Capitano Moizo
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Il Capitano (, Italian for "The Captain") is one of the four stock characters of ''
Commedia dell'arte (; ; ) was an early form of professional theatre, originating from Italian theatre, that was popular throughout Europe between the 16th and 18th centuries. It was formerly called Italian comedy in English and is also known as , , and . Charact ...
.'' He most likely was never a "Captain" but rather appropriated the name for himself. He is often a braggart and a swaggerer who can maintain his claims only by benefit of the fact that none of the locals know him. He is usually a
Spaniard Spaniards, or Spanish people, are a Romance ethnic group native to Spain. Within Spain, there are a number of national and regional ethnic identities that reflect the country's complex history, including a number of different languages, both ind ...
, given the fact that for most of the late Renaissance to well into 17th century, parts of Italy were under Spanish domination. He was most likely inspired by the boisterous Iberic caudillos who told tall tales of their exploits either in the conquest of the Americas or in the wars with Germany. Il Capitano often talks at length about made-up conquests of both the militaristic and the carnal variety in an attempt to impress others, but often ends up impressing only himself. He gets easily carried away in his tales and doesn't realise when those around him don't buy his act. He would be the first to run away from any and all battles, and he has trouble talking to and being around men. He is also extremely opportunistic and greedy. If hired by Pantalone to protect his daughter from her many suitors, Capitano would set up a bidding war for his services or aid between the suitors and Pantalone while wooing her himself. If he is hired to fight the Turks, he will bluster about fighting them to his last drop of blood, but when the Turks seem to be winning, he will join them. When they are driven off, he will change sides again and boast about his loyalty and bravery.


Role

"I think of him as a peacock who has moulted all but one of his tail feathers, but does not know it," notes author John Rudlin. In this case, his cowardice is usually overcome by the fury of his passion, which he makes every effort to demonstrate. Typically, however, his cowardice is such that when one of the characters orders him to do something, he often steps down out of fear, but is able to make up an excuse that ensures the other characters still see him as a brave and individual.
Columbina Columbina (in Italian Colombina, meaning "little dove"; in French and English Colombine) is a stock character in the ''commedia dell'arte''. She is Harlequin's mistress, a comic servant playing the tricky slave type, and wife of Pierrot. Rudlin ...
sometimes uses him to make Arlecchino jealous, much to Capitano's bewilderment and fright.


Origin

The origin of Capitano comes from 2 literary sources: Plautus's '' Miles Gloriosus'' and Terence's ''Eunuchus''. The first famous Captain, Capitano Spavento, appeared in Francesco Andreini's ''Bravure di Capitan Spaventa (The Boast of the Terrifying Captain).''


Lazzi

# Whenever Capitano sees the audience, he stops to be admired. # Capitano gloats to Arlecchino (Harlequin) about his expertise with the ladies and then proceeds to demonstrate on Arlecchino how he would make love to a woman. # He wakes up to find he is not the only one in the room. There is someone crouching in the corner. He shakes his fist at the person, the person shakes their fist back at the same time. It turns out the person in the room is just Capitano's reflection in a full-length mirror. # When frightened, he often screams in a high and womanly
falsetto ''Falsetto'' (, ; Italian diminutive of , "false") is the vocal register occupying the frequency range just above the modal voice register and overlapping with it by approximately one octave. It is produced by the vibration of the ligamentous ed ...
, or else faints.


Stance

He stands in a high posture, occupying as much space as possible, with a straight back and his chest pushed forward .


Plot function

To be exposed or 'de-masked'. He exists to be stripped of his excessive confidence and shown in a moment of panic and humility.


Famous actors

* Francesco Andreini * Antonio Fava


Description of the character


Mask

His mask is described as having "a long nose, often unambiguously phallic": "Long nose, often unambiguously phallic". The nose for Captain Spavento's mask is fairly large, but it lengthens with Matamoros, and becomes absolutely gargantuan for Coccodrillo. Originally, the color of the mask was probably flesh tone, now it can be many flamboyant colors such as bright pink, yellow and light blue. The mask often has a strong mustache and brow lines that can be black or have a purple/blue tone. UNmasked Capitano: II Cavaliere (The Lover Capitano).


