The Theatre Couple in Early Modern Italy: Self-Fashioning and Mutual Marketing by Serena Laiena (review)

IF 0.1 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER
Erith Jaffe-Berg
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She contends that the <em>comici</em> used their marital status to their advantage by marketing themselves as couples, tag-teaming in order to advance each other’s agendas. The status of couple increased the actors’ reputations artistically and also appealed to powerful religious and political figures. In this way, Laiena argues, <em>commedia dell’arte</em> created a fame-building machine and laid a foundation for stardom that is still resonant today. In her accessible narration, she draws on multiple disciplines, including theatre history, performance studies, Italian studies, celebrity studies, and gender studies. This interdisciplinary approach builds on scholarship about the Italian diva, in such works as Rosalind Kerr’s <em>The Rise of the Diva on the Sixteenth-Century Commedia dell’Arte Stage</em> and Pamela Allen Brown’s <em>The Diva’s Gift to the Shakespearean Stage: Agency, Theatricality, and the Innamorata</em>, interweaving an understanding of how the actors navigated Counter-Reformation Catholic resurgence to their advantage by foregrounding their relationships.</p> <p>In the first chapter, Laiena sets the stage of post-Tridentine Italy, a place in which religious figures such as Cardinal Borromeo and Giovan Domenico Ottonelli waged war on the theatre by casting it as a corrupting influence. Professional actresses were the main target of clerical censure, personifying their detractors’ criticism of licentious presentation and inducing moralistic condemnation. Despite this, the ever-defiant divas flaunted their sexual appeal and resisted censure, thriving on their public’s interest. Nevertheless, the divas were not impervious to condemnation, and the couple identity offered the actresses a means of pushing back on the moralizing admonitions they faced. More than just a safety net, as Laiena argues, the actresses used their status strategically, along with other methods of self-fashioning as artists and intellectuals. The following chapters unfold how they did this.</p> <p>Laiena’s second chapter offers a bird’s eye view of the phenomenon by chronicling ten theatre couples, mining various sources for details about the ways they individually enhanced each other’s fame as a strategy for mutual benefit. She notes an evolution in the <em>commedia dell’arte’</em>s history, in terms of the function of each couple—from having the woman take on the prima <em>Innamorata</em> role and the man take on the pen to reversing that trend in later periods. Laiena contends that it was up to the actress to not only forge connections with intellectuals and <strong>[End Page 489]</strong> aristocrats but also facilitate relationships with ecclesiastical authorities. Laiena identifies Alberto Naselli (Zan Ganassa, c. 1540- c.1584) and Barbara Flaminia (c. 1540- c. 1586) as the original power couple who became international purveyors of performance. Others followed this model because, as Laiena puts it, the status offered benefits, including “mutual legitimation” that extended even upon one person’s death, when the surviving partner continued lauding their beloved (51). As talented as the actors may have been as individuals, their opportunities were amplified by the mutual benefit of being part of a couple. Laiena traces many a couple well beyond the turn of the seventeenth century, up to the early eighteenth century. This broad scope provides a very useful corrective to the tendency to emphasize the first and second generations of <em>comici</em>, neglecting their legacy in subsequent decades. Thus, Caterina Biancolelli (1665–1716) and Pierre Lenoir de la Thorillière (1659–1731) surface as an international couple, “crowning the union of two theatrical traditions” (60). Likewise, unknown names such as Bridgida Bianchi (1613–1703) and Marc’Anotonio Bianchi (?-ca.1600) fall into focus and suggest further work still remains to be undertaken by future scholars.</p> <p>In the next three chapters, Laiena shifts the focus to one stellar couple, Giovan Battista Andreini (1576–1654) and...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":39600,"journal":{"name":"COMPARATIVE DRAMA","volume":"49 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2025-01-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"COMPARATIVE DRAMA","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/cdr.2024.a950198","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"THEATER","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • The Theatre Couple in Early Modern Italy: Self-Fashioning and Mutual Marketing by Serena Laiena
  • Erith Jaffe-Berg (bio)
Serena Laiena. The Theatre Couple in Early Modern Italy: Self-Fashioning and Mutual Marketing. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2023. 264 Pp. 264 + 4 color and 4 b/w figures + 2 tables. $163.00 hardback, $52.95 paperback, $52.95 eBook.

