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Showing posts from March, 2023

00023: PULCINELLA A CAMPANIA

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I knew I was going to see a sign of Pulcinella before arriving to Naples. After all, I was aware that somewhere in the city there is a statue dedicated to this commedia dell'arte character.   What I didn't know was how Napoletani (Neapolitans) truly embraced this zanni character. And they do it to the fullest in ways I could not imagine, even more than Venetians embrace Pantalone.   First, there is the famous bust of Pulcinella, located in the infamous "Vico del Fico al Purgatori" (The Alley of the Fig Tree of Purgatory.) And then there is the hundreds and hundreds of Pulcinella images, figurines, paintings, posters, logos, refrigerator magnets, souvenirs, ornaments, t-shirts, commercial signs, and masks. There is also a hiking trail known as "Capello di Pulcinella," (capello = a single hair, symbolic for "a trail") and once you reach the top of the mountain, you are in the "Capuccio di Pulcinella," (Pulcinella's hood.) There is so mu...

00022: IL MUSEO DI PULCINELLA

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Pulcinella has always been associated with Naples. And as I mentioned in my previous post, this commedia dell'arte character is a symbol of the city and it's embedded in the cultural fabric of the Napoletani. It is logical then, that I've always believed Pulcinella was born in Naples. However, I've come to find out that Pulcinella's birth isn't as clear-cut as I thought. About 15 miles northeast from Naples, there is a small town named Acerra. It is a town with about 60,000 residents and two "castles" to its name: Il Castello dei Conti di Acerra and Il Castello Baronale di Acerra, now both museums. It is in the latter that "Il Museo di Pulcinella, del Folklore e della Civiltà Contadina" is found, and i t is here where I learned several things about the Pulcinella.  Pulcinella was born in Acerra in a small house closed to the walls of the town in the district of La Maddalena. The house overlooked the town's square and it was decorated and ...

00021: FLORENCE & COMMEDIA

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From the internet Florence is considered the city of love so it makes sense that the two commedia dell'arte characters that belong to Florence are "the innamorati" (the lovers.) And because the lovers are young, infatuated with love, and desperately wanting to be together, they are seen as hopeless romantics. Most of the time, they are the cause for the older characters to go to "war." And because they are young, innocent, and in love with love, they posses an inability to solve their own problems, thus the female lover has a helper (Colombina/Florentina/Scarlina--and other names that end in "ina")-- while the male lover has a helper, Arlecchino. This set up creates the opportunity for Arlechinno to become a "zanni" character when trying to make the two lovers meet, and also gives him the opportunity to pursue the female lover's helper.   One special attribute about the lovers is that they don't wear a mask, mainly because their young...

00020: TEATRO OLIMPICO (VICENZA)

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Entrance Every semester I teach one or two "Introduction to Theatre" classes. Within the class, at some point I get to talk about Italian Theatre during the Renaissance period. One aspect we discuss in class is Italian architecture, literature, and inventions and how they contributed to the theatre world. At some point I show the students images of the only surviving Renaissance Theater in Italy, Teatro Olimpico.   Although Teatro Olimpico is not the first permanent theatre built in Italy, it is the oldest surviving indoor theater from the Renaissance period, built by Andrea Palladio. Construction started in 1580. It was finished in 1584 and inaugurated in 1585. It has been in used for 438 years.  The space was designed like an in-door Greek amphitheater with an impressive Roman facade. Even more impressive is how Palladio applied "the vanishing point" and the "linear perspective" techniques to the stage design. The facade has three entrances and behind th...

00019: IL CARRO DEI COMICI

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Compagnia di Teatro Pankatin One of the last plays I saw during the Carnevale was "Il carro dei comici." This production was presented by Compagnia Pantakin da Venezia, which is the same company that presented VENEZIA MILLENARIA. This company is also responsible for the entire Commedia dell'arte Festival, under its director and curator, Michele Modesto Casarin,  one of Italy's most respected and sought out Commedia dell'arte masters.     "Il carro dei comici" is about a traveling acting troupe, named "I senza dimora," (Without a Home) and their main purpose is to revive Commedia dell'arte. They do this through sharing the history and importance of each commedia dell'arte mask, explaining to whom it belongs and acting out classic commedia dell'arte scenarios. This play became a "play within a play," and it was not only a history lesson about commedia dell'arte as an acting style, the importance of the masks, and the ori...

00018: MUSEO MASCHERA SARTORI

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Museo Internazionale della Maschera Within the region of Veneto, in the province of Padova (Pauda) in Italy, there is a small town named Abano Terme. Most people know the town for its hot springs and mud baths, which is an important economic resource. I, on the other hand, know it because the "Museo Internazionale della Maschara Amleto e Donato Sartori" (founded in 2004) can be found in this small town.  The ride from Venice to Abano is about 50 minutes by train. And from the train station to the Museum the distance is less than 1/2 mile. Needless to say, during my stay in Venizia, I visited the museum.   Amleto Sartori (from the internet) Amleto Sartori was a sculpture who, after WWII, studied the commedia dell'arte masks. He created wooden molds and used them to make the first leather commedia dell'arte masks ever. With time, he perfected the skill and soon his masks became known, first all over Italy, and then the world.  He befriended Jacques Lecoq, a French artis...

000:17: IL TRIONFO DI ARLECCHINO

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La Compagnia The commedia dell'arte festival during the Carnevale, was an international event that also included two different countries: France and Rumania. Because I arrived during the second week of the festival, I missed the theatre presentation from Rumania, which only participated in the festival during the first week. Luckily, France was there for the second and third week so I had the opportunity to see their show.  "Il trionfo di Arlecchino" was presented by Amata Compagnie/Campagnia Amata (Amata Theatre Company) under the direciton of Carlo Boso (Carlo Boso is an Italian playwright and an international Commedia dell'arte figure living in France.)  La Compagnia What I truly loved about this theatre production was the fact that the play included French, Italian, and English. And all the actors spoke the three languages with ease. Aside from the trilingual acting, the play also included several songs in English, French, and Italian, several dance sequences, pan...