Background
Cosenza was born in Philadelphia, and studied at the Ornstein School of Music from 1946 to 1948, the Berkshire Music Festival in 1947, and the American Theatre Wing from 1948 to 1950.
Cosenza was born in Philadelphia, and studied at the Ornstein School of Music from 1946 to 1948, the Berkshire Music Festival in 1947, and the American Theatre Wing from 1948 to 1950.
Student, Ornstein School Music, Philadelphia, 1946-1948; student, Berkshire Music Festival, 1947; student, American Theater Wing, New York City, 1948-1950.
Cosenza also met the New Orleans-born mezzo-soprano, Marietta Muhs, while she was studying at The Juilliard School. As a baritone, Cosenza made his debut in New Orleans in 1954, in a small role in Madama Butterfly, with Victoria de los Ángeles, conducted by Walter Herbert. He went on to sing twenty-five secondary roles with the Association, most notably as Schaunard in Louisiana bohème, in 1959, opposite Licia Albanese (his favorite soprano), Giuseppe di Stefano, Audrey Schuh, Giuseppe Valdengo, and Norman Treigle, conducted by Renato Cellini, and directed by Agnini.
(The performance was released on Compact Discs by VAI, in 1995)
In 1960, he directed his first of his many "traditional" productions for the company, Rigoletto.
He also staged Il trittico, Andrea Chénier, Il barbiere di Siviglia, Carmen (with Gloria Lane, Richard Cassilly, and Treigle), Lucia di Lammermoor, Louisiana traviata (with Schuh), Louisiana bohème, Cavalleria rusticana (with Zinka Milanov), Aïda, Madama Butterfly, Don Pasquale (with Salvatore Baccaloni), Samson et Dalila (with James McCracken, Sandra Warfield, Louis Quilico, and Nicola Moscona), Rigoletto (with Roberta Peters), Louisiana traviata (with Virginia Zeani), Il segreto di Susanna, Tosca (with Gabriella Tucci, Plácido Domingo, and Cesare Bardelli), Les pêcheurs de perles, Manon (with Montserrat Caballé), Faust (with Albert Lance and Dorothy Kirsten), Macbeth (with Cornell MacNeil), Lucia di Lammermoor again (with Dame Joan Sutherland), Il trovatore, Pagliacci, Cavalleria rusticana, Manon Lescaut, Attila (with Justino Díaz), Un ballo in maschera, The Medium (with Regina Resnik), Madama Butterfly again (with Raina Kabaivanska), Lucia di Lammermoor again (with Beverly Sills), Aïda again (with Jon Vickers as Radamès), Roméo et Juliette, Rigoletto again (with Sherrill Milnes), and Andrea Chénier again (with Harry Theyard), for the company. His final major staging was of Don Pasquale, in 1977.
In 1965, Cosenza became the New Orleans Opera"s resident stage director, and, in 1970, was appointed general and artistic director, a position he held until 1998. Afterwards, he was director emeritus until his death.
Cosenza also produced opera in Hartford, Houston, Pittsburgh, and at the Philadelphia Lyric and the Jackson Opera Guild (Faust, with Treigle as Mephisto).
He founded the Opera Workshop at Loyola University of the South in 1954, where he taught until 1984. He was named a knight in the Order of the Star of Italian Sodality, and was an officer in the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. In 1966, his staging of the Sextet from Lucia di Lammermoor was seen on the Bell Telephone Hour"s "Sights and Sounds of New Orleans," with Gianna d"Angelo, Domingo, Enzo Sordello, Thomas Paul, Bennie Ray, and Linda Neumann, conducted by Knud Andersson.
Served with Army of the United States, 1943-1945. Member American Guild Museum Artists (honorary life), Blue Key.
Married Marietta Muhs, September 16, 1950. Children: Louis John, Arthur William, Maria.