Costume

Military-esque uniform (a satire on the period). 1500s: feathered helmet or hat (''mom panache''), exaggerated garters, extraordinarily long sword and a plethora of ruffles. 1600s: coat, breeches, and he would mostly have a musket instead of a sword. In one famous scenario, the Captain makes up a lie regarding the reason for his lack of an undershirt by claiming that it got that way because "I used to be an exceedingly fierce and violent man, and when I was made angry the hair which covers my body in goodly quantity stood on end and so riddled my shirt with holes that you would have taken it for a sieve." The real reason is that he has become too poor to afford one. Sometimes he wears it with a helmet or a bicorne or tricorne hat with a huge plume. Spanish characters often wear an exaggerated large neck-ruff. He is usually always wearing his trademarked sword. If he were to ever work up enough nerve to draw it, it is usually too long to draw easily or too heavy or wobbly to wield properly. Even if he cut somebody with it, he would faint at the very sight of the blood.


Noms de guerre

Il Capitano usually has a properly showy name for himself, preferably several lines long and followed by many made-up titles and lists of relations. Some names are fierce-sounding, like "''Escobombardon''" ("Fired out of a cannon"), "''Rodomonte''" ("Mountain-crumbler"), "''Sangre y Fuego''" (Spanish: "Blood and Fire"), "''Spaccamonti''" ("Mountain splitter"), "''Spezzaferro''" ("Iron-breaker"), or "''Terremoto''" ("Earthquake"). Some names are ironic, like: "''Bellavista''" ("Beautiful view", a vain but ugly man) or "''Fracasso''"/"''Fracassa''" (the correct masculine version and an invented feminine version for "Fracas", "Skirmish" or "Big noise"). Some are dismissive, like "''Cerimonia''" ("Ceremony", all proper manners and rigid, slavish devotion to pointless details), "''Coccodrillo''" ("Crocodile", because he preys on others), "''Fanfarone''" ("Trumpeter" or "Loudmouth"), "''Giangurgulo''" ("John the Glutton"), "''Grillo''" ("Grasshopper", because he is small and 'hops' sides), "''Malagamba''" ("Lame leg"), "''Squaquara''" ("Little Shi*"), "''Papirotonda''" ("Round letter", a complaint signed by mutinous soldiers or sailors in a circle around the main text so the ringleaders or originators cannot be discerned), "''Tagliacantoni''" ("Small-sized"), and "''Zerbino''" ("Doormat"). He is also prone to awarding himself ridiculous titles like "''Capitan Spavento della Vall'Inferna''" ("Captain Fear, (Lord) of Hell's Valley"; the name of ''Vall'Inferna'' also sounds similar to "Va' all'Inferno!", "
hen you die Hen commonly refers to a female animal: a female chicken, other gallinaceous bird, any type of bird in general, or a lobster. It is also a slang term for a woman. Hen or Hens may also refer to: Places Norway *Hen, Buskerud, a village in Ringer ...
Go to
Hell In religion and folklore, hell is a location in the afterlife in which evil souls are subjected to punitive suffering, most often through torture, as eternal punishment after death. Religions with a linear divine history often depict hell ...
!", an Italian-language imprecation), "''Salvador de los Vírgenes Borrachos''" (Spanish: "Savior of Drunken Virgins"), or "''Sieur de Fracasse et Brise-tout''" (
French French (french: français(e), link=no) may refer to: * Something of, from, or related to France ** French language, which originated in France, and its various dialects and accents ** French people, a nation and ethnic group identified with Franc ...
: "Lord of 'Knock it down' and 'Break everything'").


Variants

The French coined characters like ''Boudoufle'' (
Norman French Norman or Norman French (, french: Normand, Guernésiais: , Jèrriais: ) is a Romance language which can be classified as one of the Oïl languages along with French, Picard and Walloon. The name "Norman French" is sometimes used to descri ...
: "Puffed up with hurt pride"), ''Taille-bras'' (either "Limb-Cutter" or "Arm's Length"), and ''Engoulevent'' (either "Night-bird" or "Big-mouth"). England has the Irish dramatist
George Farquhar George Farquhar (1677The explanation for the dual birth year appears in Louis A. Strauss, ed., A Discourse Upon Comedy, The Recruiting Officer, and The Beaux’ Stratagem by George Farquhar' (Boston: D.C. Heath & Co., 1914), p. v. Strauss notes ...
's play '' The Recruiting Officer''. Major Bloodnok of the '' Goon Show'' bears some resemblance to Il Capitano and shares many of his traits, such as lust, greed and cowardice. In modern theater, the character Miles Gloriosus (Latin: "Famous or Boastful Soldier") from ''
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum ''A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum'' is a musical with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and book by Burt Shevelove and Larry Gelbart. Inspired by the farces of the ancient Roman playwright Plautus (254–184 BC), specifica ...
'' is an obvious form of the character, though modeled from the earlier Roman plays.


