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All the main
Venetian theatres were owned by important patrician families, combining business with pleasure in a city of crowded and competitive theatrical culture. When most opera in Europe was still being put on by courts, "economic prospects and a desire for exhibitionistic display", as well a
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1665–1889. Founded in 1655 by the
Grimani family. The theatre was active up until 1889. It stood on the Rio del Duca and was demolished in 1894. "It is a pretty theatre well adapted for hearing. Opera buffas are performed here" (Murray,
38:. This ushered in a period in which they throve until the decline in opera and theatre with the advent of television. Recently there has been a revival due to tourism and events such as the International Theatre Festival of the
46:
decline in their traditional overseas trading, attracted the best
Venetian families to invest in the theatre during the 17th century. Europe's first dedicated public and commercial opera house was the
103:) or Teatro San Salvatore, 1622, renamed Teatro San Luca, then Teatro Apollo in 1833, and from 1875 til now Teatro Goldoni, today home to a theatre company Teatro Stabile di Veneto "Carlo Goldoni".
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1755–?. Another theatre of the
Grimani family, built 1755, burned down 1774, rebuilt. Later "called Teatro Gallo after its proprietor" (Murray, 1860) then renamed Teatro Rossini.
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Teatro della Murata, Mestre – opened 1970; a small experimental theatre, seating 70, in an old warehouse attached to the remaining city walls.
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Theatre
Fondamenta Nuove, 1998 on the north lagoon, musical and cultural events, as well as conferences and workshops.
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89:– Venice's leading opera house. The first theatre was built in 1792 and the current structure opened in 2003.
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Teatro Ai Saloni of San
Gregorio – active circa 1650 for the members of the Academy for spoken drama.
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Handbook for
Travellers in Northern Italy: Comprising Piedmont, Liguria, Lombardy, Venetia
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originally Teatro San
Giovanni Grisostomo 1678. Re-opened in 2001 by President
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Teatro
Altieri – private theatre in the garden of the Altieri princes. 1690
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1638–1715; a theatre owned by the
Grimani family on the Calle della Testa.
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often inter-married, were dominant, owning what is now called the
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was set up in 1637, after which at one point the city had six
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Opera in Seventeenth-Century Venice: The Creation of a Genre
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Lorenzo Bianconi, Giorgio Pestelli, Lydia G. Cochrane;
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Musica e musicisti a Venezia dalle origini ad Amendola
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a private theatre on the promenade in Ognissanti 1679.
317:Lorenzo Bianconi, Giorgio Pestelli, Kate Singleton
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148:1637–1812. Site of first commercial opera,
140:Now demolished, destroyed by fire or closed
494:Lists of buildings and structures in Italy
248:Teatro Calle dell'Oca, small theatre 1707
17:
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132:Teatro Toniolo, Mestre. re-opened 2003
95:1622–present. Originally the Teatro
168:1640–1645. Six seasons, six operas.
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284:Opera Production and Its Resources
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253:Gl'amori fortunati negli equivoci
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227:Teatro a Cannaregio near the
160:Teatro Santi Giovanni e Paolo
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288:University of Chicago Press
156:, in 1637. Demolished 1812.
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499:Lists of theatres by city
231:. Built by the patrician
211:1677-1803. Theatre where
371:Teatro del Parco, Mestre
272:La Biennale Theatre page
360:Teatro Fondamente Nuove
182:at the entrance to the
196:Teatro Sant'Apollinare
69:and other houses. The
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489:Opera houses in Italy
466:at Wikimedia Commons
26:The first commercial
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504:Venice-related lists
229:Chiesa di San Giobbe
219:Teatro San Benedetto
174:1640–1818. Near the
111:Carlo Azeglio Ciampi
99:di San Salvador (in
67:Teatro San Benedetto
484:Opera-related lists
286:, pp .16 ff, 1998,
243:Teatro alle Zattere
190:Teatro SS. Apostoli
180:Church of San Moisè
146:Teatro San Cassiano
40:Biennale di Venezia
479:Theatres in Venice
464:Theatres in Venice
394:2011-07-16 at the
376:2011-07-16 at the
347:2006-10-06 at the
202:Teatro San Samuele
176:Palazzo Giustinian
150:Francesco Mannelli
125:Teatro del Parco,
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462:Media related to
209:Teatro San Angelo
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172:Teatro San Moisè
166:Teatro Novissimo
101:Venetian dialect
81:Still open today
57:, with whom the
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36:opera houses
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184:Grand Canal
50:from 1637.
48:Teatro Tron
473:Categories
260:References
307:La Fenice
237:Ermelinda
198:1651–1661
154:Andromeda
97:Vendramin
87:La Fenice
75:La Fenice
59:Vendramin
22:La Fenice
392:Archived
374:Archived
345:Archived
321:Page 346
178:and the
239:(1679).
213:Vivaldi
71:Veniers
55:Grimani
421:p. 181
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127:Mestre
73:owned
32:Venice
205:1860)
192:1648–
28:opera
434:1860
292:ISBN
53:The
152:'s
30:in
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