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{{Short description|Italian actor}} |
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{{Redirect|Fregoli|the psychiatric disorder named after this actor|Fregoli delusion}} |
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{{Expand Italian|topic=bio|Leopoldo Fregoli|date=January 2016}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2024}} |
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[[File:Leopoldo Fregoli.png|thumb|upright|Leopoldo Fregoli, as he appeared in the Argentinian magazine ''[[Caras y Caretas (Argentina)|Caras y Caretas]]'' in 1935.]] |
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==Quick-change Artist== |
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Fregoli was the greatest |
Fregoli was thought to be the greatest, most versatile [[List of quick-change acts|quick-change]] artist of his day. He was famous for his extraordinary ability in impersonations and his quickness in exchanging roles – so much so that while he was performing in [[London]] in the 1890s, unkind rumours spread that there was more than one Fregoli. He quickly quashed these rumours by inviting journalists and doubters backstage to see him at work: Fregoli had no secrets. He even went to see the host of imitators he inspired ("The Great Trickoli" and "Fregolina" were some examples) and offered them advice about how to improve their performances.{{Citation needed|date=June 2007}} |
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==Early Professional Years== |
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Originally an amateur entertainer, he took his first steps to professionalism while serving in the Italian army in [[Abyssinia]] under [[General Baldissera]] in 1890. A troupe of theatrical performers |
Originally an amateur entertainer, he took his first steps to professionalism while serving in the Italian army in [[Ethiopia|Abyssinia]] under [[Antonio Baldissera|General Baldissera]] in 1890. A troupe of theatrical performers the general hired to entertain his soldiers did not materialise. Fregoli offered to fill in and was an immediate success. General Baldissera subsequently had Fregoli posted, not as a soldier but as a performer, to the theatre at [[Massowah]], which he used to entertain soldiers. Fregoli became the director and stage manager of the theatre and casino. After a year he returned to Italy and performed in Rome, [[Genoa]] and [[Florence]]. In the audience at Florence was a government registry clerk, [[Ugo Biondi]], who was so impressed with Fregoli's performance that he sought him out and asked for some lessons in how to follow in his footsteps. Fregoli generously complied and Biondi went on to be another great quick change artist – first claiming to be a pupil, but later set up as the 'original' Fregoli.{{Citation needed|date=May 2007}} |
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==Alfred Moul== |
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From Italy Fregoli went to [[Brazil]], [[Spain]], and the [[United States]]. While he was in Madrid he was watched in performance by [[Alfred Moul]], the general manager of the [[Alhambra Theatre]] in London's [[Charing Cross Road]] (which was being refitted at that time in the [[Moorish]] style under the direction of the great designer [[Owen Jones]]). Moul had heard of Fregoli's genius and wanted to be the first impresario in [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|Britain]] to sign him up. He subsequently claimed that Fregoli (and his team of supporting assistants) were being paid £350 per week to perform at the Alhambra |
From Italy Fregoli went to [[Brazil]], [[Spain]], and the [[United States]]. While he was in Madrid he was watched in performance by [[Alfred Moul]], the general manager of the [[Alhambra Theatre]] in London's [[Charing Cross Road]] (which was being refitted at that time in the [[Moorish]] style under the direction of the great designer [[Owen Jones (architect)|Owen Jones]]). Moul had heard of Fregoli's genius and wanted to be the first impresario in [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|Britain]] to sign him up. He subsequently claimed that Fregoli (and his team of supporting assistants) were being paid £350 per week to perform at the Alhambra – a remarkable amount for the time. But this was nothing compared to what Fregoli was to generate in ticket sales.{{Citation needed|date=May 2007}} |
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The Alhambra was scheduled to reopen early in March |
The Alhambra was scheduled to reopen early in March 1897 with the premiere of [[Sir Arthur Sullivan]]'s new ballet "[[Victoria and Merrie England]]". There were a few problems with this work (it was rather over-long in its original form) and so it was thought that for a week or two, Leopoldo Fregoli could perform (he needed little in the way of permanent sets, etc.) until Sir Arthur was satisfied his work was just right. Such was Fregoli's success that it was to be late in May of that year before the Sullivan piece was finally performed. |
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==London== |
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⚫ | Fregoli took London by storm. He did quick |
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[[File:Leopoldo Fregoli by Sciutto c1900.png|thumb|upright|Fregoli circa 1900]] |
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⚫ | While there is no doubt Fregoli enjoyed himself and his success, he seems to have been essentially a modest man and he did not wish to carry on in London forever. Late in May |