Types

1. Captain Spaventa ("fear") 2. Rinoceronte ("rhino") 3. Fracassa ("uproar") 4. Spezzafer ("iron splitter") 5. Cocodrillo ("crocodile") - "A crocodile who never bites, he is all fanfare easily deflated," according to Rudlin. 6. Matamoros (Spanish: "Killer of Moors") – the original Spanish mercenary – was created by Francesco Andreini. He is powerfully built and very lavishly dressed. The clothes of his servants were supposedly made from the turbans of his victims. Has a hedgehog on his coat of arms, the result of his exploits at the battle of Trebizonde, where he claims to have fought his way into the tent of the Sultan himself. He then dragged him through the camp with one hand while fighting off the entire enemy army with the other hand. Afterwards, there were so many arrows stuck in him by the time he fought free that he resembled a hedgehog. 7. Scaramouche- '' Scaramuccia'' (Italian), or ''Scaramouche'' (French) (" skirmish") was a reinvention of the character by Tiberio Fiorilli. He is more of a man of action than he is a braggart and is clever, brave, and quick-witted rather than ignorant, cowardly and foolish. He is also a good singer and musician, and is usually depicted with a lute or guitar. Although quite a heartbreaker, he is usually indirectly or unobtrusively helpful to the innamorati. *In the Punch and Judy shows, Scaramouche is depicted by a puppet with a detachable head or an extendable neck. The former is for the Capitano incarnation, who seeks to fight all the other characters and the latter is for a singing puppet. * Cyrano de Bergerac, a play by
Edmond Rostand Edmond Eugène Alexis Rostand (, , ; 1 April 1868 – 2 December 1918) was a French poet and dramatist. He is associated with neo-romanticism and is known best for his 1897 play ''Cyrano de Bergerac''. Rostand's romantic plays contrasted with t ...
, is the most popular variant on Scaramouche. It portrays the historical figure as a violent, easily angered braggart who is sensitive about slurs on his considerable courage, his rural Gascon heritage, or his ugly face (which is identical to the features of the Scaramouche mask). He nobly helps his friend, a handsome but naïve and foolish youth, woo Roxane whom they both love. *An unnamed soldier in a short play by Miguel de Cervantes called ''The Vigilant Sentinel'' matched this character to the letter. In the play he waits, bespectacled and wearing ragged clothes, desperately trying to frighten away any rival suitors from the house of the girl he wishes to marry. * Baron Munchausen is another take on Scaramouche. He is usually depicted as an elderly man in an anachronistic 18th century uniform,
powdered wig A wig is a head or hair accessory made from human hair, animal hair, or synthetic fiber. The word wig is short for periwig, which makes its earliest known appearance in the English language in William Shakespeare's ''The Two Gentlemen of Verona ...
with queue, a beak-like and prominent nose, curling moustaches and goatee beard, and glasses. He uses his wits, his amazing luck and superhuman skills, and his gift of blather and blarney to defeat his enemies. He is also unusual in that he is handicapped by infirmities but is superhuman when he compensates for them. Without his glasses, he is blind as a bat; with them, he can see clearer and farther than a man with perfect vision. He has a lame leg, but when he carries his cane, he is capable of running faster and jumping higher and farther than an athlete. 8. Fanfarone- Pretends to be Spanish, but is actually just a Zanni.


See also

*
Capitan (disambiguation) Capitan and Kapitan are equivalents of the English Captain in other European languages. Capitan, Capitano, and Kapitan may also refer to: Places in the United States *Capitan, Louisiana, an unincorporated community *Capitan, New Mexico, a village ...
*
Captain (disambiguation) Captain is a rank or title for commander of a military unit, commander of a ship or other vessel, or leader of a unit or organization. Captain or The Captain may also refer to: Rank *Captain (armed forces), a commissioned officer rank historical ...
* El Capitan (disambiguation) *
Kapitan (disambiguation) Capitan and Kapitan are equivalents of the English Captain in other European languages. Capitan, Capitano, and Kapitan may also refer to: Places in the United States * Capitan, Louisiana, an unincorporated community *Capitan, New Mexico, a villa ...
* Kapitän * Katepano


References


Works cited

* *


General references

* * John Rudlin, ''Commedia dell'arte: An Actor's Handbook'', *
Pierre Louis Duchartre Pierre is a masculine given name. It is a French form of the name Peter. Pierre originally meant "rock" or "stone" in French (derived from the Greek word πέτρος (''petros'') meaning "stone, rock", via Latin "petra"). It is a translation ...
, ''The Italian Comedy'' {{DEFAULTSORT:Capitano, Il Commedia dell'arte male characters Fictional military captains Fictional impostors Fictional Spanish people