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EN
At the dawn of the modern era, aristocratic women, whether at court or in the academy, shed a noble aura on the new classic theatre and were often the privileged recipients of dedicated plays and poetry essays. They were totally different from the theatre-going women that bought tickets in 16 th - and 17 th -century Europe. Women in the theatre, whether on the stage or in the audience, were a problem and a source of scandal for Catholic and Protestant authorities, who wanted to ban them from attendance. However, their presence kept growing and finally established itself in the 18 th century, when women became the main heralds of good taste and sentiment. This essay discusses the two aspects of this story.
IT
La spettatrice aristocratica di corte o di accademia, agli inizi dell’età moderna, nobilita con la sua presenza il nuovo teatro classicistico, ed è spesso destinataria privilegiata di omaggi drammaturgici e di saggi di poetica; essa è tuttavia molto diversa dalle spettatrici reali che cominciano a frequentare i teatri pubblici a pagamento nell’Europa del XVI e XVII secolo. Le donne a teatro, sulle scene e in platea, rappresentano per le autorità religiose cattoliche e protestanti un problema e uno scandalo da reprimere e censurare; la loro presenza tuttavia cresce e si afferma nel ‘700, quando cominciano a diventare le depositarie principali del buon gusto e del sentimento. Il saggio analizza le due facce di questa storia.
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