Commedia dell'arte






Commedia dell'arte Troupe on a Wagon in a Town Square, by Jan Miel, 1640


Commedia dell'arte (Italian pronunciation: [komˈmɛːdja delˈlarte], comedy of the profession[1]) was an early form of professional theatre, originating from Italy, that was popular in Europe from the 16th to the 18th century.[2][3]Commedia dell'arte is also known as commedia alla maschera, commedia improvviso, and commedia dell'arte all'improvviso.[4]Commedia is a form of theatre characterized by masked "types" which began in Italy in the 16th century and was responsible for the advent of actresses (Isabella Andreini[5]) and improvised performances based on sketches or scenarios.[6][7] A commedia, such as The Tooth Puller, is both scripted and improvised.[6][8] Characters' entrances and exits are scripted. A special characteristic of commedia dell'arte are the lazzi. A lazzo is a joke or "something foolish or witty", usually well known to the performers and to some extent a scripted routine.[8][9] Another characteristic of commedia dell'arte is pantomime, which is mostly used by the character Arlecchino (Harlequin).[10]


The characters of the commedia usually represent fixed social types and stock characters, such as foolish old men, devious servants, or military officers full of false bravado.[6][11] The characters are exaggerated "real characters", such as a know-it-all doctor called Il Dottore, a greedy old man called Pantalone, or a perfect relationship like the Innamorati.[5]


Many troupes were formed to perform commedia dell'arte, including I Gelosi (which had actors such as Isabella Andreini, and her husband Francesco Andreini[12]), Confidenti Troupe, Desioi Troupe, and Fedeli Troupe.[5][6]Commedia dell'arte was often performed outside on platforms or in popular areas such as a piazza.[4][6] The form of theatre originated in Italy, but travelled throughout Europe and even to Moscow.[13]


The commedia genesis may be related to carnival in Venice, where by 1570 the author/actor Andrea Calmo had created the character Il Magnifico, the precursor to the vecchio (old man) Pantalone. In the Flaminio Scala scenario for example, Il Magnifico persists and is interchangeable with Pantalone, into the seventeenth century. While Calmo's characters (which also included the Spanish Capitano and a dottore type) were not masked, it is uncertain at what point the characters donned the mask. However, the connection to carnival (the period between Epiphany and Ash Wednesday) would suggest that masking was a convention of carnival and was applied at some point. The tradition in Northern Italy is centered in Mantua, Florence, and Venice, where the major companies came under the aegis of the various dukes. Concomitantly, a Neapolitan tradition emerged in the south and featured the prominent stage figure Pulcinella. Pulcinella has been long associated with Naples, and derived into various types elsewhere—the most famous as the puppet character Punch (of the eponymous Punch and Judy shows) in England.




Contents





  • 1 History


  • 2 Companies

    • 2.1 List of known commedia troupes [31]



  • 3 Characters


  • 4 Costumes


  • 5 Subjects


  • 6 Influence in visual art


  • 7 Influence in performance art


  • 8 References


  • 9 Sources


  • 10 Further reading


  • 11 External links




History





Claude Gillot (1673–1722), Four Commedia dell'arte Figures: Three Gentlemen and Pierrot, c. 1715


Although commedia dell'arte flourished in Italy during the Mannerist period, there has been a long-standing tradition of trying to establish historical antecedents in antiquity. While it is possible to detect formal similarities between the commedia dell'arte and earlier theatrical traditions, there is no way to establish certainty of origin.[14] Some date the origins to the period of the Roman Republic (Plautine types) or the Empire (Atellan Farces). The Atellan Farces of the Roman Empire featured crude "types" wearing masks with grossly exaggerated features and an improvised plot.[15] Some historians argue that Atellan stock characters, Pappus, Maccus+Buccus, and Manducus, are the primitive versions of the Commedia characters Pantalone, Pulcinella, and il Capitano.[16][17][18] More recent accounts establish links to the medieval jongleurs, and prototypes from medieval moralities, such as Hellequin (as the source of Harlequin, for example).[19]




