
Stenterello: a Florentine Carnival mask
In Naples there is the famous
Pulcinella, in Venice there is Colombina and in Bergamo there are Arlecchino
and Brighella, but what about in Florence? We also have our traditional
carnival mask, he's called Stenterello, because of his puny and haggard appearance, of a man who seems to have, in fact, grown up in hardship (from the
italian “stento”, hardship).
Stenterello represents the
Florentine people of low social background, who manage to overcome adversity
with a smile on their lips and humour at the ready, always finding the strength
to laugh and make jokes.
A man of great irony, with a
costume that reflects his character.
He wears an eighteenth-century
style dress in bright colors, usually composed of a light blue jacket,
sometimes with red trim, a canary yellow waistcoat, black knee-length pants
with two different socks underneath, one red and one with colored stripes;
while on his head he wears a white wig with a pigtail and a
black tricorn.
Stenterello was conceived, at the end of the 1700s, by Luigi Del Buono,
who had been a watchmaker by profession until 1782, in his workshop in Piazza
Duomo. However, his passion for theater led him to abandon that profession to pursue
the stage. He became director of the Florentine Academicians at the Ognissanti
theater and eventually founded his own company in 1791.
Just like his Stenterello, Del Buono was very thin, furthermore, his
small stature, arched eyebrows and his predisposition for comic acting, made
his interpretation of Stenterello memorable, and helped to bring popularity to
the Florentine mask.
Stenterello expresses himself in the Florentine vernacular, but he is
never vulgar. He is a chatterbox, impulsive, fearful, but also wise and
intelligent and very kind-hearted. He always takes the side of the weakest, even if
he ends up shaking with fear when it's time to take action.
This contrast is precisely the centerpiece of his comedy. A wimpy hero
who we can only get a smile from us.
The Stenterello mask has experienced great fortune in the past, and although
at times it has remained somewhat in the shade, it has never been completely
forgotten.
Florence continues to love this character, in honor of which a plaque
was even hanged in Borgo Ognissanti at n.4, where we read:
“In this building the Borgognissanti Theater was housed in 1778 where
Luigi Del Buono (1751 - 1832) created the mask of Stenterello, popular
Florentine joker character, teased and witty, that has remained in the memory
of the city".