34 min

Commedia Dell’arte: A Selection of Scenarios The History Of European Theatre

    • History

Episode 82:
The characters of Commedia Dell’arte may have been used in every play over and over again until they became completely familiar, but the plays themselves were more varied that you might imagine.
The first preserved Commedia Dell’arte scenario from 1568.
How the play was created and the characters and players.
A first-hand account of the play.
A brief analysis of this history of the play
The play ‘Madness’ presented for a Medici wedding, performed by Isabella Andreinoi, of the Golosi troupe.
A summary of the plot of ‘Madness’
Why these two examples may not truly represent the form
The scenarios published as a collection by Flaminio Scala in 1611
The form of the scenarios in the collection
The continuing influence of Roman theatre on commedia Dell’arte
The reuse of classic stories in the scenarios, with a version of ‘The Menacmus Brothers’ as an example.
How misunderstanding, intrigue and comic business remained at the heart of Commedia Dell’arte.
‘The Mad Princess’, the only tragedy in the Scala collection.
The later development of the three-in-one play where three tenuously linked plays were presented together, a comedy, a pastoral, and a tragedy.
What the three-in-one play can tell us about the diversity within Commedia Dell’arte.
Support the podcast at:
www.thehistoryofeuropeantheatre.com
www.ko-fi.com/thoetp
www.patreon.com/thoetp


This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:

Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy

Episode 82:
The characters of Commedia Dell’arte may have been used in every play over and over again until they became completely familiar, but the plays themselves were more varied that you might imagine.
The first preserved Commedia Dell’arte scenario from 1568.
How the play was created and the characters and players.
A first-hand account of the play.
A brief analysis of this history of the play
The play ‘Madness’ presented for a Medici wedding, performed by Isabella Andreinoi, of the Golosi troupe.
A summary of the plot of ‘Madness’
Why these two examples may not truly represent the form
The scenarios published as a collection by Flaminio Scala in 1611
The form of the scenarios in the collection
The continuing influence of Roman theatre on commedia Dell’arte
The reuse of classic stories in the scenarios, with a version of ‘The Menacmus Brothers’ as an example.
How misunderstanding, intrigue and comic business remained at the heart of Commedia Dell’arte.
‘The Mad Princess’, the only tragedy in the Scala collection.
The later development of the three-in-one play where three tenuously linked plays were presented together, a comedy, a pastoral, and a tragedy.
What the three-in-one play can tell us about the diversity within Commedia Dell’arte.
Support the podcast at:
www.thehistoryofeuropeantheatre.com
www.ko-fi.com/thoetp
www.patreon.com/thoetp


This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:

Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy

34 min

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