Career:
Timeline
Timeline
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20192010sTeatro alla Scala
HighlightsMajor Performances
2019
In Performance: Singing at Teatro alla Scala
Milan’s historic Teatro alla Scala, which first opened its doors in 1778, is one of the world’s great centers of opera production. Rossini, Donizetti, Bellini, Verdi, Puccini, and many others composed operas specifically for La Scala, and most of the world’s greatest singers and conductors have performed there.
Plácido Domingo made his La Scala debut at the age of twenty-eight, in Verdi’s Ernani, on December 7, 1969 – opening night of the ensemble’s 1969-1970 season – and he recalled, in My First Forty Years: “I had already sung at the Met, the Vienna State Opera, and other great theaters. But when you stand on the stage of La Scala and look into that beautiful auditorium, you cannot help thinking that nearly every celebrated singer from Mozart’s day to our own has performed there.”Through 2018 he had given 135 performances in twenty-two different operas and roles (including three baritone roles) at La Scala. (Seven of those performances took place at the Teatro degli Arcimboldi, when La Scala’s stage was being renovated.) Domingo also sang the tenor part in two performances of the Verdi Requiem at La Scala.
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20182010sGreg Gorman
Highlights
2018
In Performance: Domingo as Conductor
During his teens, when he was enrolled in Mexico City’s National Conservatory of Music, Plácido Domingo observed the conducting course of the celebrated Russian conductor Igor Markevitch, and he did some conducting with his parents’ zarzuela company. His professional conducting debut took place in 1973, when he led a performance of La Traviata with New York City Opera at Lincoln Center. Through the end of 2018, he had conducted some 607 performances altogether, including operas and concerts.
The following is a list of some of his most significant conducting debuts.
New York, New York City Opera, La Traviata, 1973
Barcelona, Liceu, Attila, 1973
Hamburg, Staatsoper, Il Trovatore, 1975
Munich, Bayerische Staatsoper, La Forza del Destino, 1976
San Francisco, War Memorial Opera House, Il Barbiere di Siviglia, 1976
Vienna, Staatsoper, Die Fledermaus, 1978
Frankfurt, Oper, Die Fledermaus, 1979
London, Royal Opera, Covent Garden, Die Fledermaus, 1983
New York, Metropolitan Opera, La Bohème, 1984
Los Angeles, Macbeth, 1987
Madrid, symphonic concert, 1988
Seville, Carmen, 1992
Verona, Arena, Aida, 1994
Zurich, Oper, La Bohème, 1995
Berlin, symphonic concert, 1996
Chicago, symphonic concert, 1997
Tokyo (Metropolitan Opera tour), Carmen, 1997
Mexico City, Luisa Fernanda, 1998
Washington, D.C., Washington Opera, Samson et Dalila, 1998
Rome, Opera di Roma, Tosca, 2000
St. Petersburg, Mariinsky Theater, Aida, 2001
Paris, Operalia concert, 2003
Warsaw, Verdi Requiem, 2006
Milan, La Scala, Operalia concert, 2010
Dresden, symphonic concert, 2017
Prague, Don Giovanni, 2017
Bayreuth, Die Walküre, 2018Expand this Milestone
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20172010s
HighlightsMajor Performances
19 May 2017
50 Years of Singing in Vienna
Plácido Domingo made his debut with the glorious Vienna State Opera (Wiener Staatsoper) at the age of twenty-six, on May 19, 1967.
He was singing the title role in Verdi’s Don Carlo and, as he described the event in his early memoir, My First Forty Years, “The first performance almost began with a calamity…. Our single rehearsal had taken place in a rehearsal room rather than on stage, [and] no one had remembered to warn me that the stage was steeply raked for that production. I came charging out like a young bull for my first scene… and nearly launched myself into the auditorium. Fortunately, I managed to brake myself in time, and the rest of the performance went beautifully.”
