Massimo Popolizio continues his artistic journey by staging the ensemble piece by Maxim Gorky. A philosophical and moral reflection on human destiny, a protest against the living conditions of a part of society that is anything but extinct, the work – here adapted by Emanuele Trevi – maintains all its visionary strength and desperate lucidity.
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Teatro Strehler
Also known as The lower depths, At the Bottom, or A Night's Lodging, the great drama by Maxim Gorky, which was staged for the first time in Moscow in 1902, was renamed L’albergo dei poveri by Giorgio Strehler in 1947, on the occasion of the extraordinary production that inaugurated the Piccolo Teatro di Milano in May 1947. It is this title that Massimo Popolizio has chosen to represent to audiences, for its emblematic, poetic and historic value.
L’albergo dei poveri is a grand ensemble piece that could be defined as Shakespearian in its skillful dose of pathos, social protest, bitter comedy, and philosophical and moral reflection on human destiny. The large number of actors on stage forces the director to identify a rhythm that is suited to the constant change in situation and point of view, in a crescendo of tension that is further highlighted by the evoked confined space; a refuge for drunks and the down-and-out, where the characters spend their days trying not to succumb to desperation and the inertia of defeat. It is a challenge that, after Stanislavskij, who was the first to direct Gorky’s work, was taken on by great masters of theatrical directing, such as Strehler, as well as cinema, including Renoir and Kurosawa.
While it is true that great works pass through time to be re-read by each generation from a different point of view, Popolizio’s directing style, his way of directing the actors and the mechanism of theatre as a whole, seem particularly suited to writing a new chapter in this story of interpretation. Ours is not the world of 1902, nor is it that of 1947; the very concept of “poverty” has changed, but the dramatic energy, the visionary strength and the desperate lucidness of Gorky’s characters is still intact.
Duration: 100’ without interval
Learn more
Booklet
ReadAlso known as The lower depths, At the Bottom, or A Night's Lodging, the great drama by Maxim Gorky, which was staged for the first time in Moscow in 1902, was renamed L’albergo dei poveri by Giorgio Strehler in 1947, on the occasion of the extraordinary production that inaugurated the Piccolo Teatro di Milano in May 1947. It is this title that Massimo Popolizio has chosen to represent to audiences, for its emblematic, poetic and historic value.
L’albergo dei poveri is a grand ensemble piece that could be defined as Shakespearian in its skillful dose of pathos, social protest, bitter comedy, and philosophical and moral reflection on human destiny. The large number of actors on stage forces the director to identify a rhythm that is suited to the constant change in situation and point of view, in a crescendo of tension that is further highlighted by the evoked confined space; a refuge for drunks and the down-and-out, where the characters spend their days trying not to succumb to desperation and the inertia of defeat. It is a challenge that, after Stanislavskij, who was the first to direct Gorky’s work, was taken on by great masters of theatrical directing, such as Strehler, as well as cinema, including Renoir and Kurosawa.
While it is true that great works pass through time to be re-read by each generation from a different point of view, Popolizio’s directing style, his way of directing the actors and the mechanism of theatre as a whole, seem particularly suited to writing a new chapter in this story of interpretation. Ours is not the world of 1902, nor is it that of 1947; the very concept of “poverty” has changed, but the dramatic energy, the visionary strength and the desperate lucidness of Gorky’s characters is still intact.
Duration: 100’ without interval
Learn more
Booklet
ReadMeetings and insights
Credits
L’albergo dei poveri
a play by Massimo Popolizio
based on the work by Maxim Gorky
abridged for the theatre by Emanuele Trevi
sets Marco Rossi and Francesca Sgariboldi
costumes Gianluca Sbicca
lighting Luigi Biondi
sound design Alessandro Saviozzi
stage movements Michele Abbondanza
direction assistant Tommaso Capodanno
with Massimo Popolizio
and with Sandra Toffolatti, Raffaele Esposito, Michele Nani, Giovanni Battaglia, Aldo Ottobrino, Giampiero Cicciò, Francesco Giordano, Martin Chishimba, Silvia Pietta, Gabriele Brunelli, Diamara Ferrero, Marco Mavaracchio, Luca Carbone, Carolina Ellero, Zoe Zolferino
a Piccolo Teatro di Milano – Teatro d’Europa, Teatro di Roma – Teatro Nazionale production
Tickets
Category of performance Piccolo Production
Stalls full price € 40 | Discounted (under 26 and over 65) € 23
Balcony full price € 32 | Discounted (under 26 and over 65) € 20
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Organised groups and audiences
For information on tickets for organised groups:
tel. +39 02 72 333 216
email promozione.pubblico@piccoloteatromilano.it