In The Theatre Couple in Early Modern Italy: Self-Fashioning and Mutual Marketing Serena Laiena focuses on the rise of the power couple of the commedia dell’arte. She contends that the comici used their marital status to their advantage by marketing themselves as couples, tag-teaming in order to advance each other’s agendas. The status of couple increased the actors’ reputations artistically and also appealed to powerful religious and political figures. In this way, Laiena argues, commedia dell’arte created a fame-building machine and laid a foundation for stardom that is still resonant today. In her accessible narration, she draws on multiple disciplines, including theatre history, performance studies, Italian studies, celebrity studies, and gender studies. This interdisciplinary approach builds on scholarship about the Italian diva, in such works as Rosalind Kerr’s The Rise of the Diva on the Sixteenth-Century Commedia dell’Arte Stage and Pamela Allen Brown’s The Diva’s Gift to the Shakespearean Stage: Agency, Theatricality, and the Innamorata, interweaving an understanding of how the actors navigated Counter-Reformation Catholic resurgence to their advantage by foregrounding their relationships.

In the first chapter, Laiena sets the stage of post-Tridentine Italy, a place in which religious figures such as Cardinal Borromeo and Giovan Domenico Ottonelli waged war on the theatre by casting it as a corrupting influence. Professional actresses were the main target of clerical censure, personifying their detractors’ criticism of licentious presentation and inducing moralistic condemnation. Despite this, the ever-defiant divas flaunted their sexual appeal and resisted censure, thriving on their public’s interest. Nevertheless, the divas were not impervious to condemnation, and the couple identity offered the actresses a means of pushing back on the moralizing admonitions they faced. More than just a safety net, as Laiena argues, the actresses used their status strategically, along with other methods of self-fashioning as artists and intellectuals. The following chapters unfold how they did this.

Laiena’s second chapter offers a bird’s eye view of the phenomenon by chronicling ten theatre couples, mining various sources for details about the ways they individually enhanced each other’s fame as a strategy for mutual benefit. She notes an evolution in the commedia dell’arte’s history, in terms of the function of each couple—from having the woman take on the prima Innamorata role and the man take on the pen to reversing that trend in later periods. Laiena contends that it was up to the actress to not only forge connections with intellectuals and [End Page 489] aristocrats but also facilitate relationships with ecclesiastical authorities. Laiena identifies Alberto Naselli (Zan Ganassa, c. 1540- c.1584) and Barbara Flaminia (c. 1540- c. 1586) as the original power couple who became international purveyors of performance. Others followed this model because, as Laiena puts it, the status offered benefits, including “mutual legitimation” that extended even upon one person’s death, when the surviving partner continued lauding their beloved (51). As talented as the actors may have been as individuals, their opportunities were amplified by the mutual benefit of being part of a couple. Laiena traces many a couple well beyond the turn of the seventeenth century, up to the early eighteenth century. This broad scope provides a very useful corrective to the tendency to emphasize the first and second generations of comici, neglecting their legacy in subsequent decades. Thus, Caterina Biancolelli (1665–1716) and Pierre Lenoir de la Thorillière (1659–1731) surface as an international couple, “crowning the union of two theatrical traditions” (60). Likewise, unknown names such as Bridgida Bianchi (1613–1703) and Marc’Anotonio Bianchi (?-ca.1600) fall into focus and suggest further work still remains to be undertaken by future scholars.

In the next three chapters, Laiena shifts the focus to one stellar couple, Giovan Battista Andreini (1576–1654) and...

