Ferrari's Sly, an opera that his Three Tenors colleague José Carreras had recently revived from obscurity. Domingo himself worked to popularize Franco Alfano's infrequently performed Cyrano de Bergerac a few years later. Shifting musical styles again, he appeared in the eighteenth-century operas Iphigénie en Tauride and Tamerlano late in the decade.

 
Domingo singing at a concert at the Obelisco in Buenos Aires in 2011

Additionally, Domingo created several new roles in modern operas, such as the title role in Tan Dun's 2006 opera The First Emperor at the Metropolitan Opera, which was broadcast worldwide into movie theaters as part of the Met Live in HD series. In September 2010, he created the role of the poet Pablo Neruda in the world première of Daniel Catán's opera Il Postino at the Los Angeles Opera.[44] During the 2011–2012 season, Domingo sang Neptune in the Metropolitan Opera's world premiere performance of Jeremy Sams' The Enchanted Island. A pastiche of Baroque opera with story and characters drawn from Shakespeare's The Tempest and A Midsummer Night's Dream, a performance of the production was telecast on PBS' Great Performances at the Met.

High-profile appearances edit

Giving him greater international recognition outside of the world of opera, Domingo participated in The Three Tenors concert on the eve of the 1990 FIFA World Cup final in Rome with José Carreras and Luciano Pavarotti. The event was originally conceived to raise money for the José Carreras International Leukemia Foundation and was later repeated a number of times, including at the three subsequent World Cup finals (1994 in Los Angeles, 1998 in Paris, and 2002 in Yokohama). The recording of their first appearance together, Carreras Domingo Pavarotti in Concert, went multi-platinum with sales in excess of three million in the United States alone,[45] eventually outselling every previous classical album worldwide.[8][9] Domingo and his colleagues won the Grammy Award for Best Classical Vocal Solo for the album. Four years after their first successful concert, around 1.3 billion viewers worldwide watched their televised second World Cup performance at Dodger Stadium.[46] The recording of that event, The Three Tenors in Concert 1994, went platinum and multi-platinum in many countries, even reaching the number one spot on the UK Albums Chart.[47] Without Pavarotti and Carreras, Domingo made an appearance at the 2006 FIFA World Cup Final in Berlin, along with rising stars Anna Netrebko and Rolando Villazón. Before the 2014 FIFA World Cup final, he performed in Rio de Janeiro with pianist Lang Lang and soprano Ana María Martínez, a winner of his Operalia competition and a frequent singing partner of his.[48] In addition to these large-scale concerts, Domingo recorded the official song for the 1982 FIFA World Cup in Spain, "El Mundial".

A lifelong football fan, Domingo has been a vocal supporter of Real Madrid C.F., his home-town team. In 2002, he performed the club's new commemorative anthem, "Himno del Centenario del Real Madrid". It was written by José María Cano, with whom he had previously collaborated on the opera, Luna. Domingo presented the song live at the Bernabeu Stadium during celebrations of the football club's 100 year anniversary. On 13 May 2012, Domingo performed during Real Madrid's season-ending celebrations, when the team won their 32nd Spanish league title. In 2016 he sang the new version of Real Madrid's "Hala Madrid y nada más" with "...Y Nada Mas."

 
Domingo as the president of Europa Nostra at the organization's awards ceremony in 2014

On 24 August 2008, Domingo performed a duet with Song Zuying, singing Ài de Huǒyàn (The Flame of Love) at the 2008 Summer Olympics closing ceremony in Beijing.[49][50][51] The Beijing Olympics was the second Olympics at which he performed; he also sang the Olympic Hymn at the closing ceremonies of the Barcelona Olympics in 1992.[52]

In 2002, he made a guest appearance on the song "Novus", the closing track on Santana's album Shaman. Domingo sang before Benedict XVI, during the pope's visit to Nationals Park and the Italian embassy in Washington, D.C., on 16 and 17 April 2008. On 15 March 2009, the Metropolitan Opera paid tribute to Domingo's 40th and the company's 125th anniversaries with a gala performance and onstage dinner.[53] On 29 August 2009, he sang "Panis angelicus" at the funeral mass of Senator Ted Kennedy in the Basilica of Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Boston, Massachusetts.[54] In March 2011, Domingo cancelled an engagement in Buenos Aires at the Teatro Colón in support of the theatre's musicians, who were on strike.[55]

As an opera company director edit

Domingo began an affiliation with the Washington National Opera in 1986, when he appeared in its world premiere production of Menotti's Goya. This was followed by performances in a production of Tosca in the 1988/89 season. Beginning in the 1996/97 season, he took on the role of Artistic Director, bringing new life to the company's productions through his many connections to singers throughout the world and his own annual appearances in one role each season.[56] One example of his ability to bring new singers to the stage were those by the then up-and-coming Anna Netrebko as Gilda in Rigoletto during the 1999/2000 season. In 2003 Domingo became General Director and his contract was extended through the 2010–2011 season.

Parallel to Domingo's management of the Washington company, he had been Artistic Director of the Los Angeles Opera since 2000. He assumed the position of General Director of the company in 2003. On 20 September 2010, he announced that he would renew his contract as General Director through 2013.[57] A week later he announced that he would not renew his contract as General Director of the Washington National Opera beyond its June 2011 expiration date. Reaction to this included The Washington Post's comments on his accomplishments:

Domingo's goal was to make the WNO an internationally regarded company. At the beginning of his tenure, he lifted the opera to a new level, bringing in more international stars and big-name productions – including José Carreras in Wolf-Ferrari's Sly, Mirella Freni singing opposite Domingo in Fedora, and Renée Fleming in Lucrezia Borgia. And his commitment to American opera meant that the WNO presented the second or third productions of a number of important works: Maw's Sophie's Choice, Bolcom's A View From the Bridge, Previn's A Streetcar Named Desire.[58]
 
Domingo (center right) as the baritone in Il trovatore at the 2014 Salzburg Festival with Francesco Meli (far left, with sword)

Domingo attempted to quash criticism in East Coast newspapers that he was taking on too much when the singer gave an interview in the Los Angeles Times in which he restated his long-time motto, "When I rest, I rust".[59]

In October 2019, Domingo resigned as general director of the Los Angeles Opera amid accusations of sexual harassment.[11]

Taking on baritone roles edit

Domingo announced in 2007 that two years later he would take on one of Verdi's most demanding baritone roles, singing the title role in Simon Boccanegra. His debut performance in the part occurred at the Berlin State Opera on 24 October, followed by 29 other performances during the 2009–2010 season at major opera houses around the world, including the Met and the Royal Opera House in London.[60]

After the success of Boccanegra, Domingo has performed other baritone roles including the character of Rigoletto in Verdi's Rigoletto in August 2010 at Reignwood Theatre in Beijing. In March 2012, for the first time he sang the baritone role of the Cenobite monk Athanaël in Massenet's Thaïs, his 139th role. Again, in 2011 he undertook the role of Rigoletto in a live television broadcast in Europe which was shot in real locations in Mantua.

He appeared as Doge Francesco Foscari in Verdi's I due Foscari in a production directed by Thaddeus Strassberger for the Los Angeles Opera in September 2012, in Valencia in early 2013, and at Covent Garden in late 2014. In March 2013, at the Metropolitan Opera, he appeared for the first time as Giorgio Germont in Verdi's La Traviata.[61] The following year, he sang Giacomo in Verdi's Giovanna d'Arco in Salzburg. Later in 2014, he debuted as the Conte di Luna in Il trovatore in Berlin. The following season, he sang di Luna again at the Salzburg Festival with Anna Netrebko as Leonora, Marie-Nicole Lemieux as Azucena and Francesco Meli as Manrico. He first sang the title role of Verdi's Nabucco at Covent Garden in March–April 2013[62][63] and has since reprised it in Saint Petersburg,[64] Beijing, Verona,[65] and Vienna. In 2015, he made his debut in the title role of Verdi's Macbeth in Berlin, as well as Don Carlo in Ernani in New York and the title role of Gianni Schicchi in Los Angeles.[66]

On 13 June 2018, Plácido Domingo performed at the 2018 FIFA World Cup opening gala concert in Moscow held at the Red Square in Moscow, with Anna Netrebko, Juan Diego Florez and Aida Garifullina and the Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra conducted by Valery Gergiev.

Family and personal life edit

 
Domingo's father, Plácido Domingo Ferrer (right), with composer Federico Moreno Torroba in Madrid, 1946

Domingo was born to Plácido Francisco Domingo Ferrer (8 March 1907 – 22 November 1987)[67] and Josefa "Pepita" Embil Echániz (28 February 1918 – 28 August 1994),[68] two Spanish zarzuela stars who nurtured his early musical abilities. Domingo's father was half Aragonese and half Catalan, while his mother was a Basque from Gipuzkoa. His father began as a violinist performing for opera and zarzuela orchestras. He soon also took on baritone roles in zarzuelas. Even though he damaged his voice by performing while suffering from a cold, he continued singing into the 1970s. Domingo's mother was an established soprano who made her stage debut at the Gran Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona. She met her husband at age 21 while performing in Federico Moreno Torroba's Sor Navarra. Domingo later recalled that experts encouraged his father to sing Wagnerian heldentenor roles, while the Liceu offered his mother a contract to sing opera.[69] In 1946 Moreno Torroba and Domingo's parents formed a zarzuela company and toured in Latin America. His parents later stayed permanently in Mexico and established their own zarzuela troupe, the Domingo-Embil Company.[70] In addition to their son, they also had a daughter, Maria José "Mari Pepa" Domingo de Fernandez (1942–2015).

 
Domingo with his wife

On 29 August 1957 at age 16, Domingo married a fellow piano student, Ana María Guerra Cué (1938–2006). Their son, José Plácido Domingo Guerra (called "Pepe" as a boy and later "Joe"), now a photographer,[71] was born on 16 June 1958.[72] However, the marriage did not last long, with the couple separating shortly thereafter. On 1 August 1962, Domingo married Marta Ornelas (born 1935), a lyric soprano from Veracruz, Mexico, whom he met during his conservatory days.[73] In the same year, Marta had been voted "Mexican Singer of the Year". After their marriage, the couple performed together frequently at the Israel National Opera. However, after she became pregnant with her first child, she gave up her promising career to devote time to her family. They have two sons, Plácido Francisco (known as Plácido Domingo Jr.), born 21 October 1965, and Alvaro Maurizio, born 11 October 1968.

After a period of time living in Israel, Domingo and his growing family moved to Teaneck, New Jersey in the 1960s.[74][75][76] He later acquired residences in Manhattan and Barcelona. Keeping his apartment in New York, he currently also has a house in his native Madrid. During breaks in his work schedule, he usually spends time with family at his vacation home in Acapulco, Mexico.[77][78]

In March 2010 he underwent surgery for colon cancer.[79] In July 2013, he was admitted to a hospital in Madrid after suffering a pulmonary embolism.[80] He was released on July 14, and was "expected to make a full recovery".[81] In October 2015, he was admitted to a hospital for a cholecystectomy and missed the first five performances of Tosca he was supposed to conduct at the Metropolitan Opera.[82][83]

On 22 March 2020, Domingo announced during the COVID-19 pandemic in Mexico that he had tested positive for COVID-19, which he reportedly contracted at a party in Tequila, Jalisco in honor of Juan Domingo Beckmann, who also tested positive.[84][85] He was admitted to a hospital in Acapulco to treat complications of the disease but his condition was stable.[84]

Sexual harassment allegations edit

In August 2019, Domingo was accused of sexual harassment by multiple female colleagues, some dating back as far as 30 years. However, no official charges were ever filed, nor were there any court proceedings or convictions. Nonetheless, Domingo subsequently resigned from his position as general manager of the Los Angeles Opera, saying he did so with a "heavy heart", but in light of the recent allegations against him, he said the move was in the best interest for the opera company.[86]

In late February 2020, Domingo apologized to any colleagues who felt uncomfortable or in any way hurt by his comments or actions. He reiterated that it was never his intention to hurt or offend anyone, saying, "I have never behaved aggressively toward anyone, and I have never done anything to hinder or harm anyone's career in any way. On the contrary, I have spent much of my half-century in the opera world supporting the industry and furthering the careers of countless singers."[87]

The investigation launched by the Los Angeles Opera into the incidents at the house "deemed the allegations to be credible, in part because of the similarities in their accounts". The investigation "often found him to be sincere in his denials but found some of them to be less credible or lacking in awareness". The investigation criticized inadequate communication and lack of awareness about sexual harassment at the opera.[88]

In his first interview since recovering from COVID-19, Domingo told the Italian newspaper La Repubblica that the charges were false. "When I knew that I had COVID, I promised myself that if I came out alive, I would fight to clear my name", Domingo said. "I never abused anyone. I will repeat that as long as I live."[89]

Recordings edit

Complete operas and recital discs edit

Domingo has made over 200 recordings, most of which are full-length operas; he has recorded nearly all of opera's leading tenor roles, several of them more than once. As a teenager, he first appeared in very small parts on the Spanish-language original cast versions of the musicals My Fair Lady (1959) and Redhead (1960). In 1968, he released his first solo album, Recital of Italian Operatic Arias (also known as Bel Canto Domingo). The album, conducted by Nello Santi, received the Grand Prix du Disque. In 1969, Domingo's first recital album for RCA Red Seal was issued, and he recorded his first complete opera in the studio, Il trovatore, with Leontyne Price and Sherrill Milnes also for RCA, which would be his primary record label throughout the entire 1970s; RCA recorded Domingo, Milnes and Price together several more times, both in complete operas and recital discs. Domingo followed Il trovatore with a steady stream of complete recorded operas from the 1970s through the early years of the next century. Starting with Il tabarro in 1970, Les Troyens 1983 and ending with Edgar in 2006, Domingo has recorded all of Puccini's operatic roles for tenor. Among his albums is a box set of every major tenor aria Verdi composed, including several obscure and rarely performed versions in languages different from the original operas, and written only for specific performances. He has also recorded the vocal parts in many symphonic works and has conducted on some of his albums.[citation needed] In August 2005, EMI Classics released a highly anticipated and publicized studio recording of Richard Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, in which Domingo and Operalia winner Nina Stemme sang the title roles. A review, headlined "Vocal perfections", in the 8 August 2005 issue of The Economist called the recording "monumental" and praised it for having "a musical lyricism and a sexual passion that make the cost and the effort entirely worthwhile". The review also characterized Domingo's July 2005 performance of Siegmund in Wagner's Die Walküre at Covent Garden as "unforgettable" and "luminous". More recently Domingo has appeared with Angela Gheorghiu on a recording of Fedora, an opera in which he often appeared onstage, and as the baritone in a live version of Giovanna d'Arco with Anna Netrebko. In September 2011, aged 70, he signed an exclusive record contract with Sony Classics.[90]

