NEW YORK — Pene Pati was cautioned as a 20-year-old not to pursue a singing career, an unusual occupation for a Samoan who grew up in New Zealand
''Lots of people want to become a singer because they want the lifestyle,'' the tenor recalled. ''Whereas for me, I did it out of spite, to be honest. It was somebody who said: `Don't be angry if you don't cut it as an opera singer because as a Polynesian, there are not many opera singers.' And that part of me thought: How do I prove him wrong?''
Now 38 and booked by top houses into 2030, Pati laughed as he recalled vocal coach Robert Wiremu's wariness.
''He didn't say I wasn't a good singer,'' Pati explained. ''He just said: `Don't be afraid if you don't make it.'''
Part of opera's young generation
Pati is among the emerging tenors in a group with Xabier Anduaga, SeokJong Baek, Freddie De Tommaso, Ismael Jordi and Jonathan Tetelman.
He impressed last month in his first staged performances of Massenet's ''Werther'' at Paris' Opéra Comique, a 1,200-capacity jewel box that turned down the composer's 1887 offer to stage the premiere.
''I wanted people who had never sung it before,'' conductor Raphaël Pichon said.