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⚫ | Fregoli took London by storm. He did quick-fire performances, impersonating [[Richard Wagner|Wagner]], [[Gioacchino Rossini|Rossini]], [[Giuseppe Verdi|Verdi]] and [[Ignacy Jan Paderewski|Paderewski]] one after another. He would exit stage left as a street musician and appear almost immediately stage right as a woman. Everybody - including the great actors and performers of the day, such as [[Dan Leno]] - wanted to see him, and his run was extended and extended, as was the seating in the theatre; not bad for someone who didn't even speak [[English (language)|English]]. The general view of him was that, apart from his obvious abilities as a quick change artist he was - unlike his rivals - a consummate actor and a brilliant writer. He gave private performances for royalty and aristocrats (such as the [[Mayer Amschel Rothschild family|Rothschild]]s, for whom he calmly explained all of his tricks). He inspired a host of imitators, male and female. Every theatre in London soon had its protean artist; even [[Biondi]] was there, performing at the same time. There were spoofers and parodists: journalists claimed tipsy theatregoers were demanding their money back upon discovering that all the performers they had just witnessed were actually just one man.{{Citation needed|date=May 2007}} |
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⚫ | He returned to Italy and subsequently inspired [[Futurism (art)|Futurist]] theatre performers, but very little information is available about him in English. He did write an autobiography (published by [[Rizzoli]]) and was the subject of another book ( |
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==Argentina== |
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A [[psychological]] [[syndrome]], in which people do not recognise their loved ones or mistake strangers for people they know, is known as [[Fregoli delusion]]. |
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⚫ | While there is no doubt Fregoli enjoyed himself and his success, he seems to have been essentially a modest man and he did not wish to carry on in London forever. Late in May 1898 he left for [[Argentina]], promising to be back in London the following February. Whether he did so is presently unclear.{{Citation needed|date=May 2007}} Several of his performances were later filmed. |
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==Paris and International Tours== |
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The Italian magician and quick change artist [[Arturo Brachetti]] is one of the more classic followers of Fregoli's style. His extensive career covers a wide artistic range of versatilty, acting, magic, Chinese shadows. |
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⚫ | Another famous Quick change artist is the Venetian [[Ennio Marchetto]], who has created his own style of quick changes and impersonations. All his costumes, wigs and props are bi-dimensional and made out of cardboard and paper. His costumes transform in front of |
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== Final Years == |
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⚫ | He returned to Italy and subsequently inspired [[Futurism (art)|Futurist]] theatre performers, but very little information is available about him in English. He did write an autobiography (published by [[RCS MediaGroup|Rizzoli]]) and was the subject of another book (Fregoli, 1867–1936. Sa vie et ses secrets by Jean Nohain, Francois Caradec and Fregoli ). The poet [[Joan Brossa]] and the painter [[Antoni Tàpies]] made an [[artist's book]] relating to Fregoli. |
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==Fregoli Delusion== |
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The [[Fregoli delusion]] or Fregoli syndrome is a rare disorder in which a person holds a delusional belief that different people are in fact a single person who changes appearance or is in disguise. The syndrome may be related to a brain lesion and is often of a paranoid nature with the delusional person believing the person they believe to be in disguise is persecuting them. |
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==Followers== |
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The Italian magician and [[List of quick-change acts|Quick-change]] artist [[Arturo Brachetti]] is one of the more classic followers of Fregoli's style. In 1979 he was the first quick change performer in the world after Fregoli. He reinvented this art and new tricks for changing. His extensive career covers a wide artistic range of versatility, acting, magic, Chinese shadows. He is listed in the [[Guinness World Records]] as the quickest and prolific performer in the world.<ref>[http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/12000/most-prolific-quick-change-illusion-artist/ Brachetti in the Guinness Book]</ref> His one-man show has been seen by more than 2,000,000 people worldwide. |
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⚫ | Another famous Quick change artist is the Venetian [[Ennio Marchetto]], who has created his own style of quick changes and impersonations. All his costumes, wigs and props are bi-dimensional and made out of cardboard and paper. His costumes transform in front of the audience like [[origami]]. Also called "The Living Cartoon," Ennio has enjoyed worldwide success since his first appearance at the Edinburgh Fringe in 1989. |
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Another follower was Lizzie Ramsden, billed as 'The Female Fregoli,' who appeared at Music Halls all over Britain and in America from about 1895 - 1904. Born in Bolton, Lancashire in 1867 she died in 1940 in Lambeth and is buried among the stars at Streatham Park Cemetery. |
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==Further reading== |
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*Leopoldo Fregoli, Fregoli raccontato da Fregoli Le memorie del mago del trasformismo, Milano, Rizzoli & C. Editori, 1936. |
