An opera star suspended by the Metropolitan Opera for allegedly groping a female cast member during a curtain call in Japan is getting a warmer embrace from some European audiences.

Officials at Milan’s famed La Scala opera house say they’re happy to have Italian tenor Vittorio Grigolo for a four-night stand next month, according to the Daily Telegraph.

Grigolo, who told an interviewer in 2015 he was “a sex addict,” is also on tap to play Germany’s State Opera House and Deutsche Oper Berlin — even as England’s Royal Opera House investigates him.

“Since the matter is currently being clarified and the performance in Berlin is not planned until April, the (Berlin venue) will wait for the results of the investigation.”

Not so at the Met, which suspended the Italian star just days after legendary tenor Placido Domingo left the Met — likely for good — as he continued to be dogged by claims of sexual harassment by more than a dozen women over the years.

Despite being cut by opera houses in Philadelphia, Dallas and San Francisco, Domingo got a standing ovation during his first performance after the allegations surfaced — in Salzburg, Austria, in August.

Grigolo was scheduled to perform Verdi’s “La Traviata” at the Met in February and March, but officials there said last week he was suspended “with immediate effect from all future performances.”

The Met’s suspension came after a member of the chorus reported that Grigolo groped her during a Sept. 18 Royal Opera-sponsored tour in Japan. No other details of the incident were released.

The Royal Opera House launched the probe a week later.

In a bizarre twist, Grigolo posted a photo on Facebook of a curtain call during the Japan tour four days after the alleged incident, thanking Japan for its support.

“It was special to come back and feel how warm all of you are,” he wrote. “Tokyo has a really special place in my heart.”

According to The Telegraph, Grigolo told Vanity Fair in 2015 that he was “a sex addict.”

“I’m difficult to be with,” he said. “I believe in fidelity, but that’s easier said than done.”