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Signora
Violante was Italian or French, and was active as a performer from 1720. She was married to an Italian, Senor Violante, a rope-slider. Neither her maiden or married name are known for certain, and she and her husband are also sometimes named as Larini in contemporary newspaper accounts. She
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Violante had a large impact on the Dublin theatre scene of the early 18th century. She worked in Dublin for three theatre seasons, during which time, in 1730, Violante and her principal dancer
Lalauze established the Dame Street Booth, a rival to the
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In 1735 Signora
Violante settled in Edinburgh, where she rented the lower floor of the hall of the Incorporation of Mary's Chapel from 1738 and continued to perform as a rope-dancer, and ran a dance school. Signora Violante died in 1741.
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where she lived in
Carruber's Close. In Edinburgh, magistrates refused her company permission to perform in their jurisdiction. after this, her company performed throughout Britain, and it is possible they also performed in
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theatres. Her performances in these shows included rope dancing with flags, sometimes advertised in bills as "The
Flourishing of the Colours"; her rope-dancing inspired a poem published in
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535:. Dobson, Michael, 1960-, Wells, Stanley, 1930-, Sharpe, Will., Sullivan, Erin (Cultural historian) (Second ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2015.
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A biographical dictionary of actors, actresses, musicians, dancers, managers & other stage personnel in London, 1660-1800. Volume 15, Tibbett to M. West
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in 1727, and returned to London's
Haymarket Theatre with a new company to perform regularly from 23 October to 6 May 1728, including a pantomime
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Read, Leslie du S. (2004-09-23). "Violante , Signora (1682–1741), rope-dancer and theatre company manager".
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338:. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 1 (online ed.). Oxford University Press.
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274:. Ewan, Elizabeth., Innes, Sue., Reynolds, Sian. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. 2006.
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Edinburgh City
Archives, Minutes of the Incorporation of Mary's Chapel, 15 July 1738 p. 329.
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in
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The biographical dictionary of
Scottish women : from the earliest times to 2004
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in the summer of 1728, where her husband Senor
Violante slid on a rope across the
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McArdle, Grainne (2005). "Signora Violante and Her Troupe of Dancers 1729-32".
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is also known as Madam Violante and Mrs Violante in 18th century sources.
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494:"Signora Violante, Series 2, Women with a Past - BBC Radio Scotland"
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Her children were among the performers in her troupe. Her daughter
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Rope-dancer, acrobat, actress, theatre company director
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The history of Edinburgh. By Hugo Arnot, Esq; Advocate
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Another reported act of Violante's was, while on the
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422:Eighteenth-Century Ireland / Iris an Dá Chultúr
380:(online ed.). Oxford University Press.
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191:The Rivals
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