Crossover albums edit

In addition to his classical recordings, Domingo has released numerous crossover albums. His output of non-operatic recordings accelerated after his pop album, Perhaps Love (1981), went gold and eventually platinum.[91] His other recordings of popular music include My Life for a Song (1983), Save Your Nights for Me (1985), and the British gold record, Be My Love (1990).[92] His English-language version of "Bésame Mucho" from My Life for a Song received a Grammy nomination for Best Latin Pop Performance in 1984. The following year he won a Grammy in the same category for his collection of Ernesto Lecuona songs, Always in My Heart (Siempre en mi corazón). (He won a second Grammy the same year for Carmen under the baton of Lorin Maazel.) In 2012, he recorded Songs with Josh Groban, Susan Boyle, and jazz singer Harry Connick, Jr., among others. In 2015, he released a holiday album, My Christmas including duets with Idina Menzel, Jackie Evancho, Plácido Domingo Jr., The Piano Guys and others.[93]

Since the early 1980s, Domingo has released several Latin albums, including two featuring the music of Mexican songwriter, Agustín Lara. He devoted two more of his albums, Adoro (1982) and 100 años de Mariachi (1999), solely to Mexican music. 100 años de Mariachi, a rancheras collection, went platinum in the United States and gold in Mexico.[91][94] He later recalled that, as a fan of mariachi music since boyhood, the Grammy he won for 100 años de Mariachi was the award that meant the most to him of all he has received.[95]

Appearances on film and television edit

Domingo has starred in several opera films. His three theatrical released opera movies from the 1980s received significant awards and recognitions, including Golden Globe and BAFTA nominations for Best Foreign Language Film. Zeffirelli's La Traviata and Otello both received Academy Award nominations, and the soundtracks of La Traviata and Rosi's Carmen won Grammy Awards for the Best Opera Recording of the year. Domingo has also made various opera films for television, including Jean-Pierre Ponnelle's Madama Butterfly with Mirella Freni, Gianfranco de Bosio's Tosca with Raina Kabaivanska, Giuseppe Patroni Griffi's Tosca with Catherine Malfitano (Emmy Award),[citation needed] Franco Zeffirelli's Cavalleria rusticana and Pagliacci, and more recently, Marco Bellocchio's Rigoletto a Mantova [it].

 
Domingo at the 81st Academy Awards in 2009

Over the course of decades, he has sung in numerous Live from the Metropolitan Opera telecasts and Met radio broadcasts. He has also appeared often in televised performances from other opera houses. In 1978, he starred in the La Scala production of Puccini's Manon Lescaut that marked the house debut of Hungarian soprano Sylvia Sass. In addition, many of his concerts and zarzuela evenings have been televised. Beyond his filmed opera and concert performances, he has frequently made guest appearances on television. Domingo appeared on The Cosby Show Season 5 as Alberto Santiago, a colleague of Dr. Cliff Huxtable.[96] In 1989, the international television series Return Journey featured Domingo returning to his home city of Madrid reflecting on life there whilst recording an album of Zarzuela arias for EMI. On the 1993 Academy Awards telecast, he performed the song, "Beautiful Maria of My Soul," from the movie The Mambo Kings, which had received a nomination for Best Original Song. The tenor was the first Spaniard to perform at an Academy Awards ceremony. He had previously presented the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film with Faye Dunaway at the 57th Academy Awards in 1985.

Domingo was the executive producer of the critically acclaimed 1998 Mexican film The Other Conquest, produced by his son Alvaro and directed by Salvador Carrasco, in which Domingo also sang the original aria "Mater Aeterna", composed by Samuel Zyman with lyrics by Carrasco. He was also heard performing the song "In Pace", during the closing credits of Kenneth Branagh's Hamlet (1996). In 2008, Domingo provided the voice of the long-haired Chihuahua named Montezuma in Disney's Beverly Hills Chihuahua. He also appeared as Manolo's great-grandfather in the animated film The Book of Life in 2014.

Christmas in Vienna edit

In December 1992, Domingo collaborated with fellow operatic tenor and friend José Carreras and pop music legend Diana Ross in a televised Christmas-themed concert. Vienna was chosen to host the event due to its reputation as a capital of music and the particular charm of Austria during Christmas time. The Wiener Symphoniker under the direction of maestro Vjekoslav Šutej provided the orchestral music, and the Gumpoldskirchen Children's Choir provided choral vocals. On 23 December 1992, the first in what would turn out to be a series of Christmas in Vienna concerts was seen worldwide by several hundred million people. Plácido Domingo returned to Vienna for many more Christmas in Vienna concerts, performing with stars and friends of both pop and classical music, including Dionne Warwick, Charles Aznavour, Sissel Kyrkjebø, Michael Bolton, Sarah Brightman, Charlotte Church, Natalie Cole, Riccardo Cocciante, Patricia Kaas, Luciano Pavarotti, Tony Bennett and others.

Cultural references edit

 
At the Washington National Opera on 14 April 2007 after a performance of Die Walküre, his most frequently performed German opera

By the 1980s and 1990s, popular cultural forms, especially television programs, began to reference Domingo, often as a prototypical opera singer or as part of the influential Three Tenors.[97] In 1987 Sesame Street, a U.S. children's television show that has been on the air since 1969, introduced a puppet character named after Domingo. In the series, Placido Flamingo was a pink singing bird who appeared regularly on "Live from the Nest" (a play on "Live from the Met") telecasts from the Nestropolitan Opera. In the 1989 special "Sesame Street... 20 Years & Still Counting", Domingo appeared with his namesake puppet, singing "Look through the Window" together.[98] The show never revived the character after the puppeteer, Richard Hunt, who provided the voice for Placido Flamingo, died in early 1992.[99] Similarly, in the 2009 Australian-Canadian cartoon comedy Pearlie, the father of a family of opera singing fleas is named Placido. Although not opera related, one of the Three Emperors (a take-off on the Three Tenors) in the original Japanese version of the anime series, Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's (2008-2011), is also named after the singer.

In 2007, Domingo had a cameo role on The Simpsons, the longest running American scripted prime time television series and winner of over thirty Emmy Awards. He provided the voice for an animated version of himself in the episode "The Homer of Seville", which revolves around Homer Simpson becoming an opera singer. After an opera performance, Homer chats with Domingo, who tells him to call him "P. Dingo" (a play on "P. Diddy") and asks him for singing advice. Although not providing voice-overs, he was also an animated character in a 1995 episode ("Three Tenors and You're Out") of the Warner Brothers children's cartoon, Animaniacs, and a 1999 episode ("Censoring Problems: The Three Stooges vs. The Three Tenors") of MTV's violent comedy, Celebrity Deathmatch.

Domingo, along with Luciano Pavarotti and José Carreras, loosely inspired the 2001 biting English-language film, Off Key, by Spanish director Manuel Gómez Pereira.[100][101] The movie's leading character, Ricardo Palacios (played by Joe Mantegna), is a Spanish tenor with vague ties to Mexico, who plays the piano, conducts, seeks celebrity outside of the opera world, and is proud of his Otello. Like Domingo, he discovers new operatic talents, sings duets with pop singers, and performs mariachi music and tangos. The farcical plot, however, has nothing in common with actual occurrences in the lives of Domingo or his colleagues.[101] The movie was the most expensive production in Spain's cinematic history to that point.[102]

American author Elizabeth George references Domingo in one of her series of mystery novels about the fictional Inspector Lynley, This Body of Death (2010). In the book, Meredith's young daughter is an enthusiastic fan of Plácido Domingo and has the detective read to her from an unauthorized biography of the singer. The real-life Domingo was also mentioned as part of a running gag on the 1996 Seinfeld episode, "The Doll". Seinfeld was the second highest rated series on U.S. television at the time. He was also referenced several times throughout the sitcom series Everybody Loves Raymond as Raymond's mother, Marie's, favorite opera singer. In addition, the tenor has appeared on the cover of several opera-related books, as a key representative of the musical genre. Such mainstream allusions to Domingo illustrate his atypically widespread fame and cultural influence as an opera singer. His integration both as an actual performer and as an "image" into popular as well as high culture was so significant by 2011, Spanish author Rubén Amón wrote a book, Plácido Domingo: Un coloso en el teatro del mundo, specifically analyzing the singer as a cultural and sociological phenomenon.[97][103]

Repertoire edit

Domingo has sung 151 roles in Italian, French, German, English, Spanish and Russian.[5][6] His main repertoire however is Italian (Otello; Cavaradossi in Tosca; Don Carlo; Des Grieux in Manon Lescaut; Dick Johnson in La fanciulla del West; Radames in Aida); French (Don José in Carmen; Samson in Samson and Delilah; Énée in Les Troyens; Hoffmann in Les Contes d'Hoffmann); and German (Lohengrin, Parsifal, and Siegmund in Die Walküre). He has appeared in more operas by Giuseppe Verdi than any other composer. Domingo has created original roles in eight world premieres of operas, Vásquez's El último sueño, Moreno Torroba's El poeta, Menotti's Goya, García Abril's Divinas palabras, Cano's Luna, Drattell's Nicholas and Alexandra, Tan Dun's The First Emperor, and Catán's Il Postino, as well as one pasticcio, The Enchanted Island. He also performed in the U.S. premieres of Don Rodrigo and Cyrano de Bergerac. He continues to add more roles to his repertoire, most recently performing as Schicchi in Puccini's one-act opera Gianni Schicchi in September 2015.

After taking on baritone roles, he sang Conte Di Luna in Il Trovatore, an opera in which he previously performed as Manrico, a tenor role. His last major role in a full-length opera was in the title role of Nabucco in the production by Thaddeus Strassberger in December 2019 in Valencia. During the curtain call many supporters of the singer showed support by dropping flyers in support of the singer.[104]

Awards and honors edit

 
Placido Domingo at a Concert.

Plácido Domingo has received many awards and honors for his achievement in the field of music and in recognition of his many benefit concerts and contributions to various charities. In 1978, when Domingo was only 37, the city of Madrid dedicated a commemorative plaque at his birthplace at 34 Calle Ibiza near the Buen Retiro Park.[12]

The singer won his first Grammy Award in 1971 and has gone on to win eight more, as well as five Latin Grammy awards including an award for Latin Recording Academy Person of the Year.[105]

A Kammersänger of the Vienna State Opera and the recipient of numerous honorary doctorates, he has received other major awards that include being made an honorary Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2002.[106]

In 2006, he received the Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music.

He has also received the Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art, 1st class (1992); Grand Decoration of Honour in Silver for Services to the Republic of Austria (2007);[107] Commander of the French Légion d'honneur; Mexican Order of the Aztec Eagle; Spanish Prince of Asturias Award for Arts (1991); the United States Presidential Medal of Freedom; and in 2011, a Medal of Honour from Sultan Qaboos bin Said of Oman.[108] The first Birgit Nilsson Prize was awarded to him in 2009.

In 2012, Domingo was voted into Gramophone's first Hall of Fame.[109]

In April 2014, Domingo was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Music degree by Berklee College of Music at its campus in Valencia, Spain. During his acceptance speech, Domingo said, "it is a great pleasure to have a connection between Boston and Valencia since both have been so important in my career." Domingo sang Handel's Messiah with the Boston Symphony Orchestra at the beginning of his career, and performed his first Bohéme at the Palau de les Arts.[110]

In June 2018, Iberia Airlines honored Domingo by placing his name on their first Airbus A350 delivered to the Airline.[111]

Humanitarian works and initiatives edit

 
Statue of Domingo in Mexico City in recognition of his contributions to 1985 Mexico City earthquake victims and his artistic works
 
Domingo at the 30 year commemoration of the 1985 Mexico City earthquake

Domingo has been heavily involved in humanitarian efforts and volunteerism. He has given many benefit concerts for disaster relief, charities, and musical organizations, as well as served in various voluntary positions in the artistic and sports worlds. In 1986, Domingo performed at several benefit concerts to raise funds for the victims of the 1985 Mexico City earthquake. He also released an album of one of the events for charity. On 21 August 2007, in recognition of his support of the earthquake victims, as well as his artistic works, a statue in his honor was unveiled. It was made in Mexico City from keys donated by the people. The statue, the work of Alejandra Zúñiga, is two meters tall, weighs about 300 kg (660 lbs) and is part of the "Grandes valores" (Great values) program.[112][113]

Since the earthquake, Domingo has continued to do charitable work in Mexico and other countries. After Hurricane Pauline ravaged the Pacific coast of Southern Mexico in 1997, he gave two charity concerts in Acapulco to raise money to build 150 new houses for those made homeless by the storm.[114] In December 2003, he performed in Cancún to benefit the Ciudad de la Alegria Foundation, which provides assistance and lodging to people in need, including low-income individuals, orphans, expectant mothers, immigrants, rehabilitated legal offenders, and the terminally ill.[115] Outside of Mexico, Domingo and Katherine Jenkins performed in a charity concert in Athens on 27 June 2007 to raise funds to aid victims of the conflict in Darfur. The concert was organized by Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders).