Italian Pulcinella


The first recorded commedia dell'arte performances came from Rome as early as 1551.[20]Commedia dell'arte was performed outdoors in temporary venues by professional actors who were costumed and masked, as opposed to commedia erudita, which were written comedies, presented indoors by untrained and unmasked actors.[21] This view may be somewhat romanticized since records describe the Gelosi performing Tasso's Aminta, for example, and much was done at court rather than in the street. By the mid-16th century, specific troupes of commedia performers began to coalesce, and by 1568 the Gelosi became a distinct company. In keeping with the tradition of the Italian Academies, I Gelosi adopted as their impress (or coat of arms) the two-faced Roman god Janus. Janus symbolized both the comings and goings of this traveling troupe, and the dual nature of the actor who impersonates the "other." The Gelosi performed in Northern Italy and France where they received protection and patronage from the King of France. Despite fluctuations the Gelosi maintained stability for performances with the "usual ten": "two vecchi (old men), four innamorati (two male and two female lovers), two zanni, a captain and a servetta (serving maid)".[22] It should be noted that commedia often performed inside in court theatres or halls, and also as some fixed theatres such as Teatro Baldrucca in Florence. Flaminio Scala, who had been a minor performer in the Gelosi published the scenarios of the commedia dell'arte around the start of the 17th century, really in an effort to legitimize the form—and ensure its legacy. These scenari are highly structured and built around the symmetry of the various types in duet: two zanni, vecchi, inamorate and inamorati, etc.


In commedia dell'arte, female roles were played by women, documented as early as the 1560s. In the 1570s, English theatre critics generally denigrated the troupes with their female actors (some decades later, Ben Jonson referred to one female performer of the commedia as a "tumbling whore"). By the end of the 1570s, Italian prelates attempted to ban female performers; however, by the end of the 16th century, actresses were standard on the Italian stage.[23] The Italian scholar Ferdinando Taviani has collated a number of church documents opposing the advent of the actress as a kind of courtesan, whose scanty attire and promiscuous lifestyle corrupted young men, or at least infused them with carnal desires. Taviani's term negativa poetica describes this and other practices offensive to the church, while giving us an idea of the phenomenon of the commedia dell'arte performance.


By the early 17th century, the zanni comedies were moving from pure improvisational street performances to specified and clearly delineated acts and characters. Three books written during the 17th century—Cecchini's Fruti della moderne commedia (1628), Niccolò Barbieri's La supplica (1634) and Perrucci's Dell'arte rapresentativa (1699—"made firm recommendations concerning performing practice." Katritzky argues, that as a result, commedia was reduced to formulaic and stylized acting; as far as possible from the purity of the improvisational genesis a century earlier.[24] In France, during the reign of Louis XIV, the Comédie-Italienne created a repertoire and delineated new masks and characters, while deleting some of the Italian precursors, such as Pantalone. French playwrights, particularly Molière, gleaned from the plots and masks in creating an indigenous treatment. Indeed, Molière shared the stage with the Comédie-Italienne at Petit-Bourbon, and some of his forms, e.g. the tirade, are derivative from the commedia (tirata).


Commedia dell'arte moved outside the city limits to the théâtre de la foire, or fair theatres, in the early 17th century as it evolved toward a more pantomimed style. With the dispatch of the Italian comedians from France in 1697, the form transmogrified in the 18th century as genres such as comédie larmoyante gained in attraction in France, particularly through the plays of Marivaux. Marivaux softened the commedia considerably by bringing in true emotion to the stage. Harlequin achieved more prominence during this period.


It is possible that this kind of improvised acting was passed down the Italian generations until the 17th century, when it was revived as a professional theatrical technique. However, as currently used the term commedia dell'arte was coined in the mid-18th century.[25]


Curiously, commedia dell'arte was equally if not more popular in France, where it continued its popularity throughout the 17th century (until 1697), and it was in France that commedia developed its established repertoire. Commedia evolved into various configurations across Europe, and each country acculturated the form to its liking. For example, pantomime, which flourished in the 18th century, owes its genesis to the character types of the commedia, particularly Harlequin. The Punch and Judy puppet shows, popular to this day in England, owe their basis to the Pulcinella mask that emerged in Neapolitan versions of the form. In Italy, commedia masks and plots found their way into the opera buffa, and the plots of Rossini, Verdi, and Puccini.


