Puppet Characters Marionette Puppeteers
Transcript
Puppet Characters Marionette Puppeteers
Puppet Characters Tartaglia Tartaglia is a mask from Naples; he stammers and his pronunciation is always hesitant on those syllables which may give place to some funny misunderstanding. On the other hand, this same imperfection allows him to prepare his tricks better. He wears a green costume with horizontal yellow stripes and a grey felt hat. He has thick glasses and a huge nose. His myopia symbolises his blindness towards what happens around him and his intention to avoid any situation which might be dangerous. Marionette Puppeteers Giovanni Stignani (Argenta 1870 – Salzano 1926) Giovanni Stignani was the husband of Luigia Salici (Fabriano 1875 – Treviso 1952), the daughter of the marionette operator Ferdinando. After working with different companies such as the Lupi, Colla, Santoro, Cagnoli and Gorno-Dall’Acqua, the couple founded a group of their own and started to perform a special type of show where, using the traditional puppet theatre, they mounted each marionette on a rod and moved their limbs by means of stiff rods called burattette. They worked in the Veneto and Friuli areas of Italy and used Harlequin and Facanapa as main characters. Many of the shows they used to perform were derived from the classical xix century repertoire and in particular from that of the Reccardini company. Giovanni and Luigia had three children: Tosca, Jolanda and Ines Carolina; the latter married Vittorio Braidotti and founded with him a company called I burattini di Braidotti (Braidotti’s Puppets). They were forced to relinquish their vocation for some time following the sudden death of Giovanni Stignani in 1926 and the family ran a hotel in Treviso. Vittorio Podrecca (Cividale del Friuli 1883 - Geneva 1959) S3 T4 Vittorio Podrecca was born into a family where patriotism (his father and uncle had fought together with Garibaldi) and the love of culture and music were strongly sustained. He came to the animation theatre through the marionette company of Leone Reccardini (the son of Antonio who is thought to have invented the mask of Facanapa), but also worked with those of Striuli, Salici, Fausto Braga, Gorno-Dall’Acqua, and – when he was a law student and used to go back to Cividale for holidays – for the Mantuan puppeteer, Gaetano Viani. In 1905 his brother Guido, who was then a music critic for the weekly magazine L’Asino suggested that he move to Rome, which he did after graduating. In Rome he became an attorney and lawyer but never practised the profession as he began to co-operate with various newspapers and in 1911 he founded the teenage magazine Primavera and the music periodical Italia Orchestrale. In 1914, together with Luigi Fornaciari, who represented the music society Ricordi, and the Neapolitan marionette operator Luigi Santoro, he rented the ex-stable of the Odescalchi Palace and, with the contribution of various friends, transformed it into a hall which could house four hundred people and could be used for both puppet and marionette shows; this was the beginning of the Teatro dei Piccoli (The Children’s Theatre). The orchestra pit was built in front of the stage: Vittorio Podrecca, in fact, made a decisive contribution to the marionette musical. The first perVittorio Podrecca formance took place on 22nd February 1914 and was preceded by a Prologue, which had been written by Alfredo Testoni for the occasion; the marionettes were all dressed in tailcoats and the show was made up of different performances; La sinfonia dei fanciulli (The Children’s Symphony) by Haydn, La fata Morgana (Morgan the Fairy), which was performed by Ugo Campogalliani’s puppets, La marcia per marionette (The Marionette March) by Gounod, La serva padrona (The Servant Mistress) by Pergolesi. They were so successful that on 16th March the Teatro dei Piccoli was invited to perform at the Quirinale and confirmed as a great company. Nonetheless, Luigi Santoro was embittered about the fact his name was never mentioned in the enthusiastic newspaper reviews and left the company to work on his own. He was replaced by Ottorino Gorno-Dall’Acqua who, as Santoro himself had previously done, brought his repertoire with him. In this way the company began to perform such pieces as La gran via (The Great Road) and, when the theatre opened after the summer break, Crispino e la comare (Crispino and the Old Wife), Arlecchino sui letti volanti (Harlequin on the Flying Beds), La pianella perduta nella neve (The Slipper Lost in the Snow), L’amore delle tre melarance (The Love of Three Oranges), Il barbiere di Siviglia (The Barber of Seville), L’elisir d’amore (The Love Potion), Il trionfo di Giuditta (Judith’s Triumph). Since its very beginning, the Teatro dei Piccoli implied cooperation between the art of animation and different artists such as Trilussa, Bruno Angoletta, Mario Pompei, Enrico Trampolini, etc. It gave voice to children both by involving them as critics (a box had been placed in the hall so that the young public could leave their written comments) and by organizing art exhibitions. Podrecca was the focl point of this organization: he used to attend every show and take note of eventual mistakes or imperfections which could jeopardise the dramatic tension; these he would write down in a special notebook to communicate them to the marionette operators, musicians, singers, electricians, etc. When Italy entered World War I in 1915, Podrecca was called to the front where he organised animation shows for the soldiers; the theatre was closed until October, when he opened a new season with Puss-in-Boots, which was followed by regular performances of marionettes and puppets. On 15th April 1918 the show I balli plastici per marionette (Marionette Plastic Dances) by the futurist artist Fortunato Depero was performed. During the summer of 1919 the Teatro dei Piccoli went on their first Italian tour; in 1922 they crossed the Ocean and in 1923 performed in London; by then they had so many engagements that Podrecca (who in the mean time had married the soprano Cisse Vaughan, alias Lia) decided to split the company in two in order to cope with them all. But the company was never to return to the Odescalchi Theatre: it was the tours that assured them their living. In 1937 the Piccoli performed some shows in Italy before leaving for Brazil: they were to come back fourteen years later, after travelling all around America. Their success was always determined by the rhythm: under Podrecca’s direction, the music was renewed according to the different tastes of the public, even though the single sketches did not vary. It is also important to underline that the company included some of the best marionette operators of the time, such as Pavero, Braga, Gorno, Corsi, Prandi, and others. In those years they certainly obtained great success, but also suffered from money troubles and homesickness. In 1951 they were back in Italy and performed at the Augustus Theatre in Genoa; in that same year they undertook a planned Italian tour and Vittorio underwent his third operation for duodenal ulcer (the other two he had had in Argentina). From that moment onward, Podrecca took care of the administration of the company from his home in Rome and entrusted its management to Carlo Farinelli, his wife’s son from her first marriage. In 1956, after the music critic Adolfo Salazar had defined the Piccoli as «ideal symphony interpreters», Podrecca founded the Nucleo, a company of marionette operators formed by Giannina Donati, Gioacchino Gorno, Elisa Leonardi, and Guido Jannotta; the shows they performed were Retablo by Manuel de Falla, Ma mère l’oye by Ravel, Pierino e il lupo (Peter and the Wolf) by Prokoffief. During the last months of his life, Podrecca had to face both disagreements and tensions within the original company entrusted to Farinelli, who felt threatened by the new Nucleo company. Podrecca’s final success was a contract for a Russian tour he managed to draw up: it was the first time an Italian company had been called to work in the Soviet Union. S3 T4 A play of Vittorio Podrecca
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