Teatro Morlacchi
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Teatro Morlacchi, formerly Teatro del Verzaro, is the largest theater of Perugia. It is named after the musician Francesco Morlacchi.


History

In 1777 the local middle class decided to build a new theater in response to the nobles who had built the Teatro del Pavone; ninety families then formed the "Society for the construction of a new theater", which bought an old convent and commissioned the project to architect Alessio Lorenzini. Lorenzini gave the hall the classic shape of a
horseshoe A horseshoe is a fabricated product designed to protect a horse hoof from wear. Shoes are attached on the palmar surface (ground side) of the hooves, usually nailed through the insensitive hoof wall that is anatomically akin to the human toen ...
and facing with the problem of limited space, having to reserve a box for each client family, he decided to set up the entire structure diagonally and to reduce the entrance hall. The works began in June 1778, and ended in April 1780. The inauguration was held on August 15, 1781, and the theater could seat 1,200 people at the time.Margherita Maria Rosa Ventura (cured by). ''Teatro Francesco Morlacchi. Archivio storico''. Perugia: Regione dell'Umbria, Editrice Umbra Cooperativa, 1983.AA. VV. ''Umbria''. Milan: Touring Club Italiano, 1999-2004. In 1874 it was restructured and modified by Guglielmo Calderini, who gave the theater its current structure; simultaneously it was redecorated by artists like Francesco Moretti and Mariano Piervittori, who worked on the curtain of the ceiling. At the new inauguration of the theater it was named after the Perugia-born musician Francesco Morlacchi. The activities of the theater continued until the early twentieth century, but declined during the years of Fascism until it was requisitioned by the Germans during the occupation of the city and allocated to shows for their soldiers. After the war, the theater was seriously damaged and the City between 1951 and 1953 financed the restoration work, which included a re-roofing and the modification of stage, orchestra pit and marble floors. Currently the theater has 785 seats. The stage is wide and deep. The proscenium is also wide.


References


External links

* {{Coord, 43.1133, N, 12.3868, E, source:wikidata, display=title Theatres in Umbria Buildings and structures in Perugia Theatres completed in 1780 18th-century architecture in Italy