Carreras announces retirement from opera
卡雷拉斯宣布退出歌剧舞台
“世界三大男高音”之一、西班牙歌剧演唱家卡雷拉斯近日在接受英国《泰晤士报》采访时宣布退出歌剧舞台。上世纪90年代初,卡雷拉斯、帕瓦罗蒂和多明戈齐聚意大利罗马,首次联袂举办了演唱会。“世界三大男高音”因而走进了人们的视野。
Spanish opera singer Jose Carreras, one of the famed "Three Tenors" along with Placido Domingo and Luciano Pavarotti, announced his retirement from opera in a newspaper interview.
Carreras, 62, who thrived as a performer after surviving leukemia, told the British newspaper The Times that he could no longer withstand the rigors of performing principal roles, to opera houses.
In the early 1990s, Carreras formed "The Three Tenors" with fellow Spaniard Domingo and Italy's Pavarotti. Their recordings and concert tours opened up opera to a larger audience and were a huge commercial success.
Pavarotti died in 2007 after a long struggle with pancreatic cancer. With Carreras's retirement, Domingo is the sole opera performer left in the original trio, whose first performance was for soccer's World Cup in Italy in 1990.
"We were, without being presumptuous, the most popular tenors of the day. We did in a very genuine and spontaneous way. We thought, let's get together. We were all football fans," Carreras said in the interview.
The tenor said his diagnosis of leukemia in 1987 was very difficult to handle.
"I have been very lucky to overcome this very serious disease with not many chances to survive. I remember this every day. The help from above is very important," he said |