On 4 March 2006, Domingo sang at the New Orleans Opera Association's Gala Benefit Concert, "A Night For New Orleans", to help rebuild the city after it was partially destroyed by Hurricane Katrina. Before the gala, he made the encouraging statement: "MUSIC IS THE VOICE OF HOPE!".[116] Operalia winner Elizabeth Futral and several other popular opera singers appeared with the tenor. The Gala collected $700,000 for the city recovery fund.[117] On 23 March 2008, the New Orleans City Council named the city theatre's stage in the Mahalia Jackson Theatre in Louis Armstrong Park the "Plácido Domingo stage", in honour of his contribution at the Gala Benefits Concert.[117] Early the following year, Domingo performed with the New Orleans Opera in a gala reopening the theatre. At the time he told the press, "The restoration of New Orleans' Mahalia Jackson Theater is a symbol of new life for the city following the devastation of 2005, but in these difficult economic times, it is also a symbol of hope and faith in the future on the part of a forward-looking artistic organization."[118]

In June 2010 Domingo became President of Europa Nostra, the Voice of Cultural Heritage in Europe, which helps to promote European high culture.[119] The following year, FIFA president Sepp Blatter invited Domingo to join a council intended to clean up the football governing body, which had been accused of taking bribes from countries that wanted to stage the World Cup.[120] Domingo has also supported environmental efforts. In 2007, he joined several other preeminent figures in entertainment, government, the environment and more, as one of the users of the BMW Hydrogen 7, designed to build support for hydrogen as a viable alternative to fossil fuels.[121] Domingo also supports the Hear the World initiative as an ambassador to raise awareness for the topic of hearing and hearing loss.[122]

Operalia and young artists programs edit

 
Domingo with young Operalia singers, Budapest, 2016

Domingo has especially tried to aid the development of young opera singers' careers. In 1993 he founded Operalia, The World Opera Competition, an international opera competition for talented young singers. The winners get the opportunity to be employed in opera ensembles around the world.[123]

Several leading opera singers of recent years have won prizes in the competition, including Joseph Calleja, Joyce DiDonato, Erwin Schrott, Giuseppe Filianoti, and José Cura. In particular, Domingo has performed frequently with Mexican tenor Rolando Villazón, who won three prizes at the 1999 Operalia competition.

Beyond Operalia, Domingo has been instrumental in giving many young artists encouragement and special attention, as in 2001, when he invited the so-called "Singing Policeman", New York tenor Daniel Rodríguez, to attend the Vilar-Domingo Young Artists program to develop his operatic skills.

In addition to the Vilar-Domingo Young Artists Program in Washington, D.C., Domingo has also started programs to train young opera singers at the Los Angeles Opera and the Palau de les Arts Reina Sofia in Valencia, Spain.

In September 2016, he performed at a Los Angeles benefit for the Esperanza Azteca Los Angeles Youth Orchestra supporting young musicians from the Los Angeles area.[124]

Writings edit

Date Title Publisher ISBN Pages Author(s)
September 1983 My First Forty Years Alfred A. Knopf ISBN 0-394-52329-6 256 Plácido Domingo
1983 Jacqueline du Pré: Impressions Vanguard Press ISBN 0814908675 141 William Wordsworth
Plácido Domingo
December 1994 Opera 101: A Complete Guide to
Learning and Loving Opera
Hyperion ISBN 0-7868-8025-2 494 Fred Plotkin
Plácido Domingo
July 1997 Christmas With Plácido Domingo:
Trumpets Sound And Angels Sing
Alfred Publishing Company ISBN 0-89524-321-0 80 Plácido Domingo
Milton Okun
July 1997 Bajo el Cielo Español
(Under the Spanish Sky)
Warner Brothers Publications ISBN 0-7692-0024-9 84 Plácido Domingo
Carol Cuéllar
March 1999 Plácido Domingo: Por Amor Hal Leonard Corporation ISBN 0-7119-7258-3 104 Plácido Domingo
January 2003 The Zarzuela Companion Scarecrow Press ISBN 0810844478 352 Christopher Webber
Plácido Domingo
March 2003 Plácido Domingo: My Operatic Roles Baskerville Publishers, Incorporated ISBN 1-880909-61-8 319 Helena Matheopoulos
Plácido Domingo
March 2007 Leoncavallo: Life and Works Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc ISBN 0-8108-5873-8
ISBN 0-8108-5880-0
349
351
Konrad Dryden
Plácido Domingo
December 2007 So When Does the Fat Lady Sing? Hal Leonard Corporation ISBN 1-57467-162-6 173 Michael Walsh
Plácido Domingo

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Pronunciation: /dˈmɪŋɡ, dəˈ-/; Spanish: [xoˈse ˈplaθiðo ðoˈmiŋɡo emˈbil]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, Encyclopedia of World Biography, Thomson Gale, 2006, The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music, Oxford University Press, 1994, Warrack, J. and West, E. The Oxford Dictionary of Opera, OUP, 1992 all give the year of birth as 1941.
  2. ^ Macy, Laura Williams (2008). The Grove Book of Opera Singers. Oxford University Press. pp. 127–8. ISBN 978-0195337655.
  3. ^ Matheopoulos & Domingo 2003, p. 19: "Otello is a dramatic part and Domingo a lirico spinto tenor. But from the beginning it was clear that this was an ideal role for him..."
  4. ^ Michener, Charles (4 October 2004). "Heppner Now Reigning Otello As Domingo Relinquishes Role". New York Observer. Retrieved 7 August 2015.
  5. ^ a b "Review: In his 151st role, Plácido Domingo plays the 'wild cat' as old lion". Los Angeles Times. 6 May 2019. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
  6. ^ a b "OperaChaser: Domingo's 151st role accompanies zarzuela's great appeal in a passionately presented El Gato Montés ("The Wildcat") at L.A. Opera". Operachaser.blogspot.com. 20 May 2019. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
  7. ^ Butler, Susan (21 June 2008). "Milt Okun: Music Legend Milt Okun Honored for a Lifetime of Vision". Billboard. p. 34.
  8. ^ a b Gareth Malone (28 April 2011). Music for the People: The Pleasures and Pitfalls of Classical Music. HarperCollins Publishers. pp. 34–. ISBN 978-0-00-739618-4. Retrieved 30 July 2013.
  9. ^ a b Classical Music Magazine, volume 17, p. 39 (1994). "And then there's the three tenors phenomenon: The London recording from the 1990 concert became the biggest-selling classical album of all time, having now topped 10-million units throughout the world."
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 10 April 2019. Retrieved 1 July 2017.
  11. ^ a b Singh, Maanvi (2 October 2019). "Plácido Domingo resigns from Los Angeles Opera amid sexual harassment claims". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 October 2019.
  12. ^ a b Plácido Domingo: "Nací a diez minutos del Real, en la calle Ibiza" (spanish)
  13. ^ S. E. (20 October 1988). "'En España la zarzuela se ha tratado como una hijastra': Pepita Embil recibe hoy un gran homenaje". ABC (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  14. ^ Domingo 1983, pp. 10–13.
  15. ^ Domingo 1983, pp. 14–9.
  16. ^ Domingo 1983, pp. 18.
  17. ^ Webber 2003, p. 303.
  18. ^ a b Domingo 1983, pp. 20.
  19. ^ Domingo 1983, pp. 20–2.
  20. ^ Domingo 1983, pp. 23.
  21. ^ Domingo 1983, pp. 25–6.
  22. ^ Domingo 1983, pp. 27.
  23. ^ Domingo 1983, pp. 28.
  24. ^ "Roles" 2021-04-16 at the Wayback Machine, placidodomingo.com
  25. ^ "Placido Domingo | About Placido Domingo | American Masters | PBS". American Masters. 3 December 2002.
  26. ^ Snowman 1985, pp. 11, 134–5.
  27. ^ Schonberg, Harold C. (10 February 1967). "Opera: Orchestra Is Star". The New York Times. p. 31.
  28. ^ Snowman 1985, p. 11.
  29. ^ Volpe 2006, p. 193.
  30. ^ Domingo 1983, p. 222.
  31. ^ PBS, American Masters: Plácido Domingo
  32. ^ Gad, Georges (February 2001). "Plácido Domingo l'apothéose". Le Monde de la musique (in French).
  33. ^ a b Swan 1982.
  34. ^ Snowman 1985, p. 49.
  35. ^ Domingo 1983, pp. 175–9.
  36. ^ Snowman 1985, pp. 213–5, 222–4.
  37. ^ Scovell, Jane (September 1987). "Domingo: Giving his Best". Opera News.
  38. ^ a b Holland, Bernard (20 September 1983). "Domingo 'Almost' Sure to Open Met". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  39. ^ Almquist, Sharon G. (1993). Opera Mediagraphy: Video Recordings and Motion Pictures. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. p. 170. ISBN 0313284903.
  40. ^ Matheopoulos & Domingo 2003, p. 212.
  41. ^ Hartlaub, Peter; Shilts, Randy (22 August 2015). "Our SF: An inebriated crowd awaits Placido Domingo's arrival". SFGate. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  42. ^ Henahan, Donal (26 September 1984). "Met opener passes tests". The New York Times.
  43. ^ Norton-Welsh, Christopher (May 1990). "Vienna, Lohengrin". Opera. London.
  44. ^ "About Us: Plácido Domingo" (Domingo's page on LA Opera's website) 2013-05-28 at the Wayback Machine, laopera.com. Retrieved 1 July 2013
  45. ^ "American certifications – "Three Tenors, The"". Recording Industry Association of America. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  46. ^ Blumenthal, Ralph (24 March 1996). "The Three Tenors Juggernaut". The New York Times. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  47. ^ "All The Number 1 Albums". Official Charts (UK). Retrieved 11 July 2015.
  48. ^ "Placido Domingo to Sing Before World Cup Final". The Hollywood Reporter. AP. 12 June 2014. Retrieved 15 July 2015.
  49. ^ . www.news.com.au. Archived from the original on 27 August 2008. Retrieved 22 May 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  50. ^ "Beijing 2008 Olympics". People's Daily.
  51. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 August 2008.
  52. ^ Placido Domingo – Olympic Closing Ceremony Barcelona 1992 on YouTube
  53. ^ "Domingo's 40th Anniversary with The MET". Metoperafamily.org. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
  54. ^ Rowley, James; Fitzgerald, Alison (29 August 2009). "Nation's Political Elite Gathers for Kennedy Farewell". Bloomberg News.
  55. ^ "Plácido Domingo actuará al aire libre en Buenos Aires, pero no en el Teatro Colón". El Día. 23 March 2011. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
  56. ^ Phillips-Matz 2006, p. 53.
  57. ^ David Ng; Mike Boehm (20 September 2010). "Plácido Domingo renews contract with L.A. Opera through 2013". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 13 November 2010.
  58. ^ Anne Midgette, "Domingo will not renew D.C. opera contract", The Washington Post, 28 September 2010
  59. ^ Reed Johnson, "Plácido Domingo's juggling act: The superstar rejects recent suggestions that his busy life is affecting L.A. Opera and his other commitments" The Los Angeles Times, 21 February 2010
  60. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 October 2009.
  61. ^ "Metropolitan Opera, 14 March 2013, performance information" (PDF). Metoperafamily.org). Retrieved 24 August 2021.
  62. ^ Hugo Shirley, "Plácido Domingo's Operalia Winners", Opera, London, September 2012, pp. 1153–1154.
  63. ^ "Nabucco — Productions — Royal Opera House". Roh.org.uk.
  64. ^ "Nabucco". Mariinsky.ru.
  65. ^ "Nabucco_arena-verona_04/07/2013_Arena". Archived from the original on 30 June 2013. Retrieved 14 October 2019.
  66. ^ "Plácido Domingo, tenor". Operabase.com.
  67. ^ "Placido Domingo Ferrer, Baritone, 80", (obit.) The New York Times, 26 November 1987
  68. ^ "Pepita Embil Domingo; Soprano and Tenor's Mother, 76" (obit.), The New York Times, 1 September 1994
  69. ^ Domingo 1983, pp. 5–7.
  70. ^ Placido Domingo Summary – via www.bookrags.com.
  71. ^ http://www.educacioncontracorriente.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=60361:expone-fotografias-jose-placido-domingo-hijo-del-tenor-en-la-ciudad-de-mexico&catid=22:articulistas[permanent dead link]
  72. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 October 2007.
  73. ^ "Plácido Domingo (biography)". IMDb.
  74. ^ Matheopoulos; with Domingo 2003, p. 16
  75. ^ "Domingo: Iron man of opera", The Cincinnati Post, 23 September 1998. Accessed 7 August 2007.
  76. ^ Dobnik, Verena via Associated Press. "The Three Tenors return in drag for Domingo", Newsday, 28 September 2008. Accessed 29 September 2008.
  77. ^ Domingo, Plácido; Matheopoulos, Helena (14 October 2000). My Operatic Roles. Baskerville Publishers, Inc. ISBN 9781880909614 – via Google Books.
  78. ^ . www.aarp.org. Archived from the original on 18 September 2008. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
  79. ^ Adams, Stephen (8 March 2010). "Placido Domingo has colon cancer surgery". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022.
  80. ^ Talbott, Chris (9 July 2013). . The Huffington Post. Nashville. Archived from the original on 10 July 2013.
  81. ^ Gelt, Jessica (14 July 2013). "Placido Domingo in high spirits after release from hospital". L.A. Times.
  82. ^ "Placido Domingo to Undergo Gallbladder Surgery, Cancels Concerts". Billboard. 15 October 2015. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
  83. ^ "Placido Domingo Will Miss First Five TOSCA Performances at the Met for Surgery". Broadwayworld.com. 14 October 2015. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
  84. ^ a b "Plácido Domingo ingresado en Acapulco por coronavirus". La Vanguardia (in Spanish). 28 March 2020. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  85. ^ "Plácido Domingo da positivo en coronavirus". El Independiente (in Spanish). 22 March 2020. Retrieved 22 March 2020.
  86. ^ Gröger, René (3 October 2019). "Plácido Domingo verlässt Oper in Los Angeles" [Plácido Domingo leaves Los Angeles Opera]. BR-Klassik (in German).
  87. ^ "Plácido Domingo's Facebook". Facebook. 27 February 2020.
  88. ^ "LA Opera Independent Investigation: Summary of Findings and Recommendations". LA Opera. 10 March 2020.
  89. ^ "After recovering from virus, Domingo vows to clear name". Msn.com. The Canadian Press. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
  90. ^ "Placido Domingo Signs With Sony Classical". Billboard. 22 September 2011. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
  91. ^ a b "American certifications – Placido Domingo". Recording Industry Association of America. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  92. ^ "British certifications – Placido Domingo". British Phonographic Industry. Retrieved 8 July 2015. Type Placido Domingo in the "Search BPI Awards" field and then press Enter.
  93. ^ "Placido Domingo Duets with Idina Menzel and More on New Album, My Christmas", BroadwayWorld.com, November 5, 2015
  94. ^ "Certificaciones" (in Spanish). Asociación Mexicana de Productores de Fonogramas y Videogramas. Retrieved 8 July 2015. Type Domingo in the box under the ARTISTA column heading.
  95. ^ "Mariachi: The Spirit of Mexico". WLIW21: WNET New York Public Media (PBS). WLIW21 Pressroom. Retrieved 17 July 2015.
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  98. ^ Burlingame, Jon (7 April 1989). "'Sesame Street' counts 20 years". Ocala Star-Banner. p. 6C. Retrieved 13 August 2015.
  99. ^ "Deaths: Richard Hunt". Toledo Blade. AP. 9 January 1992. Retrieved 13 August 2015.
  100. ^ Jonathan Holland (12 December 2001). "Film Reviews – Off-Key". Variety. Retrieved 6 August 2015.
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  104. ^ "Palau de Les Arts 2019-20 Review: Nabucco". Opera Wire. 6 December 2019. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
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  106. ^ . BBC. 15 October 2002. Archived from the original on 27 September 2020. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  107. ^ "Reply to a parliamentary question" (PDF) (in German). p. 1826. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
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  112. ^ "México rinde homenaje a Plácido Domingo con una estatua de bronce" (in Spanish), El País, 21 August 2007. Retrieved 1 July 2013
  113. ^ "Awards" 2015-06-11 at the Wayback Machine on Plácido Domingo's website
  114. ^ "Tenor gives voice to hurricane victims". The Spokesman-Review. AP. 31 October 1998. p. A9. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
  115. ^ "Performance in Cancún to benefit the Ciudad de la Alegria Foundation". Palaceresorts.com. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
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  119. ^ Domingo, Plácido (December 2016). "End the International Destruction of Cultural Heritage". Vigilo. Din l-Art Ħelwa: National Trust of Malta (48): 30–31. ISSN 1026-132X.
  120. ^ Owen Gibson (6 June 2011). "Sepp Blatter wants singer Plácido Domingo to join Fifa's wise men". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
  121. ^ "Placido Domingo Set to Drive BMW Hydrogen 7". Theautochannel.com.
  122. ^ Hear the World website on hear-the-world.com. Retrieved 30 June 2013
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Cited sources edit

