Kategorier
Arkiv
- november 2023
- maj 2023
- september 2022
- december 2021
- november 2021
- oktober 2021
- september 2021
- maj 2021
- april 2021
- mars 2021
- februari 2021
- januari 2021
- december 2020
- november 2020
- oktober 2020
- juni 2020
- maj 2020
- april 2020
- mars 2020
- maj 2017
- april 2017
- mars 2017
- februari 2017
- januari 2017
- december 2016
- november 2016
- oktober 2016
- september 2016
- juni 2016
- maj 2016
- april 2016
- mars 2016
- februari 2016
- januari 2016
- december 2015
- november 2015
- oktober 2014
- september 2014
- maj 2014
- december 2013
- november 2013
- mars 2013
- februari 2013
- januari 2013
- december 2012
- november 2012
- september 2012
- april 2012
- mars 2012
- februari 2012
- januari 2012
- december 2011
- november 2011
- oktober 2011
- juli 2011
Links
- Antonio Fava
- Burnt Out Punks
- Commedia dell'Arte day
- Dell'Arte International School of Physical Theatre
- Drama and Theatre Resource Guide
- École de Théâtre Jacques Lecoq
- Ecole Phillippe Gaulier
- Edinburgh Festival
- Glossa Teatro
- Jokes from 1906 to 2015
- Justin’s Theatre Links
- La Mama
- Marco Luly
- Maskmakers web
- Mummenschanz
- Teater Moment
- Teater Slava
- Theatret Thalias Tjenare
- Yahoo's Commedia dell'Arte group
Tag Archives: vulgar comedy
Women in Commedia dell’Arte (Part 1)
We have to start with admitting that Commedia dell’Arte was a very masculine form of theatre, at least if we see it from today’s perspective. It sprung out in a time when women, in the greater parts of Italy, just … Read the rest of this entry
Filed in 1 Commedia dell'Arte, Mask theatre
Comment Now
Commedia dell’Arte – the Name
The term Commedia dell’Arte was not used during the renaissance. It was used for the first time, the way we do today, in the eighteen century by Luigi Riccoboni in his book Histoire du Theatre Italien from 1728. At that … Read the rest of this entry
Filed in 1 Commedia dell'Arte
Comment Now
Goldoni and the end of an era (Part 3)
During the end of the eighteenth century, when the bourgeois comedy had been well established and taken over the theatre scene, Commedia dell’Arte and the vulgar laughter started to be looked at as something quaint and exotic. As new middle-class … Read the rest of this entry
Filed in 1 Commedia dell'Arte, 2 Vulgar Comedy
1 Comment
The theatre spaces in the heydays of Commedia dell’Arte
People went to the theatre of quite other reasons, socially and culturally, all the way up to the nineteenth century. First of all: the lights were not turned down in the auditorium. It was first in the middle of the … Read the rest of this entry
Filed in 1 Commedia dell'Arte
Comment Now
The Street as Venue
Vulgar Comedy has its roots as street theatre, or at least outdoor theatre. Long before the Greeks began building theatres for their dithyrambs and plays there where Thespis and his cart. One can still trace much of business onstage to … Read the rest of this entry
Filed in 2 Vulgar Comedy
1 Comment
To play mask
The mask demands in itself vast energy. If the actor doesn’t “fill” the mask it doesn’t come to life. Everyone who has seen an actor act in a mask without the energy it demands, with movements just like ordinary life, … Read the rest of this entry
Filed in Mask theatre
1 Comment
Commedia dell’Arte abroad
Commedia dell’Arte was definitely not just an Italian matter. It spread very soon all round Europe, above all in France, where Commedia dell’Arte was almost as at home as in Italy. When Gelosi and Zan Ganassa came to Paris in … Read the rest of this entry
Filed in 1 Commedia dell'Arte
Comment Now
3 reasons mask doesn’t use psychology
The characters of the masks are made of their physical limitations, posture, gestures and so on. It is only the outer of the masks that make up their character. There is no psychology possible, since it does not go through … Read the rest of this entry
Filed in Mask theatre
1 Comment
Western bias of the mask
In the west we tend to think about the mask as something to hide behind, as if it were a tool to hide emotions, intentions or reactions. Nothing can be more wrong. The masks always tell the truth – it … Read the rest of this entry
Filed in Mask theatre
Comment Now