Altogether, up to the end of 2018, and including performances in other venues, Domingo had sung forty roles – thirty-four as a tenor and six as a baritone – in Vienna, plus seventeen concerts and special events, for a total of 257 vocal performances. After more than fifty years, he remains one of that music-loving city’s favorite performers of all time.Expand this Milestone
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20122010s
HighlightsPress
21 November 2012
Plácido Domingo is named UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador
On November 21, 2012, Domingo was appointed Goodwill Ambassador for UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization), in recognition of his "exceptional artistic career, his inestimable support for young opera musicians through the Operalia competition, and his dedication to the values and ideals of UNESCO.”
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20112010sRuben Martin
HighlightsPress
2011
Honorary chairmanship of IFPI
In 2011 Domingo accepted the honorary chairmanship of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, which is trying to cope with the enormous problems that face creative and performing artists in the Internet age, when copyright problems have become extraordinarily difficult.
“I want to see a digital world that provides young artists with the kind of opportunities I was fortunate enough to have early in my career,” he says, and “that can only happen if governments around the world play their part in making sure the laws that protected creators in the physical delivery age are updated for the digital delivery age.”
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20102010sChad Batka
HighlightsPress
2010
Domingo becomes president of Europa Nostra
In 2010 Domingo became president of Europa Nostra, an association that works to safeguard Europe’s cultural heritage whenever it is threatened by natural calamities, by human beings, or by neglect or even ignorance.
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20092000sChad Batka
HighlightsPress
13 October 2009
Winning the inaugural Birgit Nilsson Prize
In her will, the great Swedish soprano Birgit Nilsson (1918-2005) left instructions for a prize of $1,000,000 to be awarded approximately once every three years to a person or institution that has made a major contribution to opera.
This is the most generous prize in the world of classical music. Nilsson personally decided who the first prize-winner was to be: Plácido Domingo. Domingo is using these funds to help support Operalia.
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20092000s
HighlightsMajor Performances
2009
The move from tenor to baritone
Although in his teens Plácido had sung some high baritone roles in zarzuelas, as an opera singer he sang only tenor roles – until 2009, when he made his debut as a baritone in the title role of Verdi’s Simon Boccanegra with the Berlin Staatsoper.
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20002000s
HighlightsPress
15 December 2000
Plácido Domingo is made a Kennedy Center Honoree
In 2000, Domingo was a recipient of one of the Kennedy Center Honors, alongside Angela Lansbury, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Clint Eastwood, and Chuck Berry.
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19961990sRobert Millard
HighlightsPress
1996
Domingo takes the lead at Washington National Opera and Los Angeles Opera
From 1996 to 2003, Domingo was Artistic Director of Washington National Opera, which is based at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, and from 2003 to 2011 he was WNO’s General Director.
Also in 2003, Domingo became General Director of Los Angeles Opera, after having been Artistic Director since the 1980s; his current contract there runs until 2019.
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19931990s
HighlightsPress
1993
Operalia is born
In 1993, Domingo founded Operalia, an annual international voice competition, which has helped to start the careers of many singers who have since become major figures on the world’s stages – among many others, Nina Stemme, Joyce DiDonato, José Cura, Rolando Villazon, Erwin Schrott, Pretty Yende, Eric Owens, Susanna Phillips, and Anthony Roth Costanzo.Expand this Milestone
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19921990s
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
June 1992
Other solo appearances at the Olympics and World Cups
Domingo sang the Olympic Anthem at the Barcelona Summer Olympics in 1992; at the final performance of the World Cup in Germany in 2006; and at the closing ceremony of the Summer Olympics in Beijing in 2008.
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19911990s
HighlightsPress
1991
Domingo honored with Premio Príncipe de Asturias
In 1991, Domingo was honored with Spain’s Premio Príncipe de Asturias, which is given to people or institutions of exceptional accomplishments in the arts and sciences.
Also in his native country, he has received the Gran Cruz de la Orden de Isabel la Católica and the Medalla de la Orden de las Artes y las Letras de España.
Other awards include the Presidential Medal of Freedom in the United States and the titles of Commander of the Legion of Honor in France, Honorary Knight of the British Empire, and both Grande Ufficiale and Cavaliere di Gran Croce of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic.
