1960s–1980s Establishing a career in opera In 1961, Domingo made his operatic debut in a leading role as Alfredo in
La traviata at the Teatro de la Ciudad in
Monterrey. 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. 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.
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." The performance also marked the opening of the City Opera's new home at
Lincoln Center. 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. 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 16 July 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 first sang Mario Cavaradossi in Puccini's
Tosca in a 1961 performance in Mexico City. He sang Cavaradossi at the Met on 15 February 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. 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). 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." 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 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. 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. In 1984, Domingo filmed the role of Don José in
Francesco Rosi's movie version of
Carmen in his native Spain. 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. 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". 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. 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, He never sang the part again. 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." 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". 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. 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 Changing repertoire 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. '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. 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. 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 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, eventually outselling every previous classical album worldwide. 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. 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. 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." 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. 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. 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. 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. 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.
As an opera company director 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. 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. 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 Posts 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. '' 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". In October 2019, Domingo resigned as general director of the Los Angeles Opera amid accusations of sexual harassment. 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. 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 and has since reprised it in
Saint Petersburg,
Beijing,
Verona, 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. 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==