  • Amón, Rubén (2011). Plácido Domingo: Un coloso en el teatro del mundo (in Spanish). Barcelona: Planeta. ISBN 978-8408099192.
  • Domingo, Plácido (1983). My First Forty Years. New York: Knopf. ISBN 0-394-52329-6.
  • Matheopoulos, Helena; Domingo, Plácido (2003). Placido Domingo: My Operatic Roles (2nd ed.). Fort Worth, TX: Baskerville Publishers. ISBN 1-880909-61-8.
  • Phillips-Matz, Mary Jane (2006). Washington National Opera 1956–2006. Washington, D.C.: Washington National Opera. ISBN 0-9777037-0-3.
  • Snowman, Daniel (1985). The World of Plácido Domingo. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-059527-5.
  • Swan, Annalyn (8 March 1982). . Newsweek. Washington, D.C. Archived from the original on 10 November 2005. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  • Volpe, Joseph (2006). The Toughest Show on Earth: My Rise and Reign at the Metropolitan Opera. New York: Knopf. ISBN 0307262855.
  • Webber, Christopher (2003). The Zarzuela Companion. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0810844478.

Other sources edit

  • Goodnough, David (1997). Plácido Domingo: Opera Superstar (Hispanic Biographies). Enslow Publishers. ISBN 0-89490-892-8

External links edit

  • Official website
  • , collection of televised performances
  • Discography, Deutsche Grammophon Classics
  • Placido Domingo performs arias from Andrea Chėnier, Abduction from the Seraglio, Carmen, Der Rosencavalier, Fidelio, Forza del destino, Otello, Samson et Dalila, Tales of Hoffmann, Tannhaeuser, Tosca, Trovatore, Un Ballo in Maschera on archive.org
  • Recordings with Plácido Domingo in the Online Archive of the Österreichische Mediathek (registration required) Retrieved 3. November 2022

Biography, interviews and profiles

  • on the Kennedy Center's website at kennedy-center.org
  • Peter Conrad, " 'I must live up to what people expect' ", The Observer (London), 9 July 2005 on guardian.co.uk.
  • Martin Kettle, "A tenor no more: Domingo to make switch to baritone", The Guardian (London), 24 January 2007.
  • Nahuel Lopez, "Oper ist teuer, Sänger sind billig" ("Opera is expensive, singers are cheap"), Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung, 17 March 2009. "Plácido Domingo about too small operas, casting singers as Paul Potts and the humility before a great career". (In German)
  • Matthew Stadlen, "Plácido Domingo: 'I've done nothing to deserve this voice'", The Telegraph (London), 25 August 2013 on telegraph.co.uk. (Domingo and his career at age 72)

