The Venetian Twins (Italian: I due gemelli veneziani, or "The two Venetian twins") is a 1747 play by Carlo Goldoni, based on Plautus's Menaechmi.

The Venetian Twins
Written byCarlo Goldoni
Date premiered 1747 (1747-MM)
Original languageItalian
SubjectPlautus's Menaechmi

It was performed by Il Teatro Stabile of Genoa at the 1965 Edinburgh International Festival, directed by Luigi Squarzina and starring the celebrated Italian actor Alberto Lionello as the two twins.[1] More recent productions include one at the Watermill Theatre[2] and a 1993 production directed by Michael Bogdanov for the Royal Shakespeare Company.[3] [4] The play has also been adapted and staged as a 1979 Australian two-act musical comedy. The play was performed by Greene Shoots Theatre at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival at C Venues (main) in August 2010.[5] Shakespeare & Company (Massachusetts) presented the play in English as part of its outdoor Bankside Festival, June 29-August 27, 2011, at Lenox, Massachusetts.[6]

Main roles

edit
  • Dr Balanzoni, a lawyer from Bologna in Verona
  • Rosaura, believed to be his daughter, later revealed as the sister of the twins
  • Pancrazio, friend of the doctor
  • Zanetto, twin brother of Tonino
  • Tonino, twin brother of Zanetto
  • Lelio, the doctor's nephew
  • Beatrice, Tonino's lover
  • Florindo, Tonino's friend
  • Brighella, servant in the doctor's house
  • Colombina, servant in the doctor's house
  • Arlecchino, servant of Zanetto
  • Tiburzio, goldsmith
  • Bargello

References

edit
  1. ^ Edinburgh International Festival 1965 Souvenir Programme. 1965.
  2. ^ "Watermill - The Venetian Twins". Retrieved 2012-06-16.
  3. ^ Morley, Sheridan (12 October 1994). ""Twins" Is No Favor to Goldoni". International Herald Tribune. Retrieved 2012-06-12.
  4. ^ Taylor, Paul (8 June 1993). "Star of David: Paul Taylor on the RSCs Venetian double offering at Stratford". The Independent. Archived from the original on 2022-06-20. Retrieved 2013-08-18.
  5. ^ "The Venetian Twins earns 5 star review at Edinburgh Festival". Retrieved 2012-06-16.
  6. ^ "Theater Review: The Venetian Twins — Commedia dell'arte Done Hilariously Right". The Arts Fuse. 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2019-11-04.