During the Napoleonic occupation of Italy, instigators of reform and critics of French Imperial rule (such as Giacomo Casanova) used the carnival masks to hide their identities while fueling political agendas, challenging social rule and hurling blatant insults and criticisms at the regime. In 1797, in order to destroy the impromptu style of carnival as a partisan platform, Napoleon outlawed the commedia dell'arte. It was not reborn in Venice until 1979.[26]



Companies




Commedia dell'arte troupe I Gelosi in a late 16th-century Flemish painting


Compagnie, or companies, were troupes of actors, each of whom had a specific function or role. Actors were versed in a plethora of skills, with many having joined troupes without a theatre background. Some were doctors, other priests, other soldiers, enticed by the excitement and prevalence of theatre in Italian society. Actors were known to switch from troupe to troupe "on loan," and companies would often collaborate if unified by a single patron or performing in the same general location.[27] Members would also splinter off to form their own troupes, such was the case with the Ganassa and the Gelosi. These compagnie traveled throughout Europe from the early period, beginning with the Soldati, then, the Ganassa, who traveled to Spain,[28] and were famous for playing the guitar and singing—never to be heard from again—and the famous troupes of the Golden Age (1580–1605): Gelosi, Confidenti, Accessi. These names which signified daring and enterprise were appropriated from the names of the academies—in a sense, to lend legitimacy. However, each troupe had its impresse (like a coat of arms) which symbolized its nature. The Gelosi, for example, used the two-headed face of the Roman god Janus, to signify its comings and goings and relationship to the season of carnival, which took place in January. Janus also signified the duality of the actor, who is playing a character or mask, while still remaining oneself.


Magistrates and clergy were not always receptive to the traveling compagnie (companies), particularly during periods of plague, and because of their itinerant nature. Actors, both male and female, were known to strip nearly naked, and storylines typically descended into crude situations with overt sexuality, considered to teach nothing but "lewdness and adultery...of both sexes" by the French Parliament.[29] The term vagabondi was used in reference to the comici, and remains a derogatory term to this day (vagabond). This was in reference to the nomadic nature of the troupes, often instigated by persecution from the Church, civil authorities, and rival theatre organisations that forced the companies to move from place to place.


A troupe often consisted of ten performers of familiar masked and unmasked types, and included women.[22] The companies would employ carpenters, props masters, servants, nurses, and prompters, all of whom would travel with the company. They would travel in large carts laden with supplies necessary for their nomadic style of performance, enabling them to move from place to place without having to worry about the difficulties of relocation. This nomadic nature, though influenced by persecution, was also largely due in part to the troupes requiring new (and paying) audiences. They would take advantage of public fairs and celebrations, most often in wealthier towns where financial success was more probable. Companies would also find themselves summoned by high-ranking officials, who would offer patronage in return for performing in their land for a certain amount of time. Companies in fact preferred to not stay in any one place too long, mostly out of a fear of the act becoming "stale." They would move on to the next location while their popularity was still active, ensuring the towns and people were sad to see them leave, and would be more likely to either invite them back or pay to watch performances again should the troupe ever return.[30] Prices were dependent on the troupe's decision, which could vary depending on the wealth of the location, the length of stay, and the regulations governments had in place for dramatic performances.



List of known commedia troupes [31]


  • Compagnia dei Fedeli: active 1601–52, with Giambattista Andreini

  • Compagnia degli Accesi: active 1590–1628


  • Compagnia degli Uniti [it]: active 1578–1640

  • Compagnia dei Confidenti: active 1574–99; reformed under Flaminio Scala, operated again 1611–39

  • I Dedosi: active 1581–99


  • I Gelosi: active 1568–1604


  • Signora Violante and Her Troupe of Dancers: active 1729-32[32]


  • Zan Ganassa: active 1568–1610


Characters





Jean-Antoine Watteau (1684–1721), Commedia dell'arte player of Pierrot, ca. 1718–19, identified as "Gilles"


Generally, the actors playing were diverse in background in terms of class and religion, and performed anywhere they could. Castagno posits that the aesthetic of exaggeration, distortion, anti-humanism (as in the masked types), and excessive borrowing as opposed to originality was typical of all the arts in the late Italian Renaissance.[33] Theatre historian Martin Green points to the extravagance of emotion during the period of commedia's emergence as the reason for representational moods, or characters, that define the art. In commedia each character embodies a mood: mockery, sadness, gaiety, confusion, and so forth.[34]


