Paul Rose

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Paul Artur Max Rose (born July 31, 1900 in Berlin , † December 25, 1973 in Baden-Baden ) was a German theater director and actor .

Paul's father Bernhard Rose was a theater director and actor. His two brothers Hans Rose and Willi Rose were also actors. He learned the art of acting from Max Reinhardt and then had various engagements in Liegnitz (1918), Barmen-Elberfeld (1919–1920) and at the National Theater Mannheim (1920–1923) before moving to his father's Rose Theater in 1924 . From 1927 Paul was director of the theater until the theater was destroyed in 1944/45 and was the successor to his late father. During his time at the Rose-Teater, Rose was friends with Gerhart Hauptmann and met his wife and actress Traute Rose , whom he married in 1925. He preferred naturalistic pieces and re-performed the pieces by Hermann Sudermann and Ernst von Wildenbruch . His performance of Faust made him famous in 1937.

After the war, Rose became director of the theater in Köthen for a short time , where he recognized and promoted Horst Tappert's talent . On June 15, 1947, he became artistic director at the Württemberg-Hohenzollern State Theater in Tübingen and, from August 1, 1950, head of the Kassel State Theater . After his contract was not renewed and he had worked as a freelance director and actor in Heidelberg , Karlsruhe , Stuttgart , Wiesbaden , Schweinfurt and Berlin, he was appointed director of the Badisches Staatstheater in Karlsruhe in 1953 . In 1956 he became general director and stayed in Karlsruhe until his retirement in 1962. He was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit for his services to the theater .

Rose had a son and a daughter.

Publications

  • 1969: Berlin's great theatrical time, Rembrandt-Verlag
  • 1943: The dissected Pegasus - a happy philosophy of the German Schaubühne
  • 1942: Don Ranudo de Colibrados, Drei Masken Verlag
  • 1939: Versailles 1919, Bloch Verlag
  • 1938: Vincent van Gogh, Bloch Verlag
  • 1938: Vincent van Gogh, P. Rose
  • 1931: Festschrift for the 25th anniversary of the Rose Theater [Berlin], Sept. 29, 1906–1931, Rose Theater

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Munziger: Paul Rose. Retrieved November 14, 2014 .
  2. ^ The dissected Pegasus - a happy philosophy of the German Schaubühne, Volume 2. Retrieved on November 14, 2014 .