Maria Melato

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Maria Melato
Melato in 1917
Born16 October 1885
Died24 August 1950 (aged 64)
OccupationActress
Years active1905–1950
Children1

Maria Melato (16 October 1885 – 24 August 1950) was an Italian actress of the stage, screen, and radio.

Early life[edit]

Maria Melato was born in Reggio Emilia on 16 October 1885, the daughter of Silvio Melato and Elisa Friggieri. Her father was a fencing master and cavalry officer. Her mother traveled with Melato during her theatrical career.[1]

Career[edit]

Portrait of Maria Melato, by Giuseppe Amisani

Melato began acting as a young woman. She joined the troupe of Irma Gramatica in about 1905, and found her first acclaim in 1908, substituting for Gramatica in Milan.[1] From 1909 to 1921 she worked with director Virgilio Talli in the Compagnia Drammatica Italiana.[2][3] "She seems to play as if acting was not the exciting, soul-wracking thing that some of its critics would have it, but a sober duty and a simple pleasure," noted one critic of the day.[4]

She started her own company in 1921. She toured with her company in South America in the 1920s. In the 1930s she worked with the National Institute of Ancient Drama on staging Iphigenia in Tauris by Euripides and Women of Trachis by Sophocles, at Syracuse. In 1935 she toured through Sicily, Tripoli, and Benghazi, then returned to Latin America in 1939. During World War II she lost a hundred trunks of costumes, props, and personal possessions when a warehouse was destroyed by bombs. She worked in radio after the war.[1]

Melato appeared in ten films: Il ritorno (1914), Anna Karenina (1917), Le due Marie (1918), Il volo degli aironi (1920), Il trittico dell'amore (1920), Le due esistenze (1920), La principessa del sogno (1942), Redenzione [it] (1943), In High Places (1945), and Il fabbro del convento (1945).

Personal life[edit]

Maria Melato had a son, Luciano, born in 1909. She died in 1950 at Forte dei Marmi, from injuries sustained in a fall from a train, aged 64 years. From 1951 to 1965, there was a Maria Melato Festival in Reggio Emilia, and a prize for amateur dramatic clubs in the comune.[5]

Her papers are archived at the Panizzi Library in Reggio Emilia.[2][6] There is a street named Via Maria Melato in Rome, and in Reggio Emilia,[7] and a bronze bust of Melato, by artist Michele Vedani, in the public gardens of the latter city.[8]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Giorgio Pangaro, "Maria Melato" in Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani 73(2009).
  2. ^ a b Antonella Babbone, "Review of Paola Daniela Giovanelli, Maria Melato. Voci d'archivio, voce di scena" La critica - Recensioni libri (Università degli Studi di Salerno).
  3. ^ Susan Bassnett, Jennifer Lorch, Luigi Pirandello in the Theatre (Routledge 2014): 46. ISBN 9781134351213
  4. ^ Addison McLeod, Plays and Players in Modern Italy (Smith, Elder 1912): 193.
  5. ^ Paola Cagliari, Marina Castagnetti, Claudia Giudici, Carlina Rinaldi, Vea Vecchi, Peter Moss, eds., Loris Malaguzzi and the Schools of Reggio Emilia: A selection of his writings and speeches, 1945-1993 (Routledge 2016): 31-32. ISBN 9781317697060
  6. ^ Archivio Maria Melato 1871-1980, Biblioteca comunale Antonio Panizzi di Reggio Emilia.
  7. ^ Via Maria Melato, Reggio nell'Emilia, Tutto Citta.
  8. ^ "Maria Melato" Statues Hither and Thither (VanderKrogt.net).

External links[edit]