A History of Pantomime eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 186 pages of information about A History of Pantomime.

A History of Pantomime eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 186 pages of information about A History of Pantomime.

The characters of the Italian Pantomime became so numerous, that every dramatic subject was easily furnished with the necessary personages of comedy.  That loquacious pedant, the Dottore, was taken from the lawyers and the physicians, babbling false Latin in the dialect of learned Bologna.  Scapin was a livery servant, who spoke the dialect of Bergamo, a province proverbially abounding with rank intriguing knaves, who, like the slaves in Plautus and Terence, were always on the watch to further any wickedness; while Calabria furnished the booby Giangurgello with his grotesque nose.  Moliere, it has been ascertained, discovered in the Italian theatre at Paris his “Medecin malgre Lui,” his “Etourdi,” his “L’Avare,” and his “Scapin.”  Milan offered a pimp in Brighella; Florence, an ape of fashion in Gelsomino.  These and other Pantomimic characters, and some ludicrous ones, as the Tartaglia, a spectacled dotard, a stammerer, and usually in a passion, had been gradually introduced by the inventive powers of an actor of genius, to call forth his own peculiar talents.

The Pantomimes, or, as they have been described, the continual Masquerades, of Ruzzante, with all these diversified personages, talking and acting, formed, in truth, a burlesque comedy.  Some of the finest geniuses of Italy became the votaries of Harlequin; and the Italian Pantomime may be said to form a school of its own.  The invention of Ruzzante was one capable of perpetual novelty.  Many of these actors have been chronicled either for the invention of some comic character, or for their true imitation of nature in performing some favourite one.  One, already immortalised by having lost his real name in that of Captain Matamoros, by whose inimitable humours he became the most popular man in Italy, invented the Neapolitan Pullicinello; while another, by deeper study, added new graces to another burlesque rival.  One Constantini invented the character of Mezetin, as the Narcissus of Pantomime.  He acted without a mask, to charm by the beautiful play of his countenance, and display the graces of his figure; the floating drapery of his fanciful dress could be arranged by the changeable humour of the wearer.  Crowds followed him in the streets, and a King of Poland ennobled him.  The Wit and Harlequin Dominic sometimes dined at the table of Louis XIV.—­Tiberio Florillo, who invented the character of Scaramouch, had been the amusing companion of the boyhood of Louis XIV.; and from him Moliere learnt much, as appears by the verses under his portrait:—­

    Cet illustre comedien
    De son art traca la carriere: 
    II fut le maitre de Moliere,
    Et la Nature fut le sien.

The last lines of an epitaph on one of these Pantomimic actors may be applied to many of them during their flourishing period:—­

    Toute sa vie il a fait rire;
    Il a fait pleurer a sa mort.

Several of these admirable actors were literary men, who have written on their art, and shown that it was one.  The Harlequin Cecchini composed the most ancient treatise on this subject, and was ennobled by the Emperor Matthias; and Nicholas Barbieri, for his excellent acting called the Beltrame, a Milanese simpleton, in his treatise on comedy, tells us that he was honoured by the conversation of Louis XIII., and rewarded with fortune.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A History of Pantomime from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.