La Locandiera

La Locandiera (The Mistress of the Inn) is a 1753 three-act comedy by Carlo Goldoni (1707-1793).

The original text
Written in 1753, this three-act comedy about a coquettish inn-owner was first staged during the Carnival of Venice in January 1753, and published in Florence that same year. However the play was no great success apparently and failed completely at the Italian Theater in Paris in 1764 (as a two act piece under the title Camille, Aubergiste). However, rediscovered, it was taken on a tour of Europe by a company of Venetian actors and triumphantly revived with a Parisian production of 1830. It has since been regarded as Goldoni's masterpiece.

Translations and adaptations
Best known in South Africa as Mirandolina (after the play's main character), an English translation and adaptation by Clifford Bax  (1886-1962), but there are several other translations into English with different titles:

E.g. The Mistress of the Inn, The Innkeeper Woman, Miranda, etc.,

Another translation, also by Clifford Bax, is entitled Mine Hostess and is included in Three comedies by  Carlo Goldoni, edited by Gabriele Baldini, published by Oxford University Press, 1961.

Bax's version, Mirandolina, was translated into Afrikaans as Moeite met die Minnaars ("Trouble with suitors") by Mariechen Naudé in 1968.

The play has also been adapted for operatic and ballet versions (inter alia by Antonio Salieri and Domenico Poggi in 1773) and films.

Performance history in South Africa
1957: Performed as Mirandolina by Pietro Nolte for the Cape Town Theatre Company, March 1957, starring Lydia Lindeque.

1962: Performed as Mirandolina by Brian Brooke Company, and possibly involving Malcolm Woolfson(???) (It appears Mirandolina was produced by the Brian Brooke Company, but the date and venue are unknown, while Malcolm Woolfson was involved in a production of Mirandolina in 1962. Possibly these are the same).

1968: Performed in Afrikaans as Moeite met die Minnaars. Directed for PACOFS by Roy Sargeant with Johan Botha, Neels Coetzee, Lynette Marais, Raymond Davies, George Barnes, Michael Lovegrove, Maryann Johnston and Estelle Davidtz. This production also toured Natal in September 1968.

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