Dmitri Hvorostovsky, a Russian baritone who was one of the most celebrated opera singers of the modern era, dazzling audiences with a voice that was by turns brooding and delicate, died Wednesday near his home in London. He was 55.

His death was confirmed by his office in a statement. Hvorostovsky announced in 2015 that he had been diagnosed with a brain tumor. His medical treatment and failing sense of balance forced him to cancel many engagements, but he rallied for a number of acclaimed performances before his death.

Among them was a surprise appearance at the Metropolitan Opera’s 50th anniversary gala in May. Peter Gelb, the opera company’s general manager, introduced Hvorostovsky, observing that he had “defied all the odds and the gods” to be there. His rendition of “Cortigiani, vil razza dannata” from Giuseppe Verdi’s “Rigoletto” received an ovation that ranked among the most emotional moments in recent operatic history.

Hvorostovsky was a rock star of opera – a singer whose talents satisfied even the most exacting buff, and whose physical charisma, accentuated by his leonine silver mane, thrilled listeners who had once gotten their opera fix at Three Tenors concerts held in athletic stadiums.

He burst onto the world’s musical stage in 1989, when he defeated the Welsh bass-baritone and hometown favorite Bryn Terfel in the Singer of the World Competition in Cardiff, Wales. The coup transformed Hvorostovsky from the pride of Siberia into the envy of the opera world.

He was hailed at times as a successor to Luciano Pavarotti, the centerpiece of the Three Tenors who perhaps more than any other opera singer before or after helped bring opera to mass audiences. Elle magazine described Hvorostovsky as the “Elvis of opera,” and People magazine ranked him among the world’s 50 most beautiful people.

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Baritone roles, unlike tenor ones, are not ready-made catapults to operatic stardom. But Hvorostovsky’s vocal cords were their own springboard.

“There have been many beautiful voices, but in my opinion none more beautiful than Dmitri’s,” Renée Fleming, the American soprano, once told the New Yorker magazine.

When Hvorostovsky first performed at New York City’s Alice Tully Hall in 1990, so many musical professionals turned out for the show that few tickets remained for the general public.

He debuted at the Met in 1995 as Prince Yeletsky in Tchaikovsky’s “The Queen of Spades.” The role became a calling card of Hvorostovsky’s Russian repertoire, along with the title role in Tchaikovsky’s “Eugene Onegin.”

He distinguished himself in the works of Verdi, including as Germont in “La Traviata,” the hunchbacked jester in “Rigoletto,” the Count di Luna in “Il Trovatore,” Rodrigo in “Don Carlo,” Renato in “Un Ballo in Maschera” and the title character of “Simon Boccanegra.”

At the Met and elsewhere, he sang opposite the most noted sopranos of his generation, among them Fleming, Anna Netrebko, Sondra Radvanovsky and Angela Gheorghiu.

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Washington Post classical music critic Tim Page lauded Hvorostovsky for “his dark and unmistakable voice” and “the wild, fierce intensity of his interpretations.” So great was his breath control that some listeners were left wondering when, exactly, he planned to breathe.

His extensive recordings included numerous solo albums featuring Russian sacred and folk music, as well as operatic selections. He had a particular sensitivity for the music of wartime in his homeland.

“The older I become,” he told The New York Times, “the closer I feel to Russia.”

Dmitri Alexandrovich Hvorostovsky was born in Krasnoyarsk, a Siberian factory city, on Oct. 16, 1962. His father was a chemical engineer and amateur singer, and his mother was a gynecologist. Because of their demanding careers, Hvorostovsky lived mainly with a grandmother, who taught him folk songs, and her alcoholic husband.

Hvorostovsky told the Times that he took up vodka when he was 14 and joined a gang. He wished to study in Moscow, but his parents objected.

“They worried that I would live a dangerous life and lose my talent,” he said.

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He risked doing exactly that by joining a heavy metal band and singing, Freddie Mercury-style, in a high-pitched voice.

All the while, Hvorostovsky nurtured an abiding interest in classical music, and he studied piano and conducting before enrolling at an arts institute in Krasnoyarsk. Because Soviet authorities preferred to minimize Western European influences on culture, the Times reported, he studied the bel canto traditions of opera independently.

He sang widely in the Soviet Union, including at factories.

“The men and women sitting in that audience in their heavy boots and big fur hats had never even heard of Verdi, and their tears were more precious to me than all the applause I could ever get again,” Hvorostovsky told the New Yorker. “Where else but in Russia would an entire factory stop working at midday to pack a concert hall?”

His marriage to Svetlana Hvorostovsky, a ballet dancer, ended in divorce. Survivors include his second wife, Florence Illi, a soprano; their two children, Maxim and Nina; and twin children from his first marriage, Daniel and Alexandra; and his parents.

In fall 2015, after falling ill, Hvorostovsky returned to the Met for three performances as the Count di Luna, one of his favorite roles, leaving many in the house in tears.


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