Teatro San Cassiano

Teatro San Cassiano
Teatro Tron
Teatro San Cassiano (1637): historically-informed visualisation
Map
LocationVenezia
Coordinates45°26′18.64″N 12°19′49.33″E / 45.4385111°N 12.3303694°E / 45.4385111; 12.3303694
Construction
Built1637
Demolished1812

The Teatro San Cassiano (or Teatro di San Cassiano and other variants) was the world's first public opera house, inaugurated as such in 1637 in Venice. The first mention of its construction dates back to 1581.[1] The name with which it is best known comes from the parish in which it was located, San Cassiano (Saint Cassian), in the Santa Croce district (‘sestiere’) not far from the Rialto.

The theatre was owned by the Venetian Tron family and was the first ‘public’ opera house in the sense that it was the first to open to a paying audience. Until then, public theatres (i.e., those operating on a commercial basis) had staged only recited theatrical performances (commedie)[2][3] while opera had remained a private spectacle, reserved for the aristocracy and the courts. The Teatro San Cassiano was, therefore, the first public theatre to stage opera and in so doing opened opera for wider public consumption.

In 2019 a project, conceived by the English entrepreneur and musicologist Paul Atkin, was announced to reconstruct in Venice the Teatro San Cassiano of 1637[4] as faithfully as academic research and traditional craftmanship will allow, complete with period stage machinery and moving stage sets. The project aims to establish the reconstructed Teatro San Cassiano as a centre for the research, exploration and staging of historically informed Baroque opera.

  1. ^ Mancini, Franco; Povoledo, Elena; Muraro, Maria Teresa (1995). I Teatri del Veneto - Venezia. Vol. Tomo 1. Venice: Corbo e Fiore. pp. 97–149.
  2. ^ Mangini, Nicola (1974). I teatri di Venezia. Milan: Mursia. p. 35.
  3. ^ Glixon, Beth L.; Glixon, Jonathan E. (2006). Inventing the Business of Opera. The Impresario and His World in Seventeenth-Century Venice. Oxford-New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 8–9.
  4. ^ Wagstyl, Stefan (28 November 2019). "The Briton dreaming of rebuilding Venice's long-lost opera treasure". Financial Times.

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