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*Luigi Colagreco, "Il cinema negli spettacoli di Leopoldo Fregoli" in ''Bianco & Nero - Bimestrale della Scuola Nazionale del Cinema'', a. LXIII n. 3–4, maggio-agosto 2002, con filmografia a cura di [[Adriano Aprà]], {{ISBN|88-317-7935-4}} |
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*Luigi Colagreco, "Scheda su Leopoldo Fregoli e il Fregoligraph" in ''Le arti multimediali digitali. Storie, tecniche, linguaggi, etiche ed estetiche delle arti del nuovo millennio'', a cura di Anna Maria Monteverdi e Andrea Balzola, Garzanti, Milano, 2004, {{ISBN|88-11-60017-0}} |
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*Alex Rusconi, ''Fregoli - La biografia'', Stampa Alternativa/Nuovi Equilibri, 2011, {{ISBN|978-88-6222-180-1}} |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{commons category}} |
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20080828113508/http://www.salonemargherita.com/docs/fregoli.pdf Amilcare Foscarini, ''Leopoldo Fregoli: la comicità che ha fatto storia''] |
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*[http://www.brachetti.com/ Arturo Brachetti's official web site] |
*[http://www.brachetti.com/ Arturo Brachetti's official web site] |
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*[http://www.enniomarchetto.com/ Ennio Marchetto's official web site] |
*[http://www.enniomarchetto.com/ Ennio Marchetto's official web site] |
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* [http://www.trax.it/olivieropdp/ateatro2002/fregoli.htm Approfondimento] Luigi Colagreco, "Verso la multimedialità? Gli spettacoli di Leopoldo Fregoli fra teatro e cinema" in ''Ateatro - webzine di cultura teatrale'', n. 29 del 15 febbraio 2002. |
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==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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[[Category:1867 births]] |
[[Category:1867 births]] |
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[[Category:1936 deaths]] |
[[Category:1936 deaths]] |
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[[Category:Male actors from Rome]] |
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[[Category:Italian vaudeville performers]] |
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[[ca:Leopoldo Fregoli]] |
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[[fr:Leopoldo Fregoli]] |
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[[it:Leopoldo Fregoli]] |
Latest revision as of 21:45, 15 August 2024
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Italian. (January 2016) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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Leopoldo Fregoli (Italian pronunciation: [leoˈpɔldo ˈfreːɡoli]; 2 July 1867 – 26 November 1936) was an Italian actor.
Quick-change Artist
[edit]Fregoli was thought to be the greatest, most versatile quick-change artist of his day. He was famous for his extraordinary ability in impersonations and his quickness in exchanging roles – so much so that while he was performing in London in the 1890s, unkind rumours spread that there was more than one Fregoli. He quickly quashed these rumours by inviting journalists and doubters backstage to see him at work: Fregoli had no secrets. He even went to see the host of imitators he inspired ("The Great Trickoli" and "Fregolina" were some examples) and offered them advice about how to improve their performances.[citation needed]
Early Professional Years
[edit]Originally an amateur entertainer, he took his first steps to professionalism while serving in the Italian army in Abyssinia under General Baldissera in 1890. A troupe of theatrical performers the general hired to entertain his soldiers did not materialise. Fregoli offered to fill in and was an immediate success. General Baldissera subsequently had Fregoli posted, not as a soldier but as a performer, to the theatre at Massowah, which he used to entertain soldiers. Fregoli became the director and stage manager of the theatre and casino. After a year he returned to Italy and performed in Rome, Genoa and Florence. In the audience at Florence was a government registry clerk, Ugo Biondi, who was so impressed with Fregoli's performance that he sought him out and asked for some lessons in how to follow in his footsteps. Fregoli generously complied and Biondi went on to be another great quick change artist – first claiming to be a pupil, but later set up as the 'original' Fregoli.[citation needed]
Alfred Moul
[edit]From Italy Fregoli went to Brazil, Spain, and the United States. While he was in Madrid he was watched in performance by Alfred Moul, the general manager of the Alhambra Theatre in London's Charing Cross Road (which was being refitted at that time in the Moorish style under the direction of the great designer Owen Jones). Moul had heard of Fregoli's genius and wanted to be the first impresario in Britain to sign him up. He subsequently claimed that Fregoli (and his team of supporting assistants) were being paid £350 per week to perform at the Alhambra – a remarkable amount for the time. But this was nothing compared to what Fregoli was to generate in ticket sales.[citation needed]
The Alhambra was scheduled to reopen early in March 1897 with the premiere of Sir Arthur Sullivan's new ballet "Victoria and Merrie England". There were a few problems with this work (it was rather over-long in its original form) and so it was thought that for a week or two, Leopoldo Fregoli could perform (he needed little in the way of permanent sets, etc.) until Sir Arthur was satisfied his work was just right. Such was Fregoli's success that it was to be late in May of that year before the Sullivan piece was finally performed.
