His bright laugh filled the room.
In a dressing room on the show “C à vous”, where he delivers an extract from his first solo album, Pene Pati lends himself to the game of questions and answers with the same solar generosity as when he interprets Donizetti, Verdi or Gounod.
This freshness of timbre, these halftones with which he colors the high notes with a disconcerting naturalness, and this voice with youthful accents, he has made a signature of it.
Not the ones we invent or make for ourselves, but the ones that say who you are.
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The one that the French public will have largely discovered last December, during a miraculous last-minute replacement in
Romeo and Juliet
by Gounod at the Opéra-Comique, does not hesitate to identify with Shakespeare's hero.
“This character is the image of youth, frozen in its death like the eternal adolescent in love.
And I like that, feeling like a teenager,”
he laughs.
At 34, the tenor from Samoa is no longer really a teenager.
But kept facing the profession this…
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