La Calandria Commedie del Cinquecento

audiobook

La Calandria Commedie del Cinquecento

by Bernardo,‏ da Bibbiena Dovizi

IT·~2 hours·67 chapters

Chapters

67 total
1

Produced by Claudio Paganelli, Barbara Magni and the Online

0:15
2

COMMEDIE DEL CINQUECENTO - A CURA DI IRENEO SANESI - VOLUME PRIMO

0:07
3

PROPRIETÁ LETTERARIA - GENNAIO MCMXII—30148 - LA CALANDRIA - DI BERNARDO DOVIZI DA BIBBIENA - INTERLOCUTORI

0:19
4

PROLOGO [DEL CASTIGLIONE]

2:49
5

PROLOGO [DEL BIBBIENA]

9:20
6

ARGUMENTO

2:18
7

ATTO I - SCENA I

2:46
8

SCENA II

9:11
9

SCENA III

2:06
10

SCENA IV

1:56

Description

A lively Renaissance comedy invites listeners into the bustling world of a small Italian town, where the bumbling Calandro stumbles through a series of absurd misunderstandings. The play unfolds in plain prose, allowing the humor to flow freely as servants, a mystic, a young lover, and an outspoken maid trade witty barbs and exaggerated boasts. Their tangled conversations reveal a satire of pretentious scholars and petty officials, while the mischievous plot twists keep the audience guessing what foolish scheme will unfold next.

The dialogue teems with sharp observations about social ambition, love, and the everyday quirks of 16th‑century life. By eschewing verse for a more conversational style, the author creates a vibrant theatrical experience that feels both rooted in its historical setting and remarkably accessible today. Listeners will enjoy the playful language, colorful characters, and the clever way the drama mirrors universal human foibles.

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Details

Full title

La Calandria Commedie del Cinquecento Commedie del Cinquecento

Language

it

Duration

~2 hours (131K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2010-12-13

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Bernardo,‏ da Bibbiena Dovizi

Bernardo,‏ da Bibbiena Dovizi

1470–1520

A sharp Renaissance courtier who moved easily between politics, the church, and the arts, he is remembered both as a cardinal and as the author of one of the early great comedies of Italian literature. His life connects the literary energy of the Renaissance with the power struggles of papal Rome.

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