Corral de comedias de Almagro

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The corral is situated on Plaza Mayor in the city centre.

Corral de comedias de Almagro ("Courtyard theatre of Almagro") is located at Plaza Mayor in Almagro, Castile-La Mancha, Spain.[n 1] The building is the best preserved example of the corral de comedias of the 17th century.

Rediscovered during the renovation of the Plaza Mayor in 1953,[1] it was inaugurated on 29 May 1954 with a play by Calderon de la Barca.[2][n 2] The Festival Internacional de Teatro Clásico (International Classical Theatre Festival), is annually celebrated at the corral.

Establishment and later use

Interior appearance of the corral de comedias de Almagro.
Exterior façade facing Plaza Mayor.

This corral de comedias, initially under private ownership and later given to charity, was located within the precincts of an inn situated on the southern side of Plaza Mayor in the city center.[3] The construction of the place where the theatre is now located, is in conformity with the prevalent building codes in Spain in 1584.[1] A report from 1618 verifies it to be the last open air theater in the country.[1]

Its establishment is on a report dated 1628 and credited to Don Leonardo de Oviedo, cleric and ordained priest of the former parish of St. Bartholomew in Calatrava.[4] Descended from an Asturian family of Jewish origin,[4] he made a payment of 5,000 ducats, a fortune at the time, in order to build this corral by expanding the well-known Taberna del Toro through the acquisition of neighboring properties.[4] After the death of Don Leonardo in February 1640, the property ownership passed on to his sister Dona Beatriz de Oviedo y Prado,[4] who bequeathed it to her daughter Dona Maria de Bivero y Prado,[4] to be inherited by her son Don Bernardino de Villarreal y Oviedo in 1715.[1] A lawsuit filed on 2 August of that year, already attested to its existence in 1680.[1]

The first recorded performance was given in 1629 by Juan Martinez's theatrical company Autor, one of the twelve authorized companies to perform such plays in Spain.[1] In 1631, the companies of Francisco Lopez and Alonzo Olmedo Tofino staged their plays here.[4] In the eighteenth century, with the enforced prohibition on corral construction, that corral the comedias was converted into a lodging house known by the names Taberna de las Comedias and Taberna de la Fruta,[4] a fact which greatly contributed to its preservation. The corral was again reported to be in use in 1802,[n 3][2] but no trace was left of the structure after 1857, except for its use as a courtyard.

During the twentieth century

Performance of El médico a palos by a Spanish theatrical company.

In 1950, when Plaza Mayor was being rebuilt, the owner of an inn, while doing his daily chores, found a hand-painted Spanish card deck dated to the early eighteenth century. He brought it to the attention of the City Council and his alcalde, Julian Calero, who then sent it to the civil governor of the province, Don José María del Moral. Because of this finding and other important documents, local experts sent to evaluate the place estimated that this structure might well have been a comedy theater.

During the reconstruction work done by M. Gonzalez Valcarcel in 1953,[1] the brick walls which concealed the place were removed and the stage area of the theatre appeared almost intact, at which point it was decided that the site, still in the hands of the owners, should be restored. Following the restoration work the site was interpreted as being a historic monument of the 17th or 18th century,[1] and then opened to the public on 29 May 1954 with the premiere of La Hidalga del Valle by Calderon de la Barca.[2] Later, it became the venue for the International Classical