Le maschere ( The Masks ) is an opera in a prologue and three acts by Pietro Mascagni to an Italian libretto by Luigi Illica .
11-695: Tartaglia may refer to: Tartaglia (commedia dell'arte) , commedia dell'arte stock character Angelo Tartaglia (1350 or 1370–1421), Italian condottiero Nicolo Tartaglia (1499/1500–1557), Venetian mathematician and engineer Ivo Tartaglia (1880–1949), Yugoslav politician Marino Tartaglia (1894–1984), Croatian painter Warren Tartaglia (1944–1965), American jazz musician Philip Tartaglia (1951–2021), Roman Catholic Archbishop of Glasgow, Scotland Antonio Tartaglia (born 1968), Italian bobsledder John Tartaglia (born 1978), American singer, actor, dancer, and puppeteer Tartaglia (Chinese: 达达利亚 ),
22-645: A playable character in Genshin Impact Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Tartaglia . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tartaglia&oldid=1246159727 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Hidden categories: Articles containing Chinese-language text Short description
33-528: Is Ajax. This article about a fictional character is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Le maschere The work was Mascagni's homage to Rossini and to the Italian opera buffa and commedia dell'arte traditions. It was premiered simultaneously in six Italian opera houses on 17 January 1901: La Scala in Milan (with Caruso as Florindo, Carelli as Rosaura, and Toscanini conducting);
44-455: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Tartaglia (commedia dell%27arte) Tartaglia ( lit. ' Stutterer ' ) is a dainty character in the commedia dell'arte . He is farsighted and with a minor stutter (hence his name; cf. Spanish tartamudear ), he is usually classed as one of the group of old characters ( vecchio ) who appears in many scenarios as one of
55-976: The Teatro Carlo Felice in Genoa; the Teatro Regio in Turin; the Teatro Costanzi in Rome; La Fenice in Venice; and the Teatro Filarmonico in Verona. Two days later, it premiered at the Teatro di San Carlo in Naples. Apart from the performance in Rome, conducted by Mascagni himself (and later in the first run by his pupil Roberto Moranzoni ), Le maschere received a dismal reception, with
66-471: The 17th century. In the 18th century, actors Agostino Fiorilli and Antonio Sacchi played this role in the plays of Gozzi, but for Gozzi this mask no longer has such a limited framework; in his plays this mask can be worn, for example, by the minister ("The Raven") and the royal son ("The Love of Three Oranges"). In the opera Le maschere by Pietro Mascagni , one of the servants is Tartaglia, whose aria ( Quella è una strada ) requires him to stutter. In
77-400: The commedia dell'arte. Tartaglia comes from the southern , or Neapolitan , quartet of masks, along with Coviello , Scaramouche , and Pulcinella . In France, this mask did not become popular. The Tartaglia mask appeared in Naples around 1610. Actors Ottavio Ferrarese and Beltrani da Verona became one of the first actors of it. The mask reaches its greatest popularity by the second half of
88-409: The lovers ( innamorati ). His social status varies; he is sometimes a bailiff, lawyer, notary or chemist. Dramatist Carlo Gozzi turned him into a statesman, and so he remained thereafter. Tartaglia wears a large felt hat, an enormous cloak, oversized boots, a long sword, a giant moustache, and a cardboard nose. He usually represents the lower working class, but at times the middle or upper class in
99-531: The opera Turandot by Ferruccio Busoni , one of the characters is Tartaglia, a minister. There is a voluble Sgt. Gino Tartaglia, played by Charles Calvert, in the radio crime drama Broadway Is My Beat . In the game Genshin Impact , the 11th of the Fatui Harbingers, who are all named after the commedia dell'arte, is known as Tartaglia (Chinese: 达达利亚) or Childe (Chinese: 公子), although his real name
110-460: The performance in Genoa suspended halfway through because of the audience's vociferous expressions of displeasure. The opera was sporadically performed in Italy over the next four years and then sank into obscurity. When Mascagni revised and represented the opera in 1931 it met with little lasting success. However, sporadic revivals in the late 20th century have been greeted with some critical interest. In
121-409: The prologue, a travelling commedia dell'arte troupe and their impresario present the characters they are about to play. The remaining three acts are the play itself wherein after many vicissitudes, Florindo and Rosaura, aided by Columbina and Arlecchino, manage to prevent the marriage which Rosaura's father, Pantalone, had planned for her. The only frequently encountered aria is "Quella è una strada",
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