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José Carreras

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The Catalan tenor José Carreras (born December 5, 1946) is a prominent opera singer much admired for his Verdi and Puccini roles. He enjoys great fame through his participation in the " Three Tenors" concerts with Luciano Pavarotti and Plácido Domingo.

Carreras was born in Barcelona and exhibited musical talent from a young age. At age eight, he also gave his first public performance, singing "La Donna e Mobile" on Spanish national radio. At eleven, he appeared at the Liceu as a boy soprano in the role of the narrator in Falla's El retablo de Maese Pedro and an urchin in the second act of La Bohème.

In his teens, Carreras studied at the Conservatorio Superior de Música del Liceo. He made his debut at the Liceu as Flavio in Norma, coming to the attention of the famous soprano Montserrat Caballè, who sang the title role. She invited him to sing in a production of Donizetti's Lucrezia Borgia, his first major breakthrough.

Carreras also sang with Caballè in his 1971 London stage debut at age 25, a concert performance of Maria Stuarda. In subsequent years, the two singers sang in more than fifteen different operas together.

In 1972, he made his American debut as Pinkerton in Madame Butterfly. In 1974, he made his debut at the Vienna State Opera as the Duke of Mantua, as Alfredo in La Traviata at the Royal Opera House and as Cavaradossi in Tosca at the Metropolitan Opera. The following year, Carreras made his debut at La Scala as Riccardo in Ballo in Maschera. By the the age of 28, Carreras had sung the lead tenor in twenty-four different operas

In 1987, at the height of career, Carreras was diagnosed with leukemia and was given a 1 in 10 chance of survival. However, he survived and resumed his singing career. In 1988, he founded the José Carreras International Leukaemia Foundation, a charity which gives financial support to leukemia research and the registration of bone marrow donors.

In 1990, hundreds of millions of people around the world watched the Three Tenors give a concert at the opening of the World Cup in ]. It was originally conceived to raise money for Carreras's foundation and also as a way for his colleagues, Domingo and Pavarotti, to welcome their colleague back to the world of opera.

In addition to opera, Carreras also performs lighter genres such as zarzuela. He also appeared in and recorded Westside Story.

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