Columbine (stock character)
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Columbine (Italian: Colombina; French: Colombine;<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Literally) is a stock character in the commedia dell'arte.<ref name="Oxford">Template:Cite book</ref> She is Harlequin's mistress,<ref name="Oxford" /> a comic servant playing the tricky slave type, and wife of Pierrot. Rudlin and Crick use the Italian spelling Colombina in Commedia dell'Arte: A Handbook for Troupes.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
History
[edit]The role of the female servant was originally that of an entr'acte dancer.Template:Sfn Women were not allowed to be part of the story that was being played out on stage, but they were allowed to have a dance in-between the action. Eventually these women became the buxom and gossipy servants of characters that were already allowed on stage, and then, later, the counterparts to the Zanni characters.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Columbine was very down to earth and could always see the situation for what it actually was. She was also sometimes portrayed as a prostitute. She was very infrequently without something to say to or about someone.Template:Sfn
She is dressed in a very short ragged and patched dress, appropriate to a master of the arts. These characters were usually played unmasked, but with bonnets and metal chokers.Template:Sfn She was also known to wear heavy makeup around her eyesTemplate:Sfn and carry a tambourine,Template:Sfn which she could use to fend off the amorous advances of Pantalone. Columbine was sometimes chased after by Harlequin (Arlecchino) or was close friends with him. There is record of Columbine using numerous disguises to trick or seduce Harlequin. Where most other characters are content with one disguise, Gheraldi's Columbine has several different disguises to confuse Harlequin and to keep the audience on their toes.Template:Sfn
She was sometimes the only functional intellect on the stage, but not always.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Columbine aided her mistress, the innamorata, to gain the affections of her one true love. She is sometimes the lover of Harlequin, but not always. They sometimes engage in sexual activity, but not always.Template:Sfn She may be a flirtatious and impudent character, indeed a soubrette.Template:Citation needed
In the verismo opera Pagliacci by Ruggero Leoncavallo, the head of the troupe's wife, Nedda, playing as Columbine, cheats on her husband, Canio, playing as Pierrot, both onstage with Harlequin and offstage with Silvio.
Although Columbine is one name associated with the female servant prostitute character archetype, other names under which the same character is played in commedia dell'arte performances include Franceschina, Smeraldina, Oliva, Nespola, Spinetta Ricciolina, and Corallina Diamantina.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Colombina became the most common name used to describe the sobretta character, especially as Colombine in France and Columbine in England.Template:Sfn
One of the actresses who made this character famous was Silvia Roncagli, the first woman recorded doing a seretta role named Francheschina in about 1570.Template:Sfn One of the first women to play the role named Colombina was Italian actress Isabella Franchini Biancolelli.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Her granddaughter, Caterina Biancolelli, was one of the most famous serettas whose name was Colombina.Template:Sfn She played the part about 1683.Template:Sfn
There is record of the French playwright Molière having attended many performances of the Comédie-Italienne, or commedia dell'arte. He is even referenced in a performance by Angelo Costantini of his show Une Vie de Scaramouche, which refers to the writer and poet.Template:Sfn This might suggest that the servant character in many of Molière's plays, such as Dorine in his play Tartuffe, might be based on this particular character archetype from the commedia dell'arte.Template:Citation needed
Gallery
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Harlequin dancing with Columbine
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Pierrot, Columbine, and Harlequin (painting by Pierre-Antoine Quillard, Template:Circa)
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The cover of the newspaper Röpke Lapok by Richard Geiger featuring Pierrot and Columbine
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Bibliography
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