近代早期意大利的戏剧夫妇:塞雷娜·莱耶娜的自我塑造与相互营销(书评)
这里是内容的简短摘录,而不是摘要:回顾:早期现代意大利的戏剧夫妇:自我塑造和相互营销,作者:瑟琳娜·莱耶娜。近代早期意大利的戏剧夫妇:自我塑造与相互营销。纽瓦克:特拉华大学出版社,2023。264页,264 + 4色和4 b/w图+ 2个表格。精装本163.00美元,平装本52.95美元,电子书52.95美元。在《近代早期意大利的戏剧夫妇:自我塑造与相互营销》一书中,塞蕾娜·莱耶娜关注的是艺术喜剧中这对权力夫妇的崛起。她认为,喜剧演员利用他们的婚姻状况作为自己的优势,把自己推销成夫妻,为了推进对方的议程而组队。这对夫妇的地位增加了演员在艺术上的声誉,也吸引了强大的宗教和政治人物。莱耶纳认为,通过这种方式,即兴喜剧创造了一种建立名声的机器,并为今天仍能引起共鸣的明星奠定了基础。在她通俗易懂的叙述中,她借鉴了多个学科,包括戏剧史、表演研究、意大利研究、名人研究和性别研究。这种跨学科的方法建立在对意大利天后的学术研究的基础上,如罗莎琳德·科尔的《16世纪艺术喜剧舞台上女主角的崛起》和帕梅拉·艾伦·布朗的《女主角给莎士比亚舞台的礼物:代理,戏剧性和Innamorata》,交织着对演员如何通过突出他们的关系来引导反宗教改革天主教复兴的理解。在第一章中,莱耶娜设定了后特伦丁时期的意大利,在这个地方,像博罗梅奥枢机主教和吉奥万·多梅尼科·奥托内利这样的宗教人物把剧院塑造成一种腐败的影响,对剧院发动了战争。职业女演员是神职人员谴责的主要对象,他们将批评者对放荡表演的批评人格化,并引发道德谴责。尽管如此,这对永不屈服的天后仍在炫耀她们的性吸引力,抵制指责,在公众的兴趣中茁壮成长。然而,这些天后也并非不受谴责,夫妻身份为女演员们提供了一种反击她们所面临的道德训诫的手段。莱耶娜认为,这不仅仅是一个安全网,女演员们策略性地利用了她们的地位,以及作为艺术家和知识分子自我塑造的其他方法。接下来的章节将展示他们是如何做到这一点的。莱耶娜的第二章通过对十对戏剧夫妇的编年记录,提供了对这一现象的鸟瞰图,挖掘各种来源的细节,了解他们各自提高彼此名气的方式,作为一种互利的策略。她注意到,就每对夫妇的角色而言,喜剧在艺术的历史上发生了演变——从女人扮演主要的角色,男人拿起笔,到后来扭转了这种趋势。莱耶娜认为,女演员不仅要与知识分子和贵族建立联系,还要促进与教会当局的关系。Laiena认为Alberto Naselli (Zan Ganassa,约1540- 1584年)和Barbara Flaminia(约1540- 1586年)是最初成为国际表演提供者的权力夫妇。其他人则遵循这种模式,因为,正如莱耶纳所说,这种状态提供了好处,包括“相互合法化”,即使在一个人去世后,当幸存的伴侣继续赞美他们的爱人时,这种地位也会延续下去(51)。尽管演员们各自都很有才华,但他们的机会却因为成为夫妻的一部分而被放大了。莱埃娜追溯了许多夫妇的历史,远超过17世纪初,一直到18世纪初。这种广泛的范围为强调第一代和第二代喜剧的倾向提供了非常有用的纠正,而忽略了他们在随后几十年的遗产。因此,Caterina Biancolelli(1665-1716)和Pierre Lenoir de la thorillire(1659-1731)作为一对国际夫妇出现,“为两种戏剧传统的结合加冕”(60)。同样,像布里奇达·比安奇(Bridgida Bianchi, 1613-1703)和马克·安东尼奥·比安奇(Marc’anotonio Bianchi, ?-约1600)这样不知名的名字也成为人们关注的焦点,这表明未来的学者仍需进行进一步的研究。在接下来的三章中,莱耶娜将焦点转移到一对明星夫妇,乔文·巴蒂斯塔·安德雷尼(1576-1654)和……
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来源期刊
COMPARATIVE DRAMA
COMPARATIVE DRAMA Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Comparative Drama (ISSN 0010-4078) is a scholarly journal devoted to studies international in spirit and interdisciplinary in scope; it is published quarterly (Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter) at Western Michigan University
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