According to 18th-century London theatre critic Baretti, commedia dell'arte incorporates specific roles and characters that were "originally intended as a kind of characteristic representative of some particular Italian district or town."[25][35] The character's persona included the specific dialect of the region or town represented. Characters would often be passed down from generation to generation, and characters married onstage were often married in real life as well, seen most famously with Francesco and Isabella Andreini. This was believed to make performances more natural, as well as strengthening the bonds within the troupe, who emphasized complete unity between every member. Additionally, each character has a singular costume and mask that is representative of the character's role.[25]


Commedia dell'arte has four stock character groups: the servants or Zanni, these are characters such as Arlecchino, Brighella, and Pedrolino; the old men or vecchi, characters such as Pantalone and il Dottore; the lovers or innamorati who would have names such as Flavio and Isabella; and the captains or Capitani who can also be La Signora if a female.[11] Male servants and male masters (but not male amorosi) are masked and those characters themselves are often referred to as "masks" (in Italian: maschere), which, according to John Rudlin, cannot be separated from the character. In other words, the characteristics of the character and the characteristics of the mask are the same.[36] In time however, the word maschere came to refer to all of the characters of the commedia dell'arte whether masked or not. Female characters (including female servants) are most often not masked (female amorose are never masked). Female characters in the masters group are rare. Female servants wore bonnets. Their character was played with a malicious wit or gossipy gaiety. The amorosi are often children of a male character in the masters group, but not of any female character in the masters group, which may represent younger women who have e.g. married an old man, or a high-class courtesan. Female characters in the masters group, while younger than their male counterparts, are nevertheless older than the amorosi. The servants or the clowns are referred to as the zanni and include characters such as Arlecchino (also known as Harlequin), Brighella, Scapino and Pedrolino.[37] Some of the better known commedia dell'arte characters are Pierrot and Pierrette, Pantalone, Il Dottore, Brighella, Il Capitano, Colombina, the innamorati, Pedrolino, Pulcinella, Sandrone, Scaramuccia (also known as Scaramouche), La Signora, and Tartaglia.



































Short list of characters[38]
Character(s)
Masks
Status
Costume

Arlecchino
Yes
Servant (sometimes to two masters)
Colorful tight fitting jacket and trousers

Il Dottore
Yes
Head of the household
Black scholarly robe

Il Capitano
Yes
Indigenous loner
Military uniform

Innamorati
No
High class hopeless lovers
Nicely dressed on par with the time

Pantalone
Yes
Older wealthy man
Dark capes and red trousers

Colombina
Yes
Perky maid / servant
Can be colorful on par with Arlecchino or black and white

Pierrot
Yes
Servant (Sad clown)
White, flowy costume with large buttons

In the 17th century as commedia became popular in France, the characters of Pierrot, Columbine and Harlequin were refined and became essentially Parisian, according to Green.[39]



Costumes



Each character in Commedia dell'arte has a distinct costume that helps the audience understand who the character is.


Arlecchino originally wore a tight fitting long jacket with matching trousers that both had numerous odd shaped patches, usually green, yellow, red, and brown.[40][41] Usually, there was a bat and a wallet that would hang from his belt.[41] His hat, which was a soft cap, was modeled after Charles IX or after Henri II, and almost always had a tail of a rabbit, hare or a fox with the occasional tuft of feathers.[41][40] During the 17th century, the patches turned into blue, red, and green triangles arranged in a symmetrical pattern.[41] The 18th century is when the iconic Arlecchino look with the diamond shaped lozenges took shape. The jacket became shorter and his hat changed from a soft cap to a double pointed hat.[41]


Il Dottore's costume was a play on the academic dress of the Bolognese scholars.[41][40] Il Dottore is almost always clothed entirely in black.[41] He wore a long black gown or jacket that went below the knees.[41][40] Over the gown, he would have a long black robe that went down to his heels, and he would have on black shoes, stockings, and breeches.[41][40] In 1653, his costume was changed by Augustin Lolli who was a very popular Il Dottore actor. He added an enormous black hat, changed the robe to a jacket cut similarly to Louis XIV, and added a flat ruff to the neck.[41]


