Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Foreword by Harvey Sachs
- Introduction
- Acknowledgements
- ARTURO TOSCANINI – CHRONICLE OF A LIFE, 1867–1957
- CHAPTER 1 1900–30: TOWARDS THE PHILHARMONIC TOUR
- CHAPTER 2 1931–35: THE LONDON MUSIC FESTIVAL 1935
- CHAPTER 3 RECORDING THE 1935 CONCERTS
- CHAPTER 4 1936–37: THE LONDON MUSIC FESTIVAL 1937
- CHAPTER 5 THE FIRST HMV RECORDING SESSION
- CHAPTER 6 AUTUMN 1937: TWO CHORAL CONCERTS AND MORE RECORDS
- CHAPTER 7 1938: THE LONDON MUSIC FESTIVAL 1938
- CHAPTER 8 1939: THE LAST LONDON MUSIC FESTIVAL
- CHAPTER 9 1940–45: WAR EFFORTS AND BEYOND
- CHAPTER 10 1946–51: LA SCALA
- CHAPTER 11 1951–52: ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL
- CHAPTER 12 THE LONDON RECORDINGS – A STUDY IN STYLE
- ANNEX A DISCOGRAPHY OF EMI RECORDINGS 1935–51
- ANNEX B THE CONCERTS 1930–52 – PROGRAMMES AND RECORDINGS
- ANNEX C BRAHMS AND TOSCANINI – AN HISTORICAL EXCURSUS
- Bibliography
- Index
CHAPTER 10 - 1946–51: LA SCALA
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 April 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Foreword by Harvey Sachs
- Introduction
- Acknowledgements
- ARTURO TOSCANINI – CHRONICLE OF A LIFE, 1867–1957
- CHAPTER 1 1900–30: TOWARDS THE PHILHARMONIC TOUR
- CHAPTER 2 1931–35: THE LONDON MUSIC FESTIVAL 1935
- CHAPTER 3 RECORDING THE 1935 CONCERTS
- CHAPTER 4 1936–37: THE LONDON MUSIC FESTIVAL 1937
- CHAPTER 5 THE FIRST HMV RECORDING SESSION
- CHAPTER 6 AUTUMN 1937: TWO CHORAL CONCERTS AND MORE RECORDS
- CHAPTER 7 1938: THE LONDON MUSIC FESTIVAL 1938
- CHAPTER 8 1939: THE LAST LONDON MUSIC FESTIVAL
- CHAPTER 9 1940–45: WAR EFFORTS AND BEYOND
- CHAPTER 10 1946–51: LA SCALA
- CHAPTER 11 1951–52: ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL
- CHAPTER 12 THE LONDON RECORDINGS – A STUDY IN STYLE
- ANNEX A DISCOGRAPHY OF EMI RECORDINGS 1935–51
- ANNEX B THE CONCERTS 1930–52 – PROGRAMMES AND RECORDINGS
- ANNEX C BRAHMS AND TOSCANINI – AN HISTORICAL EXCURSUS
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Return to La Scala
In the spring of 1946 Toscanini was standing by in New York in readiness for his long-awaited return to Milan. His informant there was Fritz Busch's son, Hans Peter, then serving with the occupying forces in north Italy and appointed at the war's end to take charge of all musical activities in the city for the Allied Military Government, including in particular La Scala. One of his noteworthy activities, close to Toscanini's heart, was soliciting funds for the rebuilding of the theatre with assistance from, among others, the Maestro's elder daughter, the ‘charming’ Wally; the cable to her father elicited a gift of one million lire. Further, Hans Peter organised immediate post-war La Scala concerts with politically clean conductors (too few, he remarked); he personally drove some of the most eminent exiled Jewish musicians back from the Swiss border – men such as Vittorio Veneziani, the famed La Scala chorusmaster on whose re-engagement Toscanini insisted; and he established and chaired the committee to run La Scala which in turn chose Antonio Ghiringhelli as the theatre's commissioner, later its general director.
Despite the evident dynamism of Hans Peter, delays in completing La Scala kept Toscanini in New York for some months early in 1946. Eventually he received the information both political and material for which he had been waiting. In mid- April he was assured that a referendum on the monarchy would take place in June and was also sufficiently reassured about the progress of La Scala's reconstruction by an invitation to return sent by Hans Peter.
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- Toscanini in Britain , pp. 187 - 201Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2012