plácido, domingo, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, domingo, second, maternal, family, name, embil, this, biography, living, person, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, adding, reliable, sources, contentious, material, about,. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Domingo and the second or maternal family name is Embil This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Placido Domingo news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Jose Placido Domingo Embil a born 21 January 1941 1 is a Spanish opera singer conductor and arts administrator He has recorded over a hundred complete operas and is well known for his versatility regularly performing in Italian French German Spanish English and Russian in the most prestigious opera houses in the world Although primarily a lirico spinto tenor for most of his career especially popular for his Cavaradossi Hoffmann Don Jose and Canio he quickly moved into more dramatic roles becoming the most acclaimed Otello of his generation 2 3 4 In the early 2010s he transitioned from the tenor repertory into exclusively baritone parts most notably Simon Boccanegra As of 2020 he has performed 151 different roles 5 6 Placido DomingoDomingo in June 2019BornJose Placido Domingo Embil 1941 01 21 21 January 1941 age 83 Madrid SpainAlma materNational Conservatory of Music MexicoOccupationsOpera singerconductorarts administratorYears active1957 presentSpousesAna Maria Guerra Cue m 1957 div 1958 wbr Marta Ornelas m 1962 wbr Children3 including Placido Jr Domingo has also achieved significant success as a crossover artist especially in the genres of Latin and popular music In addition to winning fourteen Grammy and Latin Grammy Awards several of his records have gone silver gold platinum and multi platinum His first pop album Perhaps Love 1981 spread his fame beyond the opera world The title song performed as a duet with country and folk singer John Denver has sold almost four million copies 7 and helped lead to numerous television appearances for the tenor He also starred in many cinematically released and televised opera movies particularly under the direction of Franco Zeffirelli In 1990 he began singing with fellow tenors Luciano Pavarotti and Jose Carreras as part of The Three Tenors The first Three Tenors recording became the best selling classical album of all time 8 9 Growing up working in his parents zarzuela company in Mexico Domingo has since regularly promoted this form of Spanish opera He also increasingly conducts operas and concerts and was the general director of the Los Angeles Opera in California from 2017 to 2019 10 11 He was initially the artistic director and later general director of the Washington National Opera from 1996 to 2011 He has been involved in numerous humanitarian works as well as efforts to help young opera singers including starting and running the international singing competition Operalia In the years 2019 2021 he has performed continuously on stages in Berlin Budapest Cologne Graz Madrid Merida Milan Monte Carlo Moscow Munich Palermo Rome Salzburg Sofia Verona Versailles Vienna and Zurich Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 1960s 1980s 2 1 1 Establishing a career in opera 2 1 2 Growing celebrity 2 2 Since 1990 2 2 1 Changing repertoire 2 2 2 High profile appearances 2 2 3 As an opera company director 2 2 4 Taking on baritone roles 3 Family and personal life 4 Sexual harassment allegations 5 Recordings 5 1 Complete operas and recital discs 5 2 Crossover albums 6 Appearances on film and television 6 1 Christmas in Vienna 7 Cultural references 8 Repertoire 9 Awards and honors 10 Humanitarian works and initiatives 10 1 Operalia and young artists programs 11 Writings 12 See also 13 References 13 1 Notes 13 2 Citations 13 3 Cited sources 13 4 Other sources 14 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Seventeen year old Placido Domingo as the tenor Rafael the bullfighter in El gato montes with Rosa Maria Montes Mexico City 1958 Placido Domingo was born on 21 January 1941 in the Retiro district of Madrid Spain 12 His mother recalled that she and her husband knew he would be a musician from the age of five due to his ability to hum complex music from a zarzuela after seeing a performance of it 13 In 1949 just days before his eighth birthday he moved to Mexico with his family His parents both singers had decided to start a zarzuela company there after a successful tour of Latin America Soon after arriving in Mexico Domingo won a singing contest for boys and his parents occasionally recruited him and his sister for children s roles in their zarzuela productions 14 Domingo studied piano from a young age at first privately and later at the National Conservatory of Music in Mexico City which he entered when he was fourteen At the conservatory he also attended conducting classes taught by Igor Markevitch and studied voice under Carlo Morelli the brother of Renato Zanelli The two brothers were famous practitioners of both baritone and tenor roles 15 Domingo s conservatory classes constituted the entirety of his formal vocal instruction he never studied privately with a singing teacher 16 In 1957 at age sixteen Domingo made his first professional appearance accompanying his mother on the piano at a concert at Merida Yucatan The same year he made his major zarzuela debut in Manuel Fernandez Caballero s Gigantes y cabezudos es singing a baritone role 17 At that time he was working with his parents zarzuela company eventually taking several baritone roles and acting as an accompanist for other singers 18 The following year the tenor in another company s touring production of Luisa Fernanda fell ill In his first performance as a tenor Domingo replaced the ailing singer although he feared the part s tessitura was too high for him 18 Later that same year he sang the tenor role of Rafael in the Spanish opera El gato montes illustrating his willingness to assay the tenor range even as he still considered himself a baritone On 12 May 1959 at the Teatro Degollado in Guadalajara he appeared in the baritone role sometimes sung by basses of Pascual in Emilio Arrieta s Marina es Like El gato montes Marina is an opera composed in the zarzuela musical style rather than a zarzuela proper although both are usually performed by zarzuela companies In addition to his work with zarzuelas among his earliest performances was a minor role in the first Latin American production of the musical My Fair Lady in which he was also the assistant conductor and assistant coach 19 While he was a member the company gave 185 performances of the musical in various cities in Mexico nbsp Domingo made his debut in Verdi s Otello at Bellas Artes in the comprimario role of Cassio in 1962In 1959 Domingo auditioned for the Mexico National Opera at the Palacio de Bellas Artes as a baritone but was then asked to sight read the tenor aria Amor ti vieta from Fedora He was accepted at the National Opera as a tenor comprimario and as a tutor for other singers 20 In what he considered his operatic debut Domingo sang the minor role of Borsa in Verdi s Rigoletto on September 23 at the Palacio de Bellas Artes in a production with veteran American baritone Cornell MacNeil and bass baritone Norman Treigle He later appeared as the Padre Confessor in Dialogues of the Carmelites Altoum and Pang in Turandot Normanno and Arturo in Lucia di Lammermoor among other small parts While at the National Opera he also appeared in a production of Lehar s operetta The Merry Widow in which he alternated as Camille and Danilo both originally created as tenor roles although the latter is often sung by baritones Domingo made his debut in Verdi s Otello at Bellas Artes at age 21 in the summer of 1962 not in the title role for which he has now been internationally famous for decades as one of its greatest interpreters but in the small comprimario part of Cassio nbsp Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City where Domingo began his operatic careerTo supplement his income the young Domingo played the piano for a ballet company as well as for a program on Mexico s newly founded cultural television station The program consisted of excerpts from zarzuelas operettas operas and musical comedies He acted in a few small parts while at the theater in plays by Federico Garcia Lorca Luigi Pirandello and Anton Chekhov 21 He also provided song arrangements and backup vocals for Los Camisas Negras in the late 1950s a rock and roll band led by Cesar Costa 22 In his autobiography Domingo reflected on the benefits of his busy and varied career as a teenager Today when people ask me how I manage to hold up under my extremely heavy work load I answer that I became accustomed to intense activity very early in my life and that I love it now as I loved it then 23 Career edit1960s 1980s edit Establishing a career in opera edit In 1961 Domingo made his operatic debut in a leading role as Alfredo in La traviata at the Teatro de la Ciudad in Monterrey 24 Later the same year he made his debut in the United States with the Dallas Civic Opera where he sang the role of Arturo in Lucia di Lammermoor opposite Joan Sutherland in the title role and Ettore Bastianini as Enrico In 1962 he returned to Texas to sing the role of Edgardo in the same opera with Lily Pons at the Fort Worth Opera 25 It would be the soprano s final operatic performance That November Domingo sang the second tenor role of Cassio to Mario del Monaco s celebrated Otello in Hartford Connecticut At the end of 1962 he signed a six month contract with the Israel National Opera in Tel Aviv but later extended the contract and stayed for two and a half years singing 280 performances of 12 different roles In June 1965 after finishing his contract in Tel Aviv Domingo auditioned at the New York City Opera He was hired to make his New York debut as Don Jose in Bizet s Carmen with the company but his debut came earlier than expected on 17 June 1965 when he filled in for an ailing tenor at the last minute in Puccini s Madama Butterfly In February 1966 he sang the title role in the U S premiere of Ginastera s Don Rodrigo at the New York City Opera to much acclaim 26 The New York Times review noted Mr Domingo was as impressive as ever a big burly large voiced singer who looks exactly as one would visualize a hero from Gothic Spain 27 The performance also marked the opening of the City Opera s new home at Lincoln Center 28 His official debut at the Metropolitan Opera in New York occurred on 28 September 1968 when he substituted with little notice for Franco Corelli in Cilea s Adriana Lecouvreur with Renata Tebaldi Two years before this Adriana Lecouvreur he had already performed with the Metropolitan Opera at Lewisohn Stadium in Mascagni s Cavalleria rusticana and Leoncavallo s Pagliacci Since then he has opened the season at the Metropolitan Opera 21 times more than any other singer surpassing the previous record of Enrico Caruso by four 29 He has appeared with the company every season since 1968 1969 He made his debut at the Vienna State Opera in 1967 at the Lyric Opera of Chicago in 1968 at both La Scala and San Francisco Opera in 1969 at Arena di Verona on July 16 1969 as Calaf his first in Turandot with Birgit Nilsson at the Philadelphia Lyric Opera Company in 1970 and at Covent Garden in 1971 In 1975 Domingo debuted at the prestigious Salzburg Festival singing the title role in Don Carlo in an all star cast with Nicolai Ghiaurov Piero Cappuccilli Mirella Freni and Christa Ludwig with Herbert von Karajan conducting Thereafter Domingo frequently returned to Salzburg for a number of operas as well as for several concert performances He has now sung at practically every important opera house and festival worldwide nbsp Domingo in Argentina 1979 Domingo first sang Mario Cavaradossi in Puccini s Tosca in a 1961 performance in Mexico City 30 He sang Cavaradossi at the Met on February 15 1969 with Nilsson broadcast 1971 he made his Covent Garden debut in the role He continued to sing the part for many years especially at the Met and in Vienna eventually performing it more than any other of his roles 31 In September 1975 Domingo debuted in the title role of Verdi s Otello at the Hamburg State Opera It soon became his signature role and one of operas he performed most frequently over 200 times 32 He recorded the part three times in the studio and appeared in four officially released filmed versions of the opera Oscar winning Shakespearean actor Laurence Olivier declared after seeing the tenor in the role Domingo plays Othello as well as I do and he has that voice 33 Domingo has also conducted operas and occasionally symphony orchestras as well On 7 October 1973 he conducted his first opera performance La traviata starring Patricia Brooks at the New York City Opera The same year he released his debut album as a conductor Domingo Conducts Milnes Milnes Conducts Domingo with baritone Sherrill Milnes Domingo increasingly began to appear as a conductor at major opera houses around the world In late 1983 he led a performance of Johan Strauss s Die Fledermaus at Covent Garden which was televised Three years later he made a studio recording of the operetta in which he both conducted and sang the role of Alfred Growing celebrity edit The 1980s were a time of growing success and fame for Domingo In 1981 he gained considerable recognition outside of the opera world when he recorded the song Perhaps Love as a duet with the American country folk music singer John Denver He followed this success with many more albums of popular and Latin music Domingo expressed the hope that his popular albums would expand his fan base in a way that would eventually lead more people to discover opera 34 These forays outside of the opera world led to numerous television appearances for the tenor who was no longer known only by classical music lovers In 1987 he and Denver joined Julie Andrews for an Emmy Award winning holiday television special The Sound of Christmas filmed in Salzburg Austria He was interviewed on many talk shows and news programs including The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and 60 Minutes Increasingly substantial numbers of his operatic performances were also shown on television during the 1980s After gaining experience acting for the cameras in numerous televised operas Domingo performed in his first cinematically released opera movie La Traviata in 1982 He had worked with the film s director former Academy Award nominee Franco Zeffirelli previously in staged opera productions Even as filming continued in Rome he commuted back and forth to perform live in Vienna Buenos Aires Barcelona and Madrid 35 In 1984 Domingo filmed the role of Don Jose in Francesco Rosi s movie version of Carmen in his native Spain 36 Zeffirelli reunited with the tenor two years later for another version of an opera Otello that ran in movie theaters worldwide Domingo considered Carmen the best of the three although he disagreed with the director s low conception of his character He found La traviata to be impressive but expressed displeasure over cuts to the music in Zeffirelli s Otello 37 Even while diversifying his career he continued to appear with great frequency in largely well received operatic performances By 1982 Newsweek declared Domingo King Of The Opera on its cover The magazine s featured article which recounted and analyzed his career praised the singer for his heroic voice superb musicianship fine acting skills and dashing Latin good looks 33 That same year Domingo appeared at the Metropolitan Opera s opening night performance of Bellini s Norma It was the first time onstage that the tenor sang the part of Pollione one of his rare excursions into the bel canto repertory He was also set to open the Met s 1983 1984 centennial season debuting as Enee in a well publicized new production of Berlioz Les Troyens but a couple months in advance expressed uncertainty whether he could successful sing the role s high tessitura without harming his voice 38 He asked to be released from his contract but eventually decided to sing four of the six performances in the run with his friend James Levine conducting 38 including one performance that was telecast 39 He never sang the part again 40 During rehearsals for Les Troyens Domingo rescued the opening night of the San Francisco Opera s season The tenor scheduled to sing Otello Carlo Cossutta cancelled on the day of the performance The company asked Domingo to replace him at 4 p m He quickly flew from New York to San Francisco rushed to the opera house and appeared in the role at 10 30 in the evening A writer for the San Francisco Chronicle among other journalists reported extensively on the event He observed the crowds gathering around the stage door for the tenor s arrival and remarked on how most of the waiting audience members were breathless over the chance to see Placido Domingo a star who draws the kind of rapt devotion that Mick Jagger inspires among rock fans 41 nbsp Backstage at the Washington National Opera after the opening night of Idomeneo on 3 November 2002For the opening night of the following Met season Domingo returned to the role of Wagner s Lohengrin which he had last sung in early 1968 He had originally dropped the role from his repertoire after he felt his voice had been temporarily damaged by learning the challenging opera The New York Times noted that the now more mature artist lacked the chrome plated penetrating quality that one associates with German tenors but praised him for bringing an unusual legato grace to a role that is