Athena Filippaki
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Athena Filipaki (
fl. ''Floruit'' (; abbreviated fl. or occasionally flor.; from Latin for "they flourished") denotes a date or period during which a person was known to have been alive or active. In English, the unabbreviated word may also be used as a noun indicatin ...
1842 – fl. 1846), was a Greek stage actress. She belonged to the pioneers of the modern Greek theater of the 19th century and was one of the first professional actresses in Greece. After the independence of Greece, a great interest in theatre flourished in Greece. Initially amateur theatre, a professional theatre developed, and the first modern permanent theatre in Athens, the
Boukoura Theatre Boukoura Theatre was a theatre in Athens in Greece, founded in 1840 and closed in 1897. It was the only permanent theatre in Athens from its foundation until 1888. History It was preceded by the temporary Skontzopoulos Theatre (1835–1837) and t ...
, was founded in 1840. In professional theatre, women's roles were initially played by men or by foreign (Italian) actresses. The first Greek actress was Maria Angeliki Tzivitza, who performed in the Boukoura Theatre on 24 November 1840, and retired after two performances. In September 1842, N. Skoufos, Dimitrios Levidis, Alexandros Rizos Rangavis and Grigoris Kampouroglou founded the Athenian Theatre Committee or Society of Theatre with the intent to educate professional Greek actors in Athens. Male actors were swiftly hired, but there was difficulty in finding women because the profession was not considered respectable for women. Ekaterina Panayotou signed her contract for the Society of Theatre in Athens on 8 November 1842 and became the first female actor hired, followed by Athena Filipaki, Marigo Defteridi and Marigo Domestini. Athena Filipaki signed her contract in December 1842 and was thus the second woman. The company made their inauguration performance in the spring of 1843 with the tragedy ''Filippos II'' by Vittorio Alfieri with Ekaterina Panayotou as Isabella. In the following years, Ekaterina Panayotou and Athena Filipaki shared the main female roles in Athens and enjoyed great popularity. Both of them had poems dedicated to them by the audience, and incidents about their professional rivalry were described by contemporaries. In February 1846, the theatre company was dissolved. She married and retired.


References

* ''Νεώτερον Εγκυκλοπαιδικόν Λεξικόν Ηλίου'' τ.15ος, σ.388 * Εφημερίδα ''Το Ελληνικόν Θέατρον'', Φλεβάρης 1926 {{DEFAULTSORT:Filipaki, Athena 19th-century births 19th-century deaths 19th-century Greek actresses