Liolà Explained

Liolà
Place:Teatro Argentina, Rome
Orig Lang:Sicilian
Genre:comedy

Liolà (pronounced as /it/) is an Italian stage play written by Luigi Pirandello in 1916, which takes place in 19th century Sicily. The original text was composed in the Sicilian dialect of Agrigento. The title character is a middle-aged single father by choice. He has three young boys, each by a different mother. Liolà is a free-spirit who wanders from town to town, looking to connect with nature, and to create children without having any ties to the mother. He tries to sell one of his boys to Zio Simone, a crabby elderly man, who becomes offended by the offer. He then has an encounter with Mita, a former lover, who tells him that he is the father of her unborn child. Pirandello immortalizes Liolà as an ideal father, and in certain scenes in the play, Liolà shows a lot of love and affection to his children.

"Liola disclosed an unfamiliar side of Pirandello. It is the work of his Sicilian origins and in place of the fractured perspective of illusion and reality its view of the world is as down-to-earth as a primitive painting with landscape and figures equally expressive of the one theme of fecundity."[1]

Film adaptations

Theatrical adaptation

External links

Notes and References

  1. The Times, Liola, Bloomsbury Theatre, Irving Wardle, 28th July 1982.https://archive.org/details/IrwingWardleTheTimesReviewOfLiola28July1982
  2. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0057252/?ref_=ttfc_fc_tt
  3. https://archive.org/details/daily-telegraph-deceit-in-a-sicilian-village-harold-atkins Press File Liola
  4. Web site: Liola CityLimits review by Michael Stewart .
  5. Rosalind Carne, Liola/Bloomsbury, Wednesday 28th July,1982.https://archive.org/details/LiolaFT
  6. Harold Atkins Liola review The Telegraph, " Deceit in an Italian Village", 28 July 1982. https://archive.org/details/DailyTelegraphDeceitInASicilianVillageHaroldAtkins
  7. [The Times]
  8. Web site: 'piace a Londra 'Liola'in teatro. 20 July 1982. Corriere della Serra. Internet Archive.
  9. Web site: Liola by Pirandello. August 2013. Charles Spencer. The Telegraph. telegraph.co.uk.
  10. Web site: Liola by Pirandello. August 2013. Nancy Goves. WhatsonStage. whatsonstage.com.