Il Capitano's costume is similar to Il Dottore's in the fact that it is also a satire on military wear of the time.[40] This costume would therefore change depending on where the Capitano character is from, and the period the Capitano is from.[40][41]


Pantalone has one of the most iconic costumes of Commedia dell'arte. Typically, he would wear a tightly fitting jacket with a matching pair of trousers. He usually pairs these two with a big black coat called a zimarra.[41][40]


Women, who usually played servants or lovers, wore less stylized costumes than the men in commedia. The lovers, Innamorati, would wear what was considered to be the fashion of the time period. They would only wear plain half-masks with no character distinction or street makeup.



Subjects


Conventional plot lines were written on themes of sex, jealousy, love and old age. Many of the basic plot elements can be traced back to the Roman comedies of Plautus and Terence, some of which were themselves translations of lost Greek comedies of the 4th century BC. However, it is more probable that the comici used contemporary novella, or, traditional sources as well, and drew from current events and local news of the day. Not all scenari were comic, there were some mixed forms and even tragedies. Shakespeare's The Tempest is drawn from a popular scenario in the Scala collection, his Polonius (Hamlet) is drawn from Pantalone, and his clowns bear homage to the zanni.


Comici performed written comedies at court. Song and dance were widely used, and a number of innamorati were skilled madrigalists, a song form that uses chromatics and close harmonies. Audiences came to see the performers, with plot lines becoming secondary to the performance. Among the great innamorate, Isabella Andreini was perhaps the most widely known, and a medallion dedicated to her reads "eternal fame". Tristano Martinelli achieved international fame as the first of the great Arlecchinos, and was honored by the Medici and the Queen of France. Performers made use of well-rehearsed jokes and stock physical gags, known as lazzi and concetti, as well as on-the-spot improvised and interpolated episodes and routines, called burle (singular burla, Italian for joke), usually involving a practical joke.


Since the productions were improvised, dialogue and action could easily be changed to satirize local scandals, current events, or regional tastes, while still using old jokes and punchlines. Characters were identified by costumes, masks, and props, such as a type of baton known as a slapstick. These characters included the forebears of the modern clown, namely Harlequin (arlecchino) and the zanni. Harlequin, in particular, was allowed to comment on current events in his entertainment.[42]


The classic, traditional plot is that the innamorati are in love and wish to be married, but one elder (vecchio) or several elders (vecchi) are preventing this from happening, leading the lovers to ask one or more zanni (eccentric servants) for help. Typically the story ends happily, with the marriage of the innamorati and forgiveness for any wrongdoings. There are countless variations on this story, as well as many that diverge wholly from the structure, such as a well-known story about Arlecchino becoming mysteriously pregnant, or the Punch and Judy scenario.


While generally personally unscripted, the performances often were based on scenarios that gave some semblance of plot to the largely improvised format. The Flaminio Scala scenarios, published in the early 17th century, are the most widely known collection and representative of its most esteemed compagnia, I Gelosi.



Influence in visual art





Jean-Antoine Watteau, Italian Comedians, 1720


The iconography of the commedia dell'arte represents an entire field of study that has been examined by commedia scholars such as Erenstein, Castagno, Katritzky, Molinari, and others. In the early period, representative works by painters at Fontainebleau were notable for their erotic depictions of the thinly veiled innamorata, or the bare-breasted courtesan/actress. The Flemish influence is widely documented as commedia figures entered the world of the vanitas genre, depicting the dangers of lust, drinking, and the hedonistic lifestyle. Castagno describes the Flemish pittore vago (wandering painters) who assimilated themselves within Italian workshops and even assumed Italian surnames: one of the most influential painters, Lodewyk Toeput, for example, became Ludovico Pozzoserrato and was a celebrated painter in the Veneto region of Italy. The pittore vago can be attributed with establishing commedia dell'arte as a genre of painting that would persist for centuries.


While the iconography gives evidence of the performance style (see Fossard collection), it is important to note that many of the images and engravings were not depictions from real life, but concocted in the studio. The Callot etchings of the Balli di Sfessania (1611) are most widely considered capricci rather than actual depictions of a commedia dance form, or typical masks. While these are often reproduced in large formats, it is important to note that the actual prints measured about 2×3 inches. In the 18th century, Watteau's painting of commedia figures intermingling with the aristocracy were often set in sumptuous garden or pastoral settings and were representative of that genre.