He has also received honorary doctorates from the University of Oxford, New York University, and Georgetown University in Washington, DC, for his lifelong commitment and contribution to music and the arts.
In 1993 he was presented with a star on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame.
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19901990s
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
07 July 1990
The Three Tenors perform at the World Cup in Rome
On July 7, 1990, the eve of the FIFA World Cup soccer games in Rome, Domingo, together with his fellow-singers Luciano Pavarotti and José Carreras and conductor Zubin Mehta, gave a charity concert that was viewed by millions of people around the world and was a huge success.
This led to many other performances of The Three Tenors, not only at the successive World Cup events (1994, 1998, and 2002), but also in a world tour in 1996-97 and at various other moments.
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19861980s
HighlightsMajor Performances
1986
Domingo creates the role of Goya, a part written specifically for him by Giancarlo Menotti
The Italian-American composer Gian Carlo Menotti wrote an opera, Goya, specifically for Domingo, based on the life of the great Spanish painter, Francisco de Goya y Lucientes.
It premiered at Washington in 1986, with Plácido in the title role and Spanish conductor Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos on the podium.
Goya was the most ambitious project that Washington Opera had undertaken to date, and it paved the way for an ongoing, close relationship between Domingo and the company.
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19851980sEsparta Palma
HighlightsPress
19 September 1985
September 19, 1985: A disaster in Mexico
September 1985, while Domingo was performing in Chicago, he learned that a terrible earthquake had struck Mexico City, and he flew there as quickly as possible.
His immediate family members were unharmed, but an aunt, uncle, and cousin had disappeared. Plácido began digging with his own hands, and he organized a committee to assist with the rescue operations.
Unfortunately, the aunt, uncle, and cousin had died in the disaster, but for an entire year he sang in benefit events and dedicated the proceeds to relief for the survivors and to reconstruction projects.
The Mexican government awarded him the Order of the Aztec Eagle – the highest honor given to foreigners. (Plácido is a Spanish citizen.)
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19821980s
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
October 1982
Domingo has benefit concert at the Vatican and audience with Pope John Paul II
In October 1982, Domingo sang at a benefit concert at the Vatican, had an audience with Pope John Paul II (he had met Pope Paul VI in 1970) and was made a Commendatore of the Italian Republic by President Sandro Pertini.
Over the years, he has met the presidents, prime ministers, and royal families of many countries all over the world.
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19821980s
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
1982
Following his film debut in Madama Butterfly, Plácido stars in Franco Zeffirelli’s 1982 cinema version of La traviata
Following the Ponnelle-Karajan Butterfly film, Plácido participated in Franco Zeffirelli’s 1982 cinema version of La traviata, with Levine conducting, Teresa Stratas as Violetta, and Cornell MacNeil as Germont.
This was followed, in 1984, by a film of Carmen directed by Francesco Rosi, with Julia Migenes Johnson in the title role, Ruggero Raimondi as Escamillo, Faith Esham as Micaëla, and Lorin Maazel conducting.
Maazel also conducted Zeffirelli’s 1986 film of Otello, in which Domingo sang opposite Katia Ricciarelli as Desdemona and Justino Díaz as Iago.
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19821980s
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
1982
Newsweek crowns Domingo "The King of Opera"
By 1982, when Newsweek magazine featured him on its cover as “The King of Opera,” Plácido Domingo, at the age of forty-one, was world famous. He had sung in Japan and Chile, in Russia and Monaco, and just about everywhere in between.
His voice and his face had become familiar not only to opera lovers and to classical music enthusiasts, but also to people who followed his appearances on television and listened to his various “crossover” recordings.
In 1984 he won the Best Latin Pop Performance Grammy for the album, “Always in My Heart.” “Perhaps Love,” a recording he made with John Denver, sold over 1.5 million copies. He appeared on the Johnny Carson show and on the children’s series, “Sesame Street.” He performed in zarzuelas and in programs of zarzuela excerpts, all over the world. In short, the name Plácido Domingo had become a household word.
