Teatro Argentina 11 November 2019 - Il sistema periodico | GoComGo.com

Il sistema periodico

Teatro Argentina, Rome, Italy
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9 PM
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Important Info
Type: Show
City: Rome, Italy
Starts at: 21:00
Duration:

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Overview

Il sistema periodicoMalosti, Lo Cascio and the chemical Autobiography of Primo Levi, or rather the story of a passion and its roots.

In 1975 it appeared in the world literature, The periodic system, the work in 2006 in a survey promoted by The british newspaper The Guardian has declared "the best book of science of all time", from the pen of the chemist and man of thought known to have borne testimony to the great public of the horrors perpetrated by the nazi regime in the concentration camps, Primo Levi. It was precisely this volume, the most "primolevian" of his texts (as Italo Calvino called it), that triggered the writer's fortune in the United States, in the English-speaking world and, finally, in all countries of the world. In 2010, on the occasion of the EuroScience Open Forum, was born in Turin the stage reading the sign of the chemist, by Domenico Scarpa with the direction and interpretation of Valter Malosti. Today that work is relaunched, renewed and amplified in the new stage performance entrusted to an exceptional voice, that of the Sicilian actor Luigi Lo Cascio. On the sound design and live electronics of G. U. P. Alcaro, Lo Cascio delves into the chemical-narrative universe of the great writer, a sort of autobiography in twenty-one short stories entitled each to an element of the periodic table, from Argon to carbon. The show opens with two tales of youth: hydrogen, a look at the origin of his vocation as a scientist and technician, and zinc, who speaks to us instead with a mild and unexpected tone of a female friendship at the time of the University. At the center of the work is Cerio, a tale of the great friendship with Alberto Dalla Volta, born in the concentration camp. In vanadium, twenty years after Auschwitz, we come across Dr. Müller, Levi's superior in the chemical laboratory of the Lager. Finally, the invention of Carbon: following the story of a carbon atom in its journey to secular ends, even the journey in the stories of a lifetime, that of one of the greatest writers of the Twentieth-century.

Venue Info

Teatro Argentina - Rome
Location   Largo di Torre Argentina, 52

The Teatro Argentina is an opera house and theatre located in Largo di Torre Argentina, a square in Rome, Italy. One of the oldest theatres in Rome, it was constructed in 1731 and inaugurated on 31 January 1732 with Berenice by Domenico Sarro. It is built over part of the curia section of the Theatre of Pompey. This curia was the location of the assassination of Julius Caesar.

The house was commissioned by the Sforza-Cesarini family and designed by the architect Gerolamo Theodoli with the auditorium laid out in the traditional horseshoe shape. Duke Francesco Sforza-Cesarini, who ran the Argentina Theatre from 1807 to 1815, was a "theatre fanatic" who continued until his death to run up debts. Rossini's The Barber of Seville was given its premiere on 20 February 1816, just after Duke Francesco's death and, in the 19th century, the premieres of many notable operas took place in the theatre, including Verdi's I due Foscari on 3 November 1844 and La battaglia di Legnano on 27 January 1849.

From 1919 to 1944, more musical offerings than dramatic ones were presented, although the theatre premiered works by Luigi Pirandello, Henrik Ibsen and Maxim Gorky during this time. As well, a series of operas was presented in the winter of 1944–45 in honor of the American and British troops.

The venue was used for classical-music recordings by the Santa Cecilia orchestra in the 1950s.

In 1994, the theatre became the home of the Teatro Stabile company of Rome, currently directed by Mario Martone. It offers a variety of programmes, some being large-scale productions, although more plays than music or opera are presented today.

The inside of the theatre is constructed of wood with six levels of boxes characterizing the design, and has been restored many times. It seats 696 people, including 344 in the stalls and with 40 boxes on five levels seating an additional 352.

Plantamura notes that the theatre's acoustics were regarded as being excellent and that the architect who designed the La Fenice opera house in Venice, Gianantonio Selva, modeled his design after the Argentina.

Important Info
Type: Show
City: Rome, Italy
Starts at: 21:00
Duration:
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