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Tenor Luciano Pavarotti sings during a
concertin his native town of Modena, central Italy, in this 2001 file
photo. (Photo: chinadaily.com.cn/Agencies) Photo
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BEIJING, April 9 -- Luciano Pavarotti, in severe pain months before his cancer diagnosis,
lip-synched his last performance, according to the maestro who conducted the aria at
the opening ceremony of the Turin Olympics.
The late tenor's manager said Monday the bitter cold made
a live performance impossible at the 2006 Winter Games.
The conductor, Leone Magiera, reveals in a book that
the rousing rendition of "Nessun Dorma" ("Let No One Sleep") was prerecorded
because "it would have been too dangerous for him to give a live performance in
that physical condition."
Magiera, who worked with Pavarotti for years, said
the tenor was suffering from sharp pains months before being diagnosed with
pancreatic cancer and was using a wheelchair. Pavarotti died in September 2007.
He was 71.
"The orchestra pretended to play for the public
there, I pretended to conduct and Luciano pretended to sing," Magiera writes in
"Pavarotti Visto Da Vicino" ("Pavarotti Seen From Close Up"), which was
published last month. "It came off beautifully, no one was aware of the
technical tricks."
Pavarotti recorded the famed aria from Puccini's
"Turandot" in a studio in his hometown of Modena a few days before his February
appearance in Turin, Magiera said. The orchestra prerecorded its part
separately.
"His voice was nearly intact," Magiera recalls in the
book, published by Ricordi. "He found the strength to repeat it until he was
completely satisfied. Then, he fell back on his wheelchair and closed his eyes,
exhausted."
Magiera did not elaborate on why Pavarotti was using
a wheelchair. He stood during the Turin performance.
Pavarotti's former manager, Terri Robson, said in an
e-mail to The Associated Press that the decision lip-synch was made because of
the cold during the outdoor evening event.
The singer was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in
the summer of 2006 as he was preparing to leave New York to resume a farewell
tour. Pavarotti underwent surgery in New York in early July, and his remaining
2006 concerts were canceled.
Earlier that year, Pavarotti postponed five June
dates because of what was described as complications from back surgery. He
canceled eight concerts in April, saying he had been advised not to travel or
perform while undergoing back treatment.
Robson said the tenor's voice was "in great shape ...
but because of the extreme late-night temperature in Turin in February, for both
him and the orchestra, it was decided that the only way to make it work was for
him to pre-record."
Pavarotti lip-synched a performance in 1992 in
Modena, drawing heavy criticism.
His charismatic persona, ebullient showmanship, and
powerful voice made him the most beloved and celebrated tenor since the great
Caruso and one of the few opera singers to win crossover fame as a popular
superstar.
He appeared in television commercials and sang in
hugely lucrative mega-concerts outdoors and in stadiums around the world, also
mingling with pop stars in his series of charity concerts, "Pavarotti &
Friends."
(Source:
chinadaily.com.cn/Agencies)