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19761970sDutch National Archives / Spaarnestad Photo
HighlightsMajor Performances
11 August 1976
Working with Legends: Herbert von Karajan
Domingo first worked with the legendary conductor Herbert von Karajan in 1974, when he took the part of Pinkerton in Jean-Pierre Ponnelle’s film of Madama Butterfly, of which Karajan conducted the sound track.
The following year – and precisely on August 11, 1975 – Domingo made his Salzburg Festival debut in Don Carlo, with Karajan in charge of both the music and the staging.
Later, Plácido sang with Karajan on several other occasions, including Il trovatore in Vienna, the Verdi Requiem in Salzburg, and a classic recording of Turandot.
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19751970s
HighlightsMajor Performances
28 September 1975
September 28, 1975, remains a historic date for Domingo: On this day, in Hamburg, he gives his first performance as Otello
September 28, 1975, remains a historic date for Domingo. On that day, in Hamburg, he gave his first performance of the title role in Verdi’s Otello, with Katia Ricciarelli as Desdemona, Sherrill Milnes as Iago, and James Levine on the podium.
For nearly thirty years, Plácido practically “owned” this role, which he sang all over the world, with some of the finest conductors and stage directors and opposite two generations of leading sopranos and baritones.
It was a risky undertaking at the age of thirty-four, because the part of Otello is so difficult, musically, dramatically, and emotionally, but he triumphed with it.
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19731970s
Highlights
October 1973
While singing at the Met, Domingo makes his debut as an opera conductor with New York City Opera
In the fall of 1973, while he was singing in productions of La traviata and Il trovatore at the Met, Domingo made his debut as an opera conductor with New York City Opera, also in La traviata. He has since conducted over 300 opera and concert performances all over the world.
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19731970s
HighlightsMajor Performances
20 May 1973
Plácido's Parisian debut
Domingo made his Paris debut on 20 May 1973, singing Il trovatore at the Opéra.
He has since returned many times to Paris, where he was awarded Medal of the City of Paris, and he is much loved in France, which has made him a Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres and showered many more awards on him.
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19721970s
HighlightsMajor Performances
1972
The first half of 1972 is one of the busiest periods in Plácido’s singing career: 9 debuts, 19 operas, 4 concerts
The first half of 1972 was one of the busiest periods in Plácido’s singing career. He made his debuts in Piacenza, Amsterdam, Munich, Mantua, Belgrade, Memphis, Caracas, and Zurich, as well as returning to sing in London, Hamburg, Vienna, New York, Philadelphia, San Antonio, Washington, Miami, Milan, Boston, Cleveland, Atlanta, New Orleans, Minneapolis, Detroit, San Juan, Madrid, and Vienna – in 19 different operas plus four concerts! And in July he made his Argentine debut at the great Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, in La forza del destino.
Not that subsequent periods in Domingo’s career have been relaxing! The rhythm is sometimes a little less strenuous, but he has never sat still for long.
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19711970s
HighlightsMajor Performances
08 December 1971
Plácido's Covent Garden debut, and onward
Commitments elsewhere had postponed Domingo’s debut with the Royal Opera, Covent Garden, which finally took place on December 8, 1971, in Tosca, with Gwyneth Jones in the title role and Kostas Paskalis as Scarpia.
He was very warmly received and has maintained an excellent relationship with the ensemble ever since.
1971 was also the year in which Domingo recorded Aida with Leontyne Price, Grace Bumbry, Sherrill Milnes, and Ruggero Raimondi, with Erich Leinsdorf on the podium of the London Symphony Orchestra.
With this recording he won a Grammy Award for Principal Soloist in an opera recording; it was the first of nine Grammys and four Latin Grammys that he has won so far.
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19711970s
HighlightsMajor Performances
1971
Working with Legends: Joan Sutherland and Pablo Casals
Singing Edgardo in Lucia opposite Joan Sutherland, in Hamburg in 1971, was “among the greatest performance experiences of my life,” Domingo said. He, too, was in excellent voice, and Sutherland joked with him: “If you continue to sing this so well, I won’t like you so much.”