London
[edit]Fregoli took London by storm. He did quick-fire performances, impersonating Wagner, Rossini, Verdi and Paderewski one after another. He would exit stage left as a street musician and appear almost immediately stage right as a woman. Everybody - including the great actors and performers of the day, such as Dan Leno - wanted to see him, and his run was extended and extended, as was the seating in the theatre; not bad for someone who didn't even speak English. The general view of him was that, apart from his obvious abilities as a quick change artist he was - unlike his rivals - a consummate actor and a brilliant writer. He gave private performances for royalty and aristocrats (such as the Rothschilds, for whom he calmly explained all of his tricks). He inspired a host of imitators, male and female. Every theatre in London soon had its protean artist; even Biondi was there, performing at the same time. There were spoofers and parodists: journalists claimed tipsy theatregoers were demanding their money back upon discovering that all the performers they had just witnessed were actually just one man.[citation needed]
Argentina
[edit]While there is no doubt Fregoli enjoyed himself and his success, he seems to have been essentially a modest man and he did not wish to carry on in London forever. Late in May 1898 he left for Argentina, promising to be back in London the following February. Whether he did so is presently unclear.[citation needed] Several of his performances were later filmed.
Paris and International Tours
[edit]His greatest success was in the Olympia Theatre in Paris, where he performed for more than a year. He continued to come back to Paris until 1910. He then for many years toured Italy and South America.
Rather suddenly, in 1922, while performing in Niterói, a city across the bay, opposite Rio de Janeiro, he decided to quit the world of quick change.[citation needed]
Final Years
[edit]He returned to Italy and subsequently inspired Futurist theatre performers, but very little information is available about him in English. He did write an autobiography (published by Rizzoli) and was the subject of another book (Fregoli, 1867–1936. Sa vie et ses secrets by Jean Nohain, Francois Caradec and Fregoli ). The poet Joan Brossa and the painter Antoni Tàpies made an artist's book relating to Fregoli.
He is buried in Italy with the words "His last transformation" on his gravestone.
Fregoli Delusion
[edit]The Fregoli delusion or Fregoli syndrome is a rare disorder in which a person holds a delusional belief that different people are in fact a single person who changes appearance or is in disguise. The syndrome may be related to a brain lesion and is often of a paranoid nature with the delusional person believing the person they believe to be in disguise is persecuting them.
Followers
[edit]The Italian magician and Quick-change artist Arturo Brachetti is one of the more classic followers of Fregoli's style. In 1979 he was the first quick change performer in the world after Fregoli. He reinvented this art and new tricks for changing. His extensive career covers a wide artistic range of versatility, acting, magic, Chinese shadows. He is listed in the Guinness World Records as the quickest and prolific performer in the world.[1] His one-man show has been seen by more than 2,000,000 people worldwide.
Another famous Quick change artist is the Venetian Ennio Marchetto, who has created his own style of quick changes and impersonations. All his costumes, wigs and props are bi-dimensional and made out of cardboard and paper. His costumes transform in front of the audience like origami. Also called "The Living Cartoon," Ennio has enjoyed worldwide success since his first appearance at the Edinburgh Fringe in 1989.
Another follower was Lizzie Ramsden, billed as 'The Female Fregoli,' who appeared at Music Halls all over Britain and in America from about 1895 - 1904. Born in Bolton, Lancashire in 1867 she died in 1940 in Lambeth and is buried among the stars at Streatham Park Cemetery.
Further reading
[edit]- Leopoldo Fregoli, Fregoli raccontato da Fregoli Le memorie del mago del trasformismo, Milano, Rizzoli & C. Editori, 1936.
- Luigi Colagreco, "Il cinema negli spettacoli di Leopoldo Fregoli" in Bianco & Nero - Bimestrale della Scuola Nazionale del Cinema, a. LXIII n. 3–4, maggio-agosto 2002, con filmografia a cura di Adriano Aprà, ISBN 88-317-7935-4
- Luigi Colagreco, "Scheda su Leopoldo Fregoli e il Fregoligraph" in Le arti multimediali digitali. Storie, tecniche, linguaggi, etiche ed estetiche delle arti del nuovo millennio, a cura di Anna Maria Monteverdi e Andrea Balzola, Garzanti, Milano, 2004, ISBN 88-11-60017-0
- Alex Rusconi, Fregoli - La biografia, Stampa Alternativa/Nuovi Equilibri, 2011, ISBN 978-88-6222-180-1
External links
[edit]- Amilcare Foscarini, Leopoldo Fregoli: la comicità che ha fatto storia
- Leopoldo Fregoli at IMDb
- Arturo Brachetti's official web site
- Ennio Marchetto's official web site
- Approfondimento Luigi Colagreco, "Verso la multimedialità? Gli spettacoli di Leopoldo Fregoli fra teatro e cinema" in Ateatro - webzine di cultura teatrale, n. 29 del 15 febbraio 2002.