World War II When war broke out again in Europe in September 1939, Rosing went with his friend Albert Coates to Southern California. Rosing married his third wife, the English actress Vicki Campbell, and they boarded the
SS Washington in Southampton on October 3, 1939. The ship was overflowing with artists fleeing Europe, including
Arturo Toscanini,
Arthur Rubinstein,
Paul Robeson, and the Russian Ballet. Once safely in Hollywood, Rosing and Coates formed the
Southern California Opera Association. In conjunction with the
Works Progress Administration, they produced a notable production of
Faust that featured the debut of soprano
Nadine Conner. Rosing renewed his political activities, becoming Executive Chairman of the
Federal Union of Southern California, a new group whose members included
Thomas Mann,
John Carradine,
Douglas Fairbanks Jr., and
Melvyn Douglas. The group worked to counter American isolationist sentiment and support aid for England's war efforts. When the United States joined the war, Rosing wanted to be of service. He was appointed Director of Entertainment at
Camp Roberts, California, in 1943. The film studios lent their stable of stars, and with the help of talented servicemen Rosing directed over 20 productions of musical theater and light opera for the troops. His last production at Camp Roberts was a staged version of
Handel's
Messiah in December 1945. Along with Capt. Hugh Edwards, another Camp Roberts veteran, Rosing founded the
American Operatic Laboratory in 1946. The idea was to offer complete vocal and instrumental courses to music students, as well as returning soldiers on the
GI bill. The school started with 17 students, and over the next three years 450 pupils were trained, most of whom were veterans. Over 300 performances were given of 33 different opera productions. One of Rosing's young students, Jean Hillard, eventually became his fourth wife. Rosing worked locally with the Long Beach Civic Opera Association on productions of
The Merry Widow,
Naughty Marietta, and
Rio Rita in 1946. Under the banner of the American Opera Company of Los Angeles, he directed
Tosca,
The Barber of Seville, and
Faust in 1947 with an up-and-coming young bass named
Jerome Hines. In 1948 the National Opera Association of Los Angeles, under his direction, presented ''
The Beggar's Opera, The Abduction from the Seraglio, Pagliacci
, Rigoletto, Faust
, and La traviata with soprano Jean Fenn. Productions of The Marriage of Figaro, The Queen of Spades
, and Don Giovanni with the American Opera Company of Los Angeles completed 1948. For KFI-TV in 1949, Rosing presented 46 weeks of live televised opera sequences on Sunday afternoons which were voted Outstanding Musical Program of Local Origin by the Southern California Association for Better Radio and T.V''.
New York City Opera In the fall of 1949 an offer came from the
New York City Opera (NYCO) to revive
Prokofiev's comic opera
The Love for Three Oranges. Rosing's old friend
Theodore Komisarjevsky had been slated to direct the production but had suffered a heart attack. Vladimir had seen the original failed production, commissioned by the Chicago Opera in 1921, and he knew what the work needed to bring it to success. His production opened in November 1949 and was a smash hit.
Life Magazine covered it with a three-page color-photo spread. The New York company took the production to Chicago. Prokofiev's opera was brought back by popular demand for two more successive seasons in New York. Over the next decade Rosing directed ten more productions for the NYCO, including
Douglas Moore's
The Ballad of Baby Doe which ran for two seasons in 1958 and featured the role debut of soprano
Beverly Sills. The production was revived again in 1962.
Opera in films Rosing directed opera sequences for four films during this period, starting with
Everybody Does It starring
Linda Darnell for
20th Century Fox in 1949.
Grounds for Marriage with
Kathryn Grayson followed for MGM in 1950. Rosing directed
Ezio Pinza in
Strictly Dishonorable, and
Interrupted Melody with
Eleanor Parker in 1955, also both for MGM.
Hollywood Bowl In 1950, as California was celebrating one hundred years of statehood, Rosing directed a new production of
Faust with
Nadine Conner,
Jerome Hines and
Richard Tucker, which opened the Hollywood Bowl's summer season. Rosing's work was noticed by the producers of the upcoming
The California Story, the official state centennial production to be mounted in the Bowl that fall, and he was asked to direct it.
Meredith Willson supervised the music.
The California Story ran for five performances in September 1950. A chorus of 200 and hundreds of actors were employed. The shell of the bowl was removed, and the stage was enlarged. The action was expanded to include the surrounding hillsides.
Lionel Barrymore provided the dramatic narration.
The California Story's success opened a new avenue for Rosing: the historical spectacular,
The Air Power Pageant in the Bowl in 1951 and
The Elks Story in 1954. In 1956 Rosing directed a similarly lavish production of
The California Story in
San Diego as the main production of a newly created civic festival,
Fiesta del Pacifico. Rosing also directed three more operas at the Hollywood Bowl:
Die Fledermaus in 1951,
Madama Butterfly with
Dorothy Kirsten in 1960, and
The Student Prince with
Igor Gorin in 1962.
Lyric Opera of Chicago Starting in 1955 with
Il tabarro, Vladimir Rosing directed a dozen productions over the next seven years for the
Lyric Opera of Chicago, including
Boris Godunov with
Boris Christoff,
Turandot with
Birgit Nilsson in 1958, and
Thaïs with
Leontyne Price in 1959. Rosing's last opera there, in 1962, was
Borodin's
Prince Igor, also with Boris Christoff—a production that featured sets by
Nicola Benois, choreography by
Ruth Page and dancing by
Rudolf Nureyev, newly arrived in the West from Russia.
Opera Guild of Montreal The
Opera Guild of Montreal, founded by soprano
Pauline Donalda, brought Rosing to direct
Verdi's
Falstaff in January 1958 at Her Majesty's Theatre. Through 1962, Rosing directed a production each January for the Guild:
Macbeth (1959),
Carmen (1960),
Romeo et Juliette (1961) and
La traviata (1962). The renowned Russian conductor
Emil Cooper led the orchestra for the first three seasons.
Centennials The success of
The California Story at the Hollywood Bowl in 1950 led to the show's revival in similarly grand fashion for San Diego's annual
Fiesta del Pacifico in 1956, 1957, and 1958. Other states took notice, and Rosing was hired to write and direct the
Oregon Centennial in 1959, and centennial productions for Kansas in 1961, and Arizona in 1963. He was assisted by his fifth wife, Ruth Scates, whom he married in 1959.
The Freedom Story Rosing conceived of a spectacular production,
The Civil War Story, that would be funded jointly by participating States and tour the country for several years to mark the war's centennial. Rosing planned to produce, write and direct the production. After a disappointing failure to win bi-partisan support in the Northern and Southern states for this ambitious project, Rosing then conceived of an even bigger production that would instead tell the story of freedom itself.
The Freedom Story would be an ambassador of freedom and peace, sent from America to the rest of the world, performing in local languages. Rosing wanted to use the power of art to fight the forces of totalitarianism that he saw as threatening America's freedom. The project won wide support, with an advisory board that included Alf Landon, Harry S. Truman, and Dwight D. Eisenhower. Meredith Willson had agreed to create the music. The ambitious project did not have a chance to progress further. While working on the Arizona Story, Rosing contracted
sepsis. He died in Santa Monica on November 24, 1963, aged 73. Composer
Meredith Willson gave the eulogy. Rosing was buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in the Hollywood Hills. == Recordings ==