By Christopher Cook

Published: Wednesday, 31 January 2024 at 12:57 PM


For some, their introduction to Pavarotti may have been an enthralling opera at the Met or Covent Garden. For others it would have been a drenched night in Hyde Park. Perhaps a balmy evening in the company of Domingo and Carreras. For others still, it was Lineker scoring, Gazza crying and Pearce missing from the spot.

Whatever image or event they might associate it with, more people have become familiar with Luciano Pavarotti’s tenor voice than any other. But who was Pavarotti, and how did he become just so famous?

Who was Pavarotti?

Luciano Pavarotti was, in short, the most famous opera singer that the world has known.

He became best known for his performances of ‘Nessun dorma’, the iconic aria from Puccini’s opera, Turandot.

It was wet day in Hyde Park in July 1991. The heavens opened and the traffic jammed up around the park. St John’s Ambulance volunteers treated 193 people who were said to be suffering from hypothermia. The Prince and Princess of Wales were drenched when the star suggested that they should fold up their umbrella because the people behind them couldn’t see. And when the best known tenor in the world hit his final top note in ‘Nessun dorma’, 100,000 cheered him to the damp skies. They must have heard the roar from one end of London to the other.

There were sneers of course. There were complaints that Luciano Pavarotti had ‘sold out’, the big man was more interested in money than art. People said his voice was at the end of its tether. But that single performance garnered Pavarotti a reputation like no other. Soon enough, he became the most famous tenor in the world.