seldom sung so beautifully 42 He also performed the role at the Vienna State Opera in 1985 and 1990 A performance during his last run of the opera was televised on 28 January 1990 and later released on VHS and DVD He had just recovered from the flu at the time 43 On 19 September 1985 the biggest earthquake in Mexico s history devastated part of the Mexican capital Domingo s aunt uncle nephew and his nephew s young son were killed in the collapse of the Nuevo Leon apartment block in the Tlatelolco housing complex Cancelling several performances Domingo himself labored to rescue survivors During the next year he performed benefit concerts for the victims and released an album of one of the events Also in 1986 he appeared in a special gala concert for Queen Elizabeth II and in the world premiere of Goya an opera that Gian Carlo Menotti composed specifically for him Domingo had encouraged Menotti to make the opera about the Spanish painter Francisco Goya whose life fascinated the singer Since 1990 edit Changing repertoire edit nbsp Domingo with American opera singer Stacey Robinson in 1994Since the 1990s Domingo has continued adding new roles to his growing repertoire while dropping earlier parts The 1990s were the start of rapid change in the types of roles the tenor performed During this decade he sang his last Cavaradossi Don Carlo Don Jose Gustavo Riccardo Hoffmann and Alvaro among others and he began instead to expand the breadth of his roles more substantially beyond the standard Italian and French repertory Berlioz s Requiem in 1979 In particular he increased his involvement in Wagnerian operas Although he had already sung Lohengrin and recorded a few operas by the composer he did not perform any of Wagner s works frequently onstage until he debuted as Parsifal in 1991 and Siegmund in 1992 He continued to sing these roles for almost two decades including at the Bayreuth Festival source source source source source source Domingo sings Empio per farti guerra from George Frideric Handel s Tamerlano at the Liceu in the 2010 2011 seasonFor the first time in over three decades Domingo debuted in a Mozart opera Idomeneo in 1994 at the Met During the nineties he also appeared in the early Verdi opera Stiffelio the Brazilian Il Guarany and the French grand operas Herodiade and Le prophete all of which are rarely performed Toward the end of the decade he added his first Russian language opera Tchaikovsky s The Queen of Spades although he had performed Eugene Onegin in translation while in Israel early in his career In the 2000s he sang his last performances of some of the most successful operas from early in his career Andrea Chenier Samson et Dalila Otello La fanciulla del West Fedora Pagliacci and Adriana Lecouvreur In the twenty first century however he has focused mostly on new roles Early in the 2000s he sang the role of Arrigo in two concert performances of Verdi s rare La battaglia di Legnano and debuted in Wolf Ferrari s Sly an opera that his Three Tenors colleague Jose Carreras had recently revived from obscurity Domingo himself worked to popularize Franco Alfano s infrequently performed Cyrano de Bergerac a few years later Shifting musical styles again he appeared in the eighteenth century operas Iphigenie en Tauride and Tamerlano late in the decade nbsp Domingo singing at a concert at the Obelisco in Buenos Aires in 2011Additionally Domingo created several new roles in modern operas such as the title role in Tan Dun s 2006 opera The First Emperor at the Metropolitan Opera which was broadcast worldwide into movie theaters as part of the Met Live in HD series In September 2010 he created the role of the poet Pablo Neruda in the world premiere of Daniel Catan s opera Il Postino at the Los Angeles Opera 44 During the 2011 2012 season Domingo sang Neptune in the Metropolitan Opera s world premiere performance of Jeremy Sams The Enchanted Island A pastiche of Baroque opera with story and characters drawn from Shakespeare s The Tempest and A Midsummer Night s Dream a performance of the production was telecast on PBS Great Performances at the Met High profile appearances edit Giving him greater international recognition outside of the world of opera Domingo participated in The Three Tenors concert on the eve of the 1990 FIFA World Cup final in Rome with Jose Carreras and Luciano Pavarotti The event was originally conceived to raise money for the Jose Carreras International Leukemia Foundation and was later repeated a number of times including at the three subsequent World Cup finals 1994 in Los Angeles 1998 in Paris and 2002 in Yokohama The recording of their first appearance together Carreras Domingo Pavarotti in Concert went multi platinum with sales in excess of three million in the United States alone 45 eventually outselling every previous classical album worldwide 8 9 Domingo and his colleagues won the Grammy Award for Best Classical Vocal Solo for the album Four years after their first successful concert around 1 3 billion viewers worldwide watched their televised second World Cup performance at Dodger Stadium 46 The recording of that event The Three Tenors in Concert 1994 went platinum and multi platinum in many countries even reaching the number one spot on the UK Albums Chart 47 Without Pavarotti and Carreras Domingo made an appearance at the 2006 FIFA World Cup Final in Berlin along with rising stars Anna Netrebko and Rolando Villazon Before the 2014 FIFA World Cup final he performed in Rio de Janeiro with pianist Lang Lang and soprano Ana Maria Martinez a winner of his Operalia competition and a frequent singing partner of his 48 In addition to these large scale concerts Domingo recorded the official song for the 1982 FIFA World Cup in Spain El Mundial A lifelong football fan Domingo has been a vocal supporter of Real Madrid C F his home town team In 2002 he performed the club s new commemorative anthem Himno del Centenario del Real Madrid It was written by Jose Maria Cano with whom he had previously collaborated on the opera Luna Domingo presented the song live at the Bernabeu Stadium during celebrations of the football club s 100 year anniversary On 13 May 2012 Domingo performed during Real Madrid s season ending celebrations when the team won their 32nd Spanish league title In 2016 he sang the new version of Real Madrid s Hala Madrid y nada mas with Y Nada Mas nbsp Domingo as the president of Europa Nostra at the organization s awards ceremony in 2014On 24 August 2008 Domingo performed a duet with Song Zuying singing Ai de Huǒyan The Flame of Love at the 2008 Summer Olympics closing ceremony in Beijing 49 50 51 The Beijing Olympics was the second Olympics at which he performed he also sang the Olympic Hymn at the closing ceremonies of the Barcelona Olympics in 1992 52 In 2002 he made a guest appearance on the song Novus the closing track on Santana s album Shaman Domingo sang before Benedict XVI during the pope s visit to Nationals Park and the Italian embassy in Washington D C on 16 and 17 April 2008 On 15 March 2009 the Metropolitan Opera paid tribute to Domingo s 40th and the company s 125th anniversaries with a gala performance and onstage dinner 53 On 29 August 2009 he sang Panis angelicus at the funeral mass of Senator Ted Kennedy in the Basilica of Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Boston Massachusetts 54 In March 2011 Domingo cancelled an engagement in Buenos Aires at the Teatro Colon in support of the theatre s musicians who were on strike 55 As an opera company director edit Domingo began an affiliation with the Washington National Opera in 1986 when he appeared in its world premiere production of Menotti s Goya This was followed by performances in a production of Tosca in the 1988 89 season Beginning in the 1996 97 season he took on the role of Artistic Director bringing new life to the company s productions through his many connections to singers throughout the world and his own annual appearances in one role each season 56 One example of his ability to bring new singers to the stage were those by the then up and coming Anna Netrebko as Gilda in Rigoletto during the 1999 2000 season In 2003 Domingo became General Director and his contract was extended through the 2010 2011 season Parallel to Domingo s management of the Washington company he had been Artistic Director of the Los Angeles Opera since 2000 He assumed the position of General Director of the company in 2003 On 20 September 2010 he announced that he would renew his contract as General Director through 2013 57 A week later he announced that he would not renew his contract as General Director of the Washington National Opera beyond its June 2011 expiration date Reaction to this included The Washington Post s comments on his accomplishments Domingo s goal was to make the WNO an internationally regarded company At the beginning of his tenure he lifted the opera to a new level bringing in more international stars and big name productions including Jose Carreras in Wolf Ferrari s Sly Mirella Freni singing opposite Domingo in Fedora and Renee Fleming in Lucrezia Borgia And his commitment to American opera meant that the WNO presented the second or third productions of a number of important works Maw s Sophie s Choice Bolcom s A View From the Bridge Previn s A Streetcar Named Desire 58 nbsp Domingo center right as the baritone in Il trovatore at the 2014 Salzburg Festival with Francesco Meli far left with sword Domingo attempted to quash criticism in East Coast newspapers that he was taking on too much when the singer gave an interview in the Los Angeles Times in which he restated his long time motto When I rest I rust 59 In October 2019 Domingo resigned as general director of the Los Angeles Opera amid accusations of sexual harassment 11 Taking on baritone roles edit Domingo announced in 2007 that two years later he would take on one of Verdi s most demanding baritone roles singing the title role in Simon Boccanegra His debut performance in the part occurred at the Berlin State Opera on 24 October followed by 29 other performances during the 2009 2010 season at major opera houses around the world including the Met and the Royal Opera House in London 60 After the success of Boccanegra Domingo has performed other baritone roles including the character of Rigoletto in Verdi s Rigoletto in August 2010 at Reignwood Theatre in Beijing In March 2012 for the first time he sang the baritone role of the Cenobite monk Athanael in Massenet s Thais his 139th role Again in 2011 he undertook the role of Rigoletto in a live television broadcast in Europe which was shot in real locations in Mantua He appeared as Doge Francesco Foscari in Verdi s I due Foscari in a production directed by Thaddeus Strassberger for the Los Angeles Opera in September 2012 in Valencia in early 2013 and at Covent Garden in late 2014 In March 2013 at the Metropolitan Opera he appeared for the first time as Giorgio Germont in Verdi s La Traviata 61 The following year he sang Giacomo in Verdi s Giovanna d Arco in Salzburg Later in 2014 he debuted as the Conte di Luna in Il trovatore in Berlin The following season he sang di Luna again at the Salzburg Festival with Anna Netrebko as Leonora Marie Nicole Lemieux as Azucena and Francesco Meli as Manrico He first sang the title role of Verdi s Nabucco at Covent Garden in March April 2013 62 63 and has since reprised it in Saint Petersburg 64 Beijing Verona 65 and Vienna In 2015 he made his debut in the title role of Verdi s Macbeth in Berlin as well as Don Carlo in Ernani in New York and the title role of Gianni Schicchi in Los Angeles 66 On 13 June 2018 Placido Domingo performed at the 2018 FIFA World Cup opening gala concert in Moscow held at the Red Square in Moscow with Anna Netrebko Juan Diego Florez and Aida Garifullina and the Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra conducted by Valery Gergiev Family and personal life edit nbsp Domingo s father Placido Domingo Ferrer right with composer Federico Moreno Torroba in Madrid 1946Domingo was born to Placido Francisco Domingo Ferrer 8 March 1907 22 November 1987 67 and Josefa Pepita Embil Echaniz 28 February 1918 28 August 1994 68 two Spanish zarzuela stars who nurtured his early musical abilities Domingo s father was half Aragonese and half Catalan while his mother was a Basque from Gipuzkoa His father began as a violinist performing for opera and zarzuela orchestras He soon also took on baritone roles in zarzuelas Even though he damaged his voice by performing while suffering from a cold he continued singing into the 1970s Domingo s mother was an established soprano who made her stage debut at the Gran Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona She met her husband at age 21 while performing in Federico Moreno Torroba s Sor Navarra Domingo later recalled that experts encouraged his father to sing Wagnerian heldentenor roles while the Liceu offered his mother a contract to sing opera 69 In 1946 Moreno Torroba and Domingo s parents formed a zarzuela company and toured in Latin America His parents later stayed permanently in Mexico and established their own zarzuela troupe the Domingo Embil Company 70 In addition to their son they also had a daughter Maria Jose Mari Pepa Domingo de Fernandez 1942 2015 nbsp Domingo with his wifeOn 29 August 1957 at age 16 Domingo married a fellow piano student Ana Maria Guerra Cue 1938 2006 Their son Jose Placido Domingo Guerra called Pepe as a boy and later Joe now a photographer 71 was born on 16 June 1958 72 However the marriage did not last long with the couple separating shortly thereafter On 1 August 1962 Domingo married Marta Ornelas born 1935 a lyric soprano from Veracruz Mexico whom he met during his conservatory days 73 In the same year Marta had been voted Mexican Singer of the Year After their marriage the couple performed together frequently at the Israel National Opera However after she became pregnant with her first child she gave up her promising career to devote time to her family They have two sons Placido Francisco known as Placido Domingo Jr born 21 October 1965 and Alvaro Maurizio born 11 October 1968 After a period of time living in Israel Domingo and his growing family moved to Teaneck New Jersey in the 1960s 74 75 76 He later acquired residences in Manhattan and Barcelona Keeping his apartment in New York he currently also has a house in his native Madrid During breaks in his work schedule he usually spends time with family at his vacation home in Acapulco Mexico 77 78 In March 2010 he underwent surgery for colon cancer 79 In July 2013 he was admitted to a hospital in Madrid after suffering a pulmonary embolism 80 He was released on July 14 and was expected to make a full recovery 81 In October 2015 he was admitted to a hospital for a cholecystectomy and missed the first five performances of Tosca he was supposed to conduct at the Metropolitan Opera 82 83 On 22 March 2020 Domingo announced during the COVID 19 pandemic in Mexico that he had tested positive for COVID 19 which he reportedly contracted at a party in Tequila Jalisco in honor of Juan Domingo Beckmann who also tested positive 84 85 He was admitted to a hospital in Acapulco to treat complications of the disease but his condition was stable 84 Sexual harassment allegations editIn August 2019 Domingo was accused of sexual harassment by multiple female colleagues some dating back as far as 30 years However no official charges were ever filed nor were there any court proceedings or convictions Nonetheless Domingo subsequently resigned from his position as general manager of the Los Angeles Opera saying he did so with a heavy heart but in light of the recent allegations against him he said the move was in the best interest for the opera company 86 In late February 2020 Domingo apologized to any colleagues who felt uncomfortable or in any way hurt by his comments or actions He reiterated that it was never his intention to hurt or offend anyone saying I have never behaved aggressively toward anyone and I have never done anything to hinder or harm anyone s career in any way On the contrary I have spent much of my half century in the opera world supporting the industry and furthering the careers of countless singers 87 The investigation launched by the Los Angeles Opera into the incidents at the house deemed the allegations to be credible in part because of the similarities in their accounts The investigation often found him to be sincere in his denials but found some of them to be less credible or lacking in awareness The investigation criticized inadequate communication and lack of awareness about sexual harassment at the opera 88 In his first interview since recovering from COVID 19 Domingo told the Italian newspaper La Repubblica that the charges were false When I knew that I had COVID I promised myself that if I came out alive I would fight to clear my name Domingo said I never abused anyone I will repeat that as long as I live 89 Recordings editSee also Placido Domingo discography Complete operas and recital discs edit Domingo has made over 200 recordings most of which are full length operas he has recorded nearly all of opera s leading tenor roles several of them more than once As a teenager he first appeared in very small parts on the Spanish language original cast versions of the musicals My Fair Lady 1959 and Redhead 1960 In 1968 he released his first solo album Recital of Italian Operatic Arias also known as Bel Canto Domingo The album conducted by Nello Santi received the Grand Prix du Disque In 1969 Domingo s first recital album for RCA Red Seal was issued and he recorded his first