Pablo Picasso's 1921 painting Three Musicians is a colorful representation of commedia-inspired characters.[43] Picasso also designed the original costumes for Stravinsky's Pulcinella (1920), a ballet depicting commedia characters and situations. Commedia iconography is evident in porcelain figurines many selling for thousands of dollars at auction.



Influence in performance art





Peeter van Bredael, Commedia dell'arte Scene in an Italian Landscape


The expressive theatre influenced Molière's comedy and subsequently ballet d'action, thus lending a fresh range of expression and choreographic means. An example of a commedia dell'arte character in literature is the Pied Piper of Hamelin who is dressed as Harlequin.


Music and dance were central to commedia dell'arte performance. Brighella was often depicted with a guitar, and many images of the commedia feature singing innamorati or dancing figures. In fact, it was considered part of the innamorati function to be able to sing and have the popular repertoire under their belt. Accounts of the early commedia, as far back as Calmo in the 1570s and the buffoni of Venice, note the ability of comici to sing madrigali precisely and beautifully. The danzatrice probably accompanied the troupes, and may have been in addition to the general cast of characters. For examples of strange instruments of various grotesque formations see articles by Tom Heck, who has documented this area.


The works of a number of playwrights have featured characters influenced by the commedia dell'arte and sometimes directly drawn from it. Prominent examples include The Tempest by William Shakespeare, Les Fourberies de Scapin by Molière, Servant of Two Masters (1743) by Carlo Goldoni, the Figaro plays of Pierre Beaumarchais, and especially Love for Three Oranges, Turandot and other fiabe by Carlo Gozzi. Influences appear in the lodgers in Steven Berkoff's adaptation of Franz Kafka's The Metamorphosis.


Through their association with spoken theatre and playwrights commedia figures have provided opera with many of its stock characters. Mozart's Don Giovanni sets a puppet show story and comic servants like Leporello and Figaro have commedia precedents. Soubrette characters like Susanna in Le nozze di Figaro, Zerlina in Don Giovanni and Despina in Così fan tutte recall Columbina and related characters. The comic operas of Gaetano Donizetti, such as Elisir d'amore, draw readily upon commedia stock types. Leoncavallo's tragic melodrama Pagliacci depicts a commedia dell'arte company in which the performers find their life situations reflecting events they depict on stage. Commedia characters also figure in Richard Strauss's opera Ariadne auf Naxos.


Stock characters and situations also appear in ballet. Igor Stravinsky's Petrushka and Pulcinella allude directly to the tradition.



References




  1. ^ "Commedia dell'arte", Encyclopædia Britannica


  2. ^ Lea, K.M. (1962). Italian Popular Comedy: A Study In The Commedia Dell'Arte, 1560–1620 With Special Reference to the English State. New York: Russell & Russell INC. p. 3..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output .citation qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-maintdisplay:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  3. ^ Wilson, Matthew R. "A History of Commedia dell'arte". Faction of Fools. Faction of Fools. Retrieved 9 December 2016.


  4. ^ ab Rudlin, John (1994). Commedia Dell'Arte An Actor's Handbook. London and New York: Ruutaledge. p. 48. ISBN 0-415-04769-2.


  5. ^ abc Ducharte, Pierre Louis (1966). The Italian Comedy: The Improvisation Scenarios Lives Attributes Portraits and Masks of the Illustrious Characters of the Commedia dell'Arte. New York: Dover Publication. p. 17. ISBN 0486216799.


  6. ^ abcde Chaffee, Judith; Crick, Olly (2015). The Routledge Companion to Commedia Dell'Arte. London and New York: Rutledge Taylor and Francis Group. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-415-74506-2.


  7. ^ "Faction Of Fools".


  8. ^ ab Grantham, Barry (2000). Playing Commedia A Training Guide to Commedia Techniques. United Kingdom: Heinemann Drama. pp. 3, 6–7. ISBN 0-325-00346-7.


