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Atellan farce

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Atellan farce

Theatre performance popular in ancient Rome (a type of farce). It was an improvised burlesque from low life, but during the last century BC it became fashionable to present it after the performance of a tragedy, and it was given a literary form. Certain stock characters appeared, such as Maccus the glutton, Bucco the fool, Paggus (Pantaloon), and Dossenus (Punch).

Atellan farces were named after the town of Atella, near Capua, north of Naples. They were gradually superseded by mime and disappeared about the time of Tiberius, in the early 1st century AD.



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If no one agrees any longer with nineteenth-century scholars that the commedia dell'arte derived directly from the late ancient Atellan farce, a more temporally proximate theatrical phenomenon has frequently been proposed in recent years as a generative antecedent: the performances in Venetian piazzas, banquet halls, and state venues of buffoni such as Domenico Taiacalze (d.
 
 
 
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