complete opera in the studio Il trovatore with Leontyne Price and Sherrill Milnes also for RCA which would be his primary record label throughout the entire 1970s RCA recorded Domingo Milnes and Price together several more times both in complete operas and recital discs Domingo followed Il trovatore with a steady stream of complete recorded operas from the 1970s through the early years of the next century Starting with Il tabarro in 1970 Les Troyens 1983 and ending with Edgar in 2006 Domingo has recorded all of Puccini s operatic roles for tenor Among his albums is a box set of every major tenor aria Verdi composed including several obscure and rarely performed versions in languages different from the original operas and written only for specific performances He has also recorded the vocal parts in many symphonic works and has conducted on some of his albums citation needed In August 2005 EMI Classics released a highly anticipated and publicized studio recording of Richard Wagner s Tristan und Isolde in which Domingo and Operalia winner Nina Stemme sang the title roles A review headlined Vocal perfections in the 8 August 2005 issue of The Economist called the recording monumental and praised it for having a musical lyricism and a sexual passion that make the cost and the effort entirely worthwhile The review also characterized Domingo s July 2005 performance of Siegmund in Wagner s Die Walkure at Covent Garden as unforgettable and luminous More recently Domingo has appeared with Angela Gheorghiu on a recording of Fedora an opera in which he often appeared onstage and as the baritone in a live version of Giovanna d Arco with Anna Netrebko In September 2011 aged 70 he signed an exclusive record contract with Sony Classics 90 Crossover albums edit In addition to his classical recordings Domingo has released numerous crossover albums His output of non operatic recordings accelerated after his pop album Perhaps Love 1981 went gold and eventually platinum 91 His other recordings of popular music include My Life for a Song 1983 Save Your Nights for Me 1985 and the British gold record Be My Love 1990 92 His English language version of Besame Mucho from My Life for a Song received a Grammy nomination for Best Latin Pop Performance in 1984 The following year he won a Grammy in the same category for his collection of Ernesto Lecuona songs Always in My Heart Siempre en mi corazon He won a second Grammy the same year for Carmen under the baton of Lorin Maazel In 2012 he recorded Songs with Josh Groban Susan Boyle and jazz singer Harry Connick Jr among others In 2015 he released a holiday album My Christmas including duets with Idina Menzel Jackie Evancho Placido Domingo Jr The Piano Guys and others 93 Since the early 1980s Domingo has released several Latin albums including two featuring the music of Mexican songwriter Agustin Lara He devoted two more of his albums Adoro 1982 and 100 anos de Mariachi 1999 solely to Mexican music 100 anos de Mariachi a rancheras collection went platinum in the United States and gold in Mexico 91 94 He later recalled that as a fan of mariachi music since boyhood the Grammy he won for 100 anos de Mariachi was the award that meant the most to him of all he has received 95 Appearances on film and television editMain article Placido Domingo filmography Domingo has starred in several opera films His three theatrical released opera movies from the 1980s received significant awards and recognitions including Golden Globe and BAFTA nominations for Best Foreign Language Film Zeffirelli s La Traviata and Otello both received Academy Award nominations and the soundtracks of La Traviata and Rosi s Carmen won Grammy Awards for the Best Opera Recording of the year Domingo has also made various opera films for television including Jean Pierre Ponnelle s Madama Butterfly with Mirella Freni Gianfranco de Bosio s Tosca with Raina Kabaivanska Giuseppe Patroni Griffi s Tosca with Catherine Malfitano Emmy Award citation needed Franco Zeffirelli s Cavalleria rusticana and Pagliacci and more recently Marco Bellocchio s Rigoletto a Mantova it nbsp Domingo at the 81st Academy Awards in 2009Over the course of decades he has sung in numerous Live from the Metropolitan Opera telecasts and Met radio broadcasts He has also appeared often in televised performances from other opera houses In 1978 he starred in the La Scala production of Puccini s Manon Lescaut that marked the house debut of Hungarian soprano Sylvia Sass In addition many of his concerts and zarzuela evenings have been televised Beyond his filmed opera and concert performances he has frequently made guest appearances on television Domingo appeared on The Cosby Show Season 5 as Alberto Santiago a colleague of Dr Cliff Huxtable 96 In 1989 the international television series Return Journey featured Domingo returning to his home city of Madrid reflecting on life there whilst recording an album of Zarzuela arias for EMI On the 1993 Academy Awards telecast he performed the song Beautiful Maria of My Soul from the movie The Mambo Kings which had received a nomination for Best Original Song The tenor was the first Spaniard to perform at an Academy Awards ceremony He had previously presented the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film with Faye Dunaway at the 57th Academy Awards in 1985 Domingo was the executive producer of the critically acclaimed 1998 Mexican film The Other Conquest produced by his son Alvaro and directed by Salvador Carrasco in which Domingo also sang the original aria Mater Aeterna composed by Samuel Zyman with lyrics by Carrasco He was also heard performing the song In Pace during the closing credits of Kenneth Branagh s Hamlet 1996 In 2008 Domingo provided the voice of the long haired Chihuahua named Montezuma in Disney s Beverly Hills Chihuahua He also appeared as Manolo s great grandfather in the animated film The Book of Life in 2014 Christmas in Vienna edit Further information Christmas in Vienna album Christmas in Vienna II Christmas in Vienna III and Christmas in Vienna VI In December 1992 Domingo collaborated with fellow operatic tenor and friend Jose Carreras and pop music legend Diana Ross in a televised Christmas themed concert Vienna was chosen to host the event due to its reputation as a capital of music and the particular charm of Austria during Christmas time The Wiener Symphoniker under the direction of maestro Vjekoslav Sutej provided the orchestral music and the Gumpoldskirchen Children s Choir provided choral vocals On 23 December 1992 the first in what would turn out to be a series of Christmas in Vienna concerts was seen worldwide by several hundred million people Placido Domingo returned to Vienna for many more Christmas in Vienna concerts performing with stars and friends of both pop and classical music including Dionne Warwick Charles Aznavour Sissel Kyrkjebo Michael Bolton Sarah Brightman Charlotte Church Natalie Cole Riccardo Cocciante Patricia Kaas Luciano Pavarotti Tony Bennett and others Cultural references edit nbsp At the Washington National Opera on 14 April 2007 after a performance of Die Walkure his most frequently performed German operaBy the 1980s and 1990s popular cultural forms especially television programs began to reference Domingo often as a prototypical opera singer or as part of the influential Three Tenors 97 In 1987 Sesame Street a U S children s television show that has been on the air since 1969 introduced a puppet character named after Domingo In the series Placido Flamingo was a pink singing bird who appeared regularly on Live from the Nest a play on Live from the Met telecasts from the Nestropolitan Opera In the 1989 special Sesame Street 20 Years amp Still Counting Domingo appeared with his namesake puppet singing Look through the Window together 98 The show never revived the character after the puppeteer Richard Hunt who provided the voice for Placido Flamingo died in early 1992 99 Similarly in the 2009 Australian Canadian cartoon comedy Pearlie the father of a family of opera singing fleas is named Placido Although not opera related one of the Three Emperors a take off on the Three Tenors in the original Japanese version of the anime series Yu Gi Oh 5D s 2008 2011 is also named after the singer In 2007 Domingo had a cameo role on The Simpsons the longest running American scripted prime time television series and winner of over thirty Emmy Awards He provided the voice for an animated version of himself in the episode The Homer of Seville which revolves around Homer Simpson becoming an opera singer After an opera performance Homer chats with Domingo who tells him to call him P Dingo a play on P Diddy and asks him for singing advice Although not providing voice overs he was also an animated character in a 1995 episode Three Tenors and You re Out of the Warner Brothers children s cartoon Animaniacs and a 1999 episode Censoring Problems The Three Stooges vs The Three Tenors of MTV s violent comedy Celebrity Deathmatch Domingo along with Luciano Pavarotti and Jose Carreras loosely inspired the 2001 biting English language film Off Key by Spanish director Manuel Gomez Pereira 100 101 The movie s leading character Ricardo Palacios played by Joe Mantegna is a Spanish tenor with vague ties to Mexico who plays the piano conducts seeks celebrity outside of the opera world and is proud of his Otello Like Domingo he discovers new operatic talents sings duets with pop singers and performs mariachi music and tangos The farcical plot however has nothing in common with actual occurrences in the lives of Domingo or his colleagues 101 The movie was the most expensive production in Spain s cinematic history to that point 102 American author Elizabeth George references Domingo in one of her series of mystery novels about the fictional Inspector Lynley This Body of Death 2010 In the book Meredith s young daughter is an enthusiastic fan of Placido Domingo and has the detective read to her from an unauthorized biography of the singer The real life Domingo was also mentioned as part of a running gag on the 1996 Seinfeld episode The Doll Seinfeld was the second highest rated series on U S television at the time He was also referenced several times throughout the sitcom series Everybody Loves Raymond as Raymond s mother Marie s favorite opera singer In addition the tenor has appeared on the cover of several opera related books as a key representative of the musical genre Such mainstream allusions to Domingo illustrate his atypically widespread fame and cultural influence as an opera singer His integration both as an actual performer and as an image into popular as well as high culture was so significant by 2011 Spanish author Ruben Amon wrote a book Placido Domingo Un coloso en el teatro del mundo specifically analyzing the singer as a cultural and sociological phenomenon 97 103 Repertoire editMain article Repertoire of Placido Domingo Domingo has sung 151 roles in Italian French German English Spanish and Russian 5 6 His main repertoire however is Italian Otello Cavaradossi in Tosca Don Carlo Des Grieux in Manon Lescaut Dick Johnson in La fanciulla del West Radames in Aida French Don Jose in Carmen Samson in Samson and Delilah Enee in Les Troyens Hoffmann in Les Contes d Hoffmann and German Lohengrin Parsifal and Siegmund in Die Walkure He has appeared in more operas by Giuseppe Verdi than any other composer Domingo has created original roles in eight world premieres of operas Vasquez s El ultimo sueno Moreno Torroba s El poeta Menotti s Goya Garcia Abril s Divinas palabras Cano s Luna Drattell s Nicholas and Alexandra Tan Dun s The First Emperor and Catan s Il Postino as well as one pasticcio The Enchanted Island He also performed in the U S premieres of Don Rodrigo and Cyrano de Bergerac He continues to add more roles to his repertoire most recently performing as Schicchi in Puccini s one act opera Gianni Schicchi in September 2015 After taking on baritone roles he sang Conte Di Luna in Il Trovatore an opera in which he previously performed as Manrico a tenor role His last major role in a full length opera was in the title role of Nabucco in the production by Thaddeus Strassberger in December 2019 in Valencia During the curtain call many supporters of the singer showed support by dropping flyers in support of the singer 104 Awards and honors editMain article List of awards and nominations received by Placido Domingo nbsp Placido Domingo at a Concert Placido Domingo has received many awards and honors for his achievement in the field of music and in recognition of his many benefit concerts and contributions to various charities In 1978 when Domingo was only 37 the city of Madrid dedicated a commemorative plaque at his birthplace at 34 Calle Ibiza near the Buen Retiro Park 12 The singer won his first Grammy Award in 1971 and has gone on to win eight more as well as five Latin Grammy awards including an award for Latin Recording Academy Person of the Year 105 A Kammersanger of the Vienna State Opera and the recipient of numerous honorary doctorates he has received other major awards that include being made an honorary Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2002 106 In 2006 he received the Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music He has also received the Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art 1st class 1992 Grand Decoration of Honour in Silver for Services to the Republic of Austria 2007 107 Commander of the French Legion d honneur Mexican Order of the Aztec Eagle Spanish Prince of Asturias Award for Arts 1991 the United States Presidential Medal of Freedom and in 2011 a Medal of Honour from Sultan Qaboos bin Said of Oman 108 The first Birgit Nilsson Prize was awarded to him in 2009 In 2012 Domingo was voted into Gramophone s first Hall of Fame 109 In April 2014 Domingo was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Music degree by Berklee College of Music at its campus in Valencia Spain During his acceptance speech Domingo said it is a great pleasure to have a connection between Boston and Valencia since both have been so important in my career Domingo sang Handel s Messiah with the Boston Symphony Orchestra at the beginning of his career and performed his first Boheme at the Palau de les Arts 110 In June 2018 Iberia Airlines honored Domingo by placing his name on their first Airbus A350 delivered to the Airline 111 Humanitarian works and initiatives edit nbsp Statue of Domingo in Mexico City in recognition of his contributions to 1985 Mexico City earthquake victims and his artistic works nbsp Domingo at the 30 year commemoration of the 1985 Mexico City earthquake Domingo has been heavily involved in humanitarian efforts and volunteerism He has given many benefit concerts for disaster relief charities and musical organizations as well as served in various voluntary positions in the artistic and sports worlds In 1986 Domingo performed at several benefit concerts to raise funds for the victims of the 1985 Mexico City earthquake He also released an album of one of the events for charity On 21 August 2007 in recognition of his support of the earthquake victims as well as his artistic works a statue in his honor was unveiled It was made in Mexico City from keys donated by the people The statue the work of Alejandra Zuniga is two meters tall weighs about 300 kg 660 lbs and is part of the Grandes valores Great values program 112 113 Since the earthquake Domingo has continued to do charitable work in Mexico and other countries After Hurricane Pauline ravaged the Pacific coast of Southern Mexico in 1997 he gave two charity concerts in Acapulco to raise money to build 150 new houses for those made homeless by the storm 114 In December 2003 he performed in Cancun to benefit the Ciudad de la Alegria Foundation which provides assistance and lodging to people in need including low income individuals orphans expectant mothers immigrants rehabilitated legal offenders and the terminally ill 115 Outside of Mexico Domingo and Katherine Jenkins performed in a charity concert in Athens on 27 June 2007 to raise funds to aid victims of the conflict in Darfur The concert was organized by Medecins Sans Frontieres Doctors Without Borders On 4 March 2006 Domingo sang at the New Orleans Opera Association s Gala Benefit Concert A Night For New Orleans to help rebuild the city after it was partially destroyed by Hurricane Katrina Before the gala he made the encouraging statement MUSIC IS THE VOICE OF HOPE 116 Operalia winner Elizabeth Futral and several other popular opera singers appeared with the tenor The Gala collected 700 000 for the city recovery fund 117 On 23 March 2008 the New Orleans City Council named the city theatre s stage in the Mahalia Jackson Theatre in Louis Armstrong Park the Placido Domingo stage in honour of his contribution at the Gala Benefits Concert 117 Early the following year Domingo performed with the New Orleans Opera in a gala reopening the theatre At the time he told the press The restoration of New Orleans Mahalia Jackson Theater is a symbol of new life for the city following the devastation of 2005 but in these difficult economic times it is also a symbol of hope and faith in the future on the part of a forward looking artistic organization 118 In June 2010 Domingo became President of Europa Nostra the Voice of Cultural Heritage in Europe which helps to promote European high culture 119 The following year FIFA president Sepp Blatter invited Domingo to join a council intended to clean up the football governing body which had been accused of taking bribes from countries that wanted to stage the World Cup 120 