  9. ^ Gordon, Mel (1983). Lazzi: The Comic Routine of the Commedia dell'Arte. New York: Performing Arts Journal Publications. p. 4. ISBN 0-933826-69-9.


  10. ^ Broadbent, R.J. (1901). A History Of Pantomime. New York: Benjamin Blom, Inc. p. 62.


  11. ^ ab "Faction of Fools | A History of Commedia dell'Arte". www.factionoffools.org. Retrieved 2016-12-09.


  12. ^ Maurice, Sand (1915). The History of the Harlequinade. New York: Benjamin Bloom, Inc. p. 135.


  13. ^ Nicoll, Allardyce (1963). The World of Harlequin: A Critical Study of the Commedia dell'Arte. London: Cambridge University Press. p. 9.


  14. ^ Castagno 1994, p. 94.


  15. ^ Smith, Winifred (1964). The Commedia Dell'Arte. New York: Benjamin Blom. p. 26. Atellanae were forced marked by improvisations and masked personages...


  16. ^ Duchartre, Pierre (1966). The Italian Comedy. New York: Dover Publications, INC. p. 29. Pulcinella was always dressed in white like Maccus, the mimus albus, or white mime.


  17. ^ Duchartre, Pierre (1966). The Italian Comedy. New York: Dover Publication, INC. p. 18. Next there is the ogre Manducus, the Miles Glorious in the plays of Plautus, who is later metamorphosed into the swaggering Captain, of Captain.


  18. ^ Duchartre, Pierre (1966). The Italian Comedy. New York: Dover Publications, INC. p. 18. ...Bucco and the sensual Maccus, whose lean figure and cowardly nature reappear in Pulcinella.


  19. ^ Palleschi: Part One


  20. ^ Katritzky p. 82


  21. ^ Rudlin p. 14


  22. ^ ab Rudlin & Crick, p. 15


  23. ^ Katritzky, p. 90


  24. ^ Katritzky p. 106


  25. ^ abc Katritzky p. 19


  26. ^ "Carnival in Venice".


  27. ^ Ducharte, Pierre Louis (1966). The Italian Comedy. Toronto: General Publishing Company. p. 70.


  28. ^ Kenley, M. E. (2012-11-01). "Il Mattaccino: music and dance of the matachin and its role in Italian comedy". Early Music. 40 (4): 659–670. doi:10.1093/em/cas089. ISSN 0306-1078.


  29. ^ Ducharte, Pierre Louis (1966). The Italian Comedy. Toronto: General Publishing Company. p. 74.


  30. ^ Ducharte, Pierre Louis (1966). The Italian Comedy. Toronto: General Publishing Company. p. 79.


  31. ^ Ducharte, Pierre Louis (1966). The Italian Comedy. Toronto: General Publishing. pp. 86–98.


  32. ^ McArdle, Grainne (2005). "Signora Violante and Her Troupe of Dancers 1729-32". Eighteenth-Century Ireland / Iris an dá chultúr. 20: 55–78.


  33. ^ Castagno 1994, p. [page needed].


  34. ^ Green, pp. xi–xii


  35. ^ Oreglia, Giacomo (1968). The Commedia dell'Arte. Hill & Wang. pp. 65, 71. OCLC 939808594.


  36. ^ Rudlin, An Actor's Handbook. p. 34.


  37. ^ Rudlin, An Actor's Handbook. p. 67.


  38. ^ "Commedia Stock Characters". shane-arts.com. Archived from the original on 2005-02-07. Retrieved 2016-04-05.


  39. ^ Green, p. 163


  40. ^ abcdefgh Rudlin, John (1994). Commedia dell'Arte An Actor's Handbook. New York: Routledge. pp. 67–156. ISBN 0-415-04769-2.


  41. ^ abcdefghijkl Ducharte, Pierre (1966). The Italian Comedy. New York: Dover. pp. 164–207.


  42. ^ Oreglia, Giacomo (1968). The Commedia dell'Arte. Hill & Wang. p. 58. OCLC 939808594.


  43. ^ Katritzky p. 26




Sources


  • Callery, Dymphna. Through the Body: A Practical Guide to Physical Theatre. London: Nickalis Hernt Books (2001).
    ISBN 1-85459-630-6


  • Castagno, Paul C. (1994). The Early Commedia dell'arte (1550–1621): The Mannerist Context. Bern, New York: Peter Lang Publishing..