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19701970sFayer
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
14 May 1970
An even more emotional experience for Domingo in his hometown debut
In some ways, though, an even more emotional experience for Domingo was his debut in Madrid, his home town, in La Gioconda, on May 14, 1970, at the Teatro de la Zarzuela. “The ovation after my aria, ‘Cielo e mar,’ was so great and so warm that I could not help myself – I began to cry,” he recalled. But he finally managed to get a grip on himself and to proceed normally.
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19691960s
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
27 July 1969
Domingo makes his debut in Italy, the land where opera was born
Performances at the Met, Hamburg, and elsewhere continued to be scheduled, and by now the name Plácido Domingo was becoming known to opera lovers all over the world.
In May 1969 he made his London debut, not in an opera but in a concert performance of the Verdi Requiem with the New Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by the great Carlo Maria Giulini, and with fellow singers Gwyneth Jones, Josephine Veasey, and Raphael Arié.
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19681960s
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
28 September 1968
Plácido Domingo's Metropolitan Opera debut
In Hamburg in January 1968, Domingo sang the title role in Lohengrin – his first Wagner part and the first time he was singing in German. The intense preparations caused him to have vocal problems, but by May he was in top form for his Canadian debut – Tosca, in Vancouver.
During the summer he made his first two recordings, both of opera arias – one for the Decca/London label, the other for RCA.
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19671960s
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
January 1967
Rolf Liebermann, head of the Hamburg Opera, invites Domingo to perform in Tosca in January 1967 — his European debut
The redoubtable Sarah Caldwell engaged Domingo to sing with her Boston Opera Company, in Rameau’s Hippolyte et Aricie, opposite Beverly Sills, and in La Bohème, opposite the already legendary Renata Tebaldi.
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19651960s
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
June 1965
International beginnings: The Domingos move from Israel to the United States
By the spring of 1965, Plácido had been given contracts for summer performances in the United States. He and Marta left Tel Aviv in June – and Plácido’s international career really began.
Domingo made his New York debut on October 17, singing Pinkerton in Madama Butterfly with New York City Opera, and four days later Marta gave birth to their first son, Plácido, Jr.
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19621960s
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
1 August 1962
Domingo marries Marta Ornelas; the couple moves to Israel
During this period of artistic and human growth, and early opera experiences, Domingo met and became close to Marta Ornelas, an aspiring young soprano who studied at the National Conservatory, and after a courtship that lasted over a year (“the most wonderful period in my life,” Plácido said) they were married on August 1, 1962.
They wondered where to go to complete their training, but when they plus their friend Franco Iglesias, a baritone, were offered contracts with the Hebrew National Opera in Tel Aviv, they decided to go to Israel.
This was in keeping with Domingo’s preference for “learning things by doing them rather than by mastering the theory behind them.”
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19591950s
1959
In Performance: Singing the Music of Verdi
For Plácido Domingo, Giuseppe Verdi (1813-1901) has been and continues to be the greatest provider of opera roles. Roughly one-quarter of all of Domingo’s opera performances have taken place under the Verdi banner. Domingo loves not only Verdi’s great skill in vocal writing but also the emotional power and intensity, the dramatic truth, and the amazing way in which each character in every opera is magnificently delineated.
He made his opera debut in the small role of Borsa in Rigoletto, in Mexico City in 1959, and two years later, in Monterrey, Mexico, he sang Alfredo in La Traviata – his first leading role. Altogether, he has sung twenty-six different roles in seventeen different Verdi operas, not counting parts that he only recorded but did not perform on stage. Most extraordinary is the record of his 225 performances of the title role in Otello, with which he was closely identified for a quarter of a century.
Here is a list, arranged alphabetically by opera, of Domingo’s Verdi roles, with the number of performances of each part. Baritone roles are given in boldface; all the others are tenor roles.