Domingo has also supported environmental efforts In 2007 he joined several other preeminent figures in entertainment government the environment and more as one of the users of the BMW Hydrogen 7 designed to build support for hydrogen as a viable alternative to fossil fuels 121 Domingo also supports the Hear the World initiative as an ambassador to raise awareness for the topic of hearing and hearing loss 122 Operalia and young artists programs edit nbsp Domingo with young Operalia singers Budapest 2016Domingo has especially tried to aid the development of young opera singers careers In 1993 he founded Operalia The World Opera Competition an international opera competition for talented young singers The winners get the opportunity to be employed in opera ensembles around the world 123 Several leading opera singers of recent years have won prizes in the competition including Joseph Calleja Joyce DiDonato Erwin Schrott Giuseppe Filianoti and Jose Cura In particular Domingo has performed frequently with Mexican tenor Rolando Villazon who won three prizes at the 1999 Operalia competition Beyond Operalia Domingo has been instrumental in giving many young artists encouragement and special attention as in 2001 when he invited the so called Singing Policeman New York tenor Daniel Rodriguez to attend the Vilar Domingo Young Artists program to develop his operatic skills In addition to the Vilar Domingo Young Artists Program in Washington D C Domingo has also started programs to train young opera singers at the Los Angeles Opera and the Palau de les Arts Reina Sofia in Valencia Spain In September 2016 he performed at a Los Angeles benefit for the Esperanza Azteca Los Angeles Youth Orchestra supporting young musicians from the Los Angeles area 124 Writings editDate Title Publisher ISBN Pages Author s September 1983 My First Forty Years Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 394 52329 6 256 Placido Domingo1983 Jacqueline du Pre Impressions Vanguard Press ISBN 0814908675 141 William WordsworthPlacido DomingoDecember 1994 Opera 101 A Complete Guide toLearning and Loving Opera Hyperion ISBN 0 7868 8025 2 494 Fred PlotkinPlacido DomingoJuly 1997 Christmas With Placido Domingo Trumpets Sound And Angels Sing Alfred Publishing Company ISBN 0 89524 321 0 80 Placido DomingoMilton OkunJuly 1997 Bajo el Cielo Espanol Under the Spanish Sky Warner Brothers Publications ISBN 0 7692 0024 9 84 Placido DomingoCarol CuellarMarch 1999 Placido Domingo Por Amor Hal Leonard Corporation ISBN 0 7119 7258 3 104 Placido DomingoJanuary 2003 The Zarzuela Companion Scarecrow Press ISBN 0810844478 352 Christopher WebberPlacido DomingoMarch 2003 Placido Domingo My Operatic Roles Baskerville Publishers Incorporated ISBN 1 880909 61 8 319 Helena MatheopoulosPlacido DomingoMarch 2007 Leoncavallo Life and Works Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc ISBN 0 8108 5873 8ISBN 0 8108 5880 0 349351 Konrad DrydenPlacido DomingoDecember 2007 So When Does the Fat Lady Sing Hal Leonard Corporation ISBN 1 57467 162 6 173 Michael WalshPlacido DomingoSee also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Opera portalBust of Placido Domingo Category Placido Domingo albums List of best selling Latin music artistsReferences editNotes edit Pronunciation d oʊ ˈ m ɪ ŋ ɡ oʊ d e ˈ Spanish xoˈse ˈpla8ido doˈmiŋɡo emˈbil Citations edit Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopedia of World Biography Thomson Gale 2006 The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music Oxford University Press 1994 Warrack J and West E The Oxford Dictionary of Opera OUP 1992 all give the year of birth as 1941 Macy Laura Williams 2008 The Grove Book of Opera Singers Oxford University Press pp 127 8 ISBN 978 0195337655 Matheopoulos amp Domingo 2003 p 19 Otello is a dramatic part and Domingo a lirico spinto tenor But from the beginning it was clear that this was an ideal role for him Michener Charles 4 October 2004 Heppner Now Reigning Otello As Domingo Relinquishes Role New York Observer Retrieved 7 August 2015 a b Review In his 151st role Placido Domingo plays the wild cat as old lion Los Angeles Times 6 May 2019 Retrieved 24 August 2021 a b OperaChaser Domingo s 151st role accompanies zarzuela s great appeal in a passionately presented El Gato Montes The Wildcat at L A Opera Operachaser blogspot com 20 May 2019 Retrieved 24 August 2021 Butler Susan 21 June 2008 Milt Okun Music Legend Milt Okun Honored for a Lifetime of Vision Billboard p 34 a b Gareth Malone 28 April 2011 Music for the People The Pleasures and Pitfalls of Classical Music HarperCollins Publishers pp 34 ISBN 978 0 00 739618 4 Retrieved 30 July 2013 a b Classical Music Magazine volume 17 p 39 1994 And then there s the three tenors phenomenon The London recording from the 1990 concert became the biggest selling classical album of all time having now topped 10 million units throughout the world Los Angeles Opera homepage accessed 2017 07 01 Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 1 July 2017 a b Singh Maanvi 2 October 2019 Placido Domingo resigns from Los Angeles Opera amid sexual harassment claims The Guardian Retrieved 2 October 2019 a b Placido Domingo Naci a diez minutos del Real en la calle Ibiza spanish S E 20 October 1988 En Espana la zarzuela se ha tratado como una hijastra Pepita Embil recibe hoy un gran homenaje ABC in Spanish Madrid Retrieved 9 September 2015 Domingo 1983 pp 10 13 Domingo 1983 pp 14 9 Domingo 1983 pp 18 Webber 2003 p 303 a b Domingo 1983 pp 20 Domingo 1983 pp 20 2 Domingo 1983 pp 23 Domingo 1983 pp 25 6 Domingo 1983 pp 27 Domingo 1983 pp 28 Roles Archived 2021 04 16 at the Wayback Machine placidodomingo com Placido Domingo About Placido Domingo American Masters PBS American Masters 3 December 2002 Snowman 1985 pp 11 134 5 Schonberg Harold C 10 February 1967 Opera Orchestra Is Star The New York Times p 31 Snowman 1985 p 11 Volpe 2006 p 193 Domingo 1983 p 222 PBS American Masters Placido Domingo Gad Georges February 2001 Placido Domingo l apotheose Le Monde de la musique in French a b Swan 1982 Snowman 1985 p 49 Domingo 1983 pp 175 9 Snowman 1985 pp 213 5 222 4 Scovell Jane September 1987 Domingo Giving his Best Opera News a b Holland Bernard 20 September 1983 Domingo Almost Sure to Open Met The New York Times Retrieved 14 August 2015 Almquist Sharon G 1993 Opera Mediagraphy Video Recordings and Motion Pictures Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press p 170 ISBN 0313284903 Matheopoulos amp Domingo 2003 p 212 Hartlaub Peter Shilts Randy 22 August 2015 Our SF An inebriated crowd awaits Placido Domingo s arrival SFGate Retrieved 2 September 2015 Henahan Donal 26 September 1984 Met opener passes tests The New York Times Norton Welsh Christopher May 1990 Vienna Lohengrin Opera London About Us Placido Domingo Domingo s page on LA Opera s website Archived 2013 05 28 at the Wayback Machine laopera com Retrieved 1 July 2013 American certifications Three Tenors The Recording Industry Association of America Retrieved 8 July 2015 Blumenthal Ralph 24 March 1996 The Three Tenors Juggernaut The New York Times Retrieved 1 August 2015 All The Number 1 Albums Official Charts UK Retrieved 11 July 2015 Placido Domingo to Sing Before World Cup Final The Hollywood Reporter AP 12 June 2014 Retrieved 15 July 2015 Archived copy www news com au Archived from the original on 27 August 2008 Retrieved 22 May 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Beijing 2008 Olympics People s Daily Beijing 2008 Singers Domingo and Song perform Archived from the original on 24 August 2008 Placido Domingo Olympic Closing Ceremony Barcelona 1992 on YouTube Domingo s 40th Anniversary with The MET Metoperafamily org Retrieved 24 August 2021 Rowley James Fitzgerald Alison 29 August 2009 Nation s Political Elite Gathers for Kennedy Farewell Bloomberg News Placido Domingo actuara al aire libre en Buenos Aires pero no en el Teatro Colon El Dia 23 March 2011 Retrieved 12 January 2015 Phillips Matz 2006 p 53 David Ng Mike Boehm 20 September 2010 Placido Domingo renews contract with L A Opera through 2013 Los Angeles Times Retrieved 13 November 2010 Anne Midgette Domingo will not renew D C opera contract The Washington Post 28 September 2010 Reed Johnson Placido Domingo s juggling act The superstar rejects recent suggestions that his busy life is affecting L A Opera and his other commitments The Los Angeles Times 21 February 2010 Domingo s performance calendar Archived from the original on 14 October 2009 Metropolitan Opera 14 March 2013 performance information PDF Metoperafamily org Retrieved 24 August 2021 Hugo Shirley Placido Domingo s Operalia Winners Opera London September 2012 pp 1153 1154 Nabucco Productions Royal Opera House Roh org uk Nabucco Mariinsky ru Nabucco arena verona 04 07 2013 Arena Archived from the original on 30 June 2013 Retrieved 14 October 2019 Placido Domingo tenor Operabase com Placido Domingo Ferrer Baritone 80 obit The New York Times 26 November 1987 Pepita Embil Domingo Soprano and Tenor s Mother 76 obit The New York Times 1 September 1994 Domingo 1983 pp 5 7 Placido Domingo Summary via www bookrags com http www educacioncontracorriente org index php option com content amp view article amp id 60361 expone fotografias jose placido domingo hijo del tenor en la ciudad de mexico amp catid 22 articulistas permanent dead link His son Jose from first marriage Archived from the original on 12 October 2007 Placido Domingo biography IMDb Matheopoulos with Domingo 2003 p 16 Domingo Iron man of opera The Cincinnati Post 23 September 1998 Accessed 7 August 2007 Dobnik Verena via Associated Press The Three Tenors return in drag for Domingo Newsday 28 September 2008 Accessed 29 September 2008 Domingo Placido Matheopoulos Helena 14 October 2000 My Operatic Roles Baskerville Publishers Inc ISBN 9781880909614 via Google Books Placido Domingo Notable www aarp org Archived from the original on 18 September 2008 Retrieved 22 May 2022 Adams Stephen 8 March 2010 Placido Domingo has colon cancer surgery The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Talbott Chris 9 July 2013 Placido Domingo In Hospital Opera Singer Suffers Embolism In Spain The Huffington Post Nashville Archived from the original on 10 July 2013 Gelt Jessica 14 July 2013 Placido Domingo in high spirits after release from hospital L A Times Placido Domingo to Undergo Gallbladder Surgery Cancels Concerts Billboard 15 October 2015 Retrieved 5 March 2016 Placido Domingo Will Miss First Five TOSCA Performances at the Met for Surgery Broadwayworld com 14 October 2015 Retrieved 5 March 2016 a b Placido Domingo ingresado en Acapulco por coronavirus La Vanguardia in Spanish 28 March 2020 Retrieved 28 March 2020 Placido Domingo da positivo en coronavirus El Independiente in Spanish 22 March 2020 Retrieved 22 March 2020 Groger Rene 3 October 2019 Placido Domingo verlasst Oper in Los Angeles Placido Domingo leaves Los Angeles Opera BR Klassik in German Placido Domingo s Facebook Facebook 27 February 2020 LA Opera Independent Investigation Summary of Findings and Recommendations LA Opera 10 March 2020 After recovering from virus Domingo vows to clear name Msn com The Canadian Press Retrieved 8 August 2020 Placido Domingo Signs With Sony Classical Billboard 22 September 2011 Retrieved 12 January 2015 a b American certifications Placido Domingo Recording Industry Association of America Retrieved 8 July 2015 British certifications Placido Domingo British Phonographic Industry Retrieved 8 July 2015 TypePlacido Domingoin the Search BPI Awards field and then press Enter Placido Domingo Duets with Idina Menzel and More on New Album My Christmas BroadwayWorld com November 5 2015 Certificaciones in Spanish Asociacion Mexicana de Productores de Fonogramas y Videogramas Retrieved 8 July 2015 TypeDomingoin the box under theARTISTAcolumn heading Mariachi The Spirit of Mexico WLIW21 WNET New York Public Media PBS WLIW21 Pressroom Retrieved 17 July 2015 Smith Michael 13 June 1989 A resting tenor on a house call The Age Retrieved 25 August 2015 a b Amon 2011 Burlingame Jon 7 April 1989 Sesame Street counts 20 years Ocala Star Banner p 6C Retrieved 13 August 2015 Deaths Richard Hunt Toledo Blade AP 9 January 1992 Retrieved 13 August 2015 Jonathan Holland 12 December 2001 Film Reviews Off Key Variety Retrieved 6 August 2015 a b Munoz Diego 16 November 2001 Manuel Gomez Pereira parodia a los tres tenores en la comedia Desafinado La Vanguardia Retrieved 10 August 2015 http www lavozdegalicia es hemeroteca 2000 07 23 130557 shtml permanent dead link La biografia de Placido Domingo escrita por Ruben Amon The Cult 27 January 2011 Retrieved 13 August 2015 Palau de Les Arts 2019 20 Review Nabucco Opera Wire 6 December 2019 Retrieved 27 March 2022 Placido Domingo to be Honored as the 2010 Latin Recording Academy Person of the Year Press release Latin Academy of Recording Arts amp Sciences 14 September 2010 Retrieved 8 November 2010 Placido Domingo knighted BBC 15 October 2002 Archived from the original on 27 September 2020 Retrieved 10 December 2020 Reply to a parliamentary question PDF in German p 1826 Retrieved 11 March 2013 HM confers medals of honour on opera director conductor Oman Observer Main omanobserver om Retrieved on 2012 05 10 Placido Domingo tenor conductor and administrator Gramophone Retrieved 11 April 2012 Maricq Sophie 7 April 2014 Berklee Awards Honorary Doctorate to Placido Domingo Berklee College of Music EC MXV Iberia Airbus A350 900 Planespotters net 31 March 2022 Mexico rinde homenaje a Placido Domingo con una estatua de bronce in Spanish El Pais 21 August 2007 Retrieved 1 July 2013 Awards Archived 2015 06 11 at the Wayback Machine on Placido Domingo s website Tenor gives voice to hurricane victims The Spokesman Review AP 31 October 1998 p A9 Retrieved 26 August 2015 Performance in Cancun to benefit the Ciudad de la Alegria Foundation Palaceresorts com Retrieved 24 August 2021 A Night for New Orleans with Placido Domingo 4 March 2006 prnewswire com Retrieved 1 July 2013 a b Bruce Eggler Local staged named for opera singer Placido Domingo The Times Picayune 23 March 2008 Retrieved 1 July 2013 Montoya Maria C 17 January 2009 Superstar Placido Domingo set to take stage at Mahalia Jackson Theater for the Performing Arts The Times Picayune Retrieved 12 August 2015 Domingo Placido December 2016 End the International Destruction of Cultural Heritage Vigilo Din l Art Ħelwa National Trust of Malta 48 30 31 ISSN 1026 132X Owen Gibson 6 June 2011 Sepp Blatter wants singer Placido Domingo to join Fifa s wise men The Guardian Retrieved 12 January 2015 Placido Domingo Set to Drive BMW Hydrogen 7 Theautochannel com Hear the World website on hear the world com Retrieved 30 June 2013 Domingo describes his Operalia program operaliacompetition org Retrieved 1 July 2013 BWW News Desk Placido Domingo Performs With Esperanza Azteca Youth Orchestra BroadwayWorld com Retrieved 13 October 2016 Cited sources edit Amon Ruben 2011 Placido Domingo Un coloso en el teatro del mundo in Spanish Barcelona Planeta ISBN 978 8408099192 Domingo Placido 1983 My First Forty Years New York Knopf ISBN 0 394 52329 6 Matheopoulos Helena Domingo Placido 2003 Placido Domingo My Operatic Roles 2nd ed Fort Worth TX Baskerville Publishers ISBN 1 880909 61 8 Phillips Matz Mary Jane 2006 Washington National Opera 1956 2006 Washington D C Washington National Opera ISBN 0 9777037 0 3 Snowman Daniel 1985 The World of Placido Domingo New York McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 059527 5 Swan Annalyn 8 March 1982 King Of The Opera Bravissimo Domingo Newsweek Washington D C Archived from the original on 10 November 2005 Retrieved 14 July 2015 Volpe Joseph 2006 The Toughest Show on Earth My Rise and Reign at the Metropolitan Opera New York Knopf ISBN 0307262855 Webber Christopher 2003 The Zarzuela Companion Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press ISBN 0810844478 Other sources edit Goodnough David 1997 Placido Domingo Opera Superstar Hispanic Biographies Enslow Publishers ISBN 0 89490 892 8External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Placido Domingo Official website Placido Domingo My Greatest Roles collection of televised performances Placido Domingo International Operalia Opera Singer Contest Discography Deutsche Grammophon Classics History of the Tenor sound clips and narration Placido Domingo performs arias from Andrea Chenier Abduction from the Seraglio Carmen Der Rosencavalier Fidelio Forza del destino Otello Samson et Dalila Tales of Hoffmann Tannhaeuser Tosca Trovatore Un Ballo in Maschera on archive org Recordings with Placido Domingo in the Online Archive of the Osterreichische Mediathek registration required Retrieved 3 November 2022Biography interviews and profiles Domingo s biography on the Kennedy Center s website at kennedy center org Peter Conrad I must live up to what people expect The Observer London 9 July 2005 on guardian co uk Martin Kettle A tenor no more Domingo to make switch to baritone The Guardian London 24 January 2007 Nahuel Lopez Oper ist teuer Sanger sind billig Opera is expensive singers are cheap Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung 17 March 2009 Placido Domingo about too small operas casting singers as Paul Potts and the humility before a great career In German Matthew Stadlen Placido Domingo I ve done nothing to deserve this voice The Telegraph London 25 August 2013 on telegraph co uk Domingo and his career at age 72 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Placido Domingo amp oldid 1190703024, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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