  • Cecchini, Pier Maria (1628) Frutti delle moderne comedie et avvisi a chi le recita, Padua: Guareschi

  • Green, Martin and John Swan. The Triumph of Pierrot: The Commedia dell'arte and the Modern Imagination. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University (1993).
    ISBN 0-271-00928-4


  • Katritzky, M. A. (2006). The Art of Commedia: A Study in the Commedia dell'arte 1560–1620 with Special Reference to the Visual Records. New York: Editions Rodopi. ISBN 90-420-1798-8.

  • Palleschi, Marino. The Commedia dell'arte: Its Origins, Development & Influence on the Ballet. Auguste Vestris (2005)

  • Perrucci, Andrea (1699) Dell'arte rappresentativa premeditata, ed all'improviso

  • Rudlin, John. Commedia dell'arte: An Actor's Handbook. Ebook Corporation.

  • Rudlin, John, and Oliver Crick. Commedia dell'arte: A Handbook for Troupes. London: Routledge (2001).
    ISBN 041-520-408-9

  • Scala, Flaminio (1611) Il Teatro Delle Favole Rappresentative (online pdf available at Bavarian State Library website). Translated into English by Henry F. Salerno in 1967 as Scenarios of the Commedia dell'arte. New Italian edition cured by F.Mariotti (1976). New partial translation (30 scenarios out of 50) by Richard Andrews (2008) The Commedia dell'arte of Flaminio Scala, A Translation and Analysis of Scenarios Published by: Scarecrow Press.

  • Smith, Winifred. The Commedia dell'arte. Benjamin Bloom, Inc., 1964.

  • Taviani, Ferdinando and Marotti, Ferruccio, and Romei, Giovanna. La Commedia dell'arte e la societa barocca M. Bulzoni, Roma : 1969

  • Taviani, Ferdinando and M. Schino (1982) Il segreto della commedia dell'arte.

  • Tessari, R. (1969) La commedia dell'arte nel seicento

  • Tessari, R. (1981) Commedia dell'arte: la maschera e l'ombra


Further reading


  • Aguirre, Mariano 'Qué es la Commedia dell'arte' (Spanish) [1]


  • Chaffee, Judith; Crick, Oliver, eds. (2014). The Routledge Companion to Commedia Dell'Arte. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-61337-4.

  • Tony, Kishawi Teaching Commedia dell'arte (2010) A step by step handbook for the theatre ensemble and Drama teacher. [2]
    ISBN 978-0-646-53217-2


  • Darius, Adam. The Commedia dell'arte (1996) Kolesnik Production OY, Helsinki.
    ISBN 952-90-7188-4

  • DelPiano, Roberto La Commedia dell'arte 2007. Retrieved 2009-07-09.

  • Grantham, Barry Playing Commedia, Nick Hern Books, London, 2000.
    ISBN 978-1-85459-466-2

  • Grantham, Barry Commedia Plays: Scenarios – Scripts – Lazzi, Nick Hern Books, London, 2006.
    ISBN 978-1-85459-871-4


  • Jordan, Peter (2013). The Venetian Origins of the Commedia Dell'Arte. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-48824-5.

  • Puppa, Paolo A History of Italian Theatre. Eds. Joseph Farrell. Cambridge University Press. 2006.
    ISBN 0-521-80265-2


  • Sand, Maurice (1860). Masques et bouffouns:(comédie italienne) (in French). Illustrated by Maurice Sand. Paris: Michel Levy Freres. Retrieved 22 October 2013.


  • Smith, Winifred (1912). The Commedia dell'Arte: A Study in Popular Italian Comedy. New York: The Columbia University Press. Retrieved July 10, 2009.

  • Simply Masquerade – Types of masks used [3]


External links





  • commedia-dell-arte.com – Judith Chaffee's Commedia website, with resources, annotated bibliography, and links

  • Meagher, Jennifer (2007) Commedia dell'arte, Metropolitan Museum of Art, July 2007

  • Bellinger, Martha Fletcher (2002) "The Commedia dell'arte", A Short History of the Drama (1927)

  • Wilson, Matthew R. (2010) A History of Commedia dell'Arte









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