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Luciano Pavarotti changed my life: Opera Hong Kong artistic director and singer on the Italian tenor’s indelible influence on his career

  • Warren Mok bought two albums by Pavarotti in 1979 while at college in Hawaii and soon he was studying every facet of the Italian master’s singing
  • He acted as his understudy in 1987 in Berlin, where he received personal attention from the Italian, and the two later met again backstage in Hong Kong in 2005

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Luciano Pavarotti on the cover of his album ’O Sole Mio – Favourite Neapolitan Songs from 1979.
Richard Lord

’O Sole Mio – Favourite Neapolitan Songs and Verismo (both 1979), album-length collections of traditional songs and operatic arias, respectively, are among the most popular studio recordings by legendary Italian tenor Luciano Pavarotti. Warren Mok Wah-yeun, artistic director of Opera Hong Kong, tells Richard Lord how they changed his life.

I bought them in 1979. ’O Sole Mio was the first album I bought. I was at college in Honolulu, Hawaii, and I bought it at a record shop in the Ala Moana Center, the biggest shopping mall in Honolulu. Before I bought the album, I was introduced to it by a friend who was a professor at the University of Hawaii – not of music but of history. He introduced me to opera: he took me to see opera in Hawaii, and I first heard these records at his home.

I heard these records and I just thought, “Wow, what an amazing voice!” I listened to him every day while I was a student: his singing technique, his diction, how he pronounced and punctuated each word of Italian. He has the clearest diction of all singers.

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In 1980, I saw Pavarotti perform in Hawaii; he had a recital there on his way to Australia. I was in the last row on the balcony, and I paid US$100 for one single ticket. It was totally worth it. He was even better live than on the records. I thought, “How can this be possible?”

Warren Mok still listens to Pavarotti’s performances every time before he goes on stage. Photo: Courtesy of Warren Mok
Warren Mok still listens to Pavarotti’s performances every time before he goes on stage. Photo: Courtesy of Warren Mok

That concert was like reading a textbook. I was studying voice at the time, including Italian antique arias, and it was like a lesson, a masterclass on the stage. I felt lucky to have heard his albums and then to have been able to see him the next year.

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