Podcast Appearances
Was your talent for singing recognised and nurtured there at a young age?
Did you have extracurricular singing lessons or was it just at school?
I was going to say, that stands you in good stead as an opera singer, doesn't it?
But if this talent was spotted at such a young age and you were, you know, this perfect pitch at the age of two, were you already as a child thinking, I might be able to be a singer, I might make a living out of this as a grown-up?
Did you know much about opera at the time?
And what were you, just under six foot?
Why do you think the shyness is also linked to your height?
Because, I mean, a lot of tall people in childhood are trying to kind of come down because they don't want to stand out.
Your next choice for this cultural life, Felicity Lott, is France.
And your career has owed so much to French music, to operetta, to the music of Offenbach and Poulenc and to other French composers.
Do you trace all of that back to a love of the French language itself when you were young?
But you studied French, actually, rather than studying music, which is what people possibly would have expected you to have studied.
If you didn't think you could become an interpreter, what were you going to do with your French language skills?