Aida – Radamès 77
Ballo in Maschera, Un – Riccardo 76
Don Carlo – Don Carlo 41, Rodrigo 15
Due Foscari, I – Francesco Foscari 37
Ernani – Ernani 14, Don Carlo 6
Forza del Destino, La – Alvaro 41
Giovanna d’Arco – Giacomo 3
Luisa Miller – Rodolfo 16, Miller 6
Macbeth – Macbetto 35
Nabucco – Nabucco 30
Otello – Otello 225
Rigoletto – Borsa 5, Duca di Mantova 12, Rigoletto 2
Simon Boccanegra – Gabriele Adorno 14, Simon Boccanegra 72
Stiffelio – Stiffelio 28
Traviata, La – Gastone 5, Alfredo Germont 50, Giorgio Germont 42
Trovatore, Il – Manrico 50, Conte di Luna 10
Vespri Siciliani, I – Arrigo 14
Plus: Messa da Requiem – tenor part 20Expand this Milestone
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19461940s
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
1946
Over the following four years, Domingo gains early experiences in numerous aspects of music and theatre
Over the following four years, Domingo:
• accompanied his mother in vocal recitals,
• sang high baritone roles in his parents’ zarzuela company,
• studied voice (especially interpretation) with the well-known baritone Carlo Morelli,
• sang a minor part (and assisted in coaching and conducting) in 185 performances of the first Mexican production of My Fair Lady,
• accompanied a young singer in her nightclub performances,
• alternated in the roles of Camillo and Danilo in over 170 performances of The Merry Widow,
• sang in The Redhead, another musical,
• played the piano for a touring ballet company,
• had his own music program on Mexico’s first cultural television station, Channel 11,
• took acting lessons,
• acted in and selected music for televised plays by Pirandello, Benavente, García Lorca, and Chekhov,
• trained a chorus for a special zarzuela season, and
• made Spanish-language arrangements of American pop songs and sometimes even sang in them.Expand this Milestone
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19461940s
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
1946
The Domingos move to Mexico which launches Plácido's conservatory years
In 1946, Federico Moreno Torroba, the most important modern zarzuela composer, formed his own zarzuela company, which included Domingo’s parents, and took it on a two-year tour of Latin America. At the end of it, the Mexican admirers of Pepita and Plácido, Sr., persuaded the couple to form their own company in Mexico City.
The couple sent for their children, who, accompanied by an aunt, traveled across the Atlantic and arrived in Mexico three days before Plácido’s eighth birthday. The country would be his home until he was twenty-one years old.
He attended school at the Instituto México, played soccer as much as possible (he remains a great soccer enthusiast to this day), but, at the same time, began “to gravitate toward the performances that my parents’ company gave,” he says. When children were needed in a production, Plácido and Mari Pepa were pressed into service, and so “I began to learn the basics of theatrical practice from the time I was small.” But he also saw how difficult the financial end of running a company could be, and how his parents worried when the theatre was half empty.
He was given piano lessons, demonstrated great talent, and when he was fourteen his parents enrolled him at Mexico’s National Conservatory, where he studied both musical and academic subjects.
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19461940s
Highlights
1946
All of Domingo’s early musical memories are tied in with the zarzuela
"I owe my love of music to the zarzuelas I so often heard from the time I was a small boy."
All of Domingo’s early musical memories are tied in with the zarzuela, which he heard constantly, practically from the day he was born. “The zarzuelas fascinated me, and I still love them,” he says.
He has devoted much energy, over the years, to keeping this art form alive throughout the Spanish-speaking world and beyond. “Just as in other art forms, so with the zarzuela there are great, good, so-so, bad, and terrible works,” he says, “but the best of them are very much worth performing.”
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19411940s
HighlightsMajor PerformancesPress
21 January 1941
Plácido Domingo was born in the Barrio de Salamanca, a typical Madrid neighborhood, on January 21, 1941
His father, Plácido Domingo, Sr., was a baritone from Zaragoza in the Aragon region, and his mother, Pepita Embil, a soprano, was a zarzuela star from Guetaria in the Basque country. “Both the Basques and the Aragonese are said to be stubborn, hard-headed,” Domingo says. “This is a useful heritage for anyone who makes his career in the performing arts.”
He and his younger sister, Mari Pepa, had a happy childhood, surrounded by aunts, uncles, and cousins even when their parents were away touring. “I remember the comfortable feeling of the constant rotation in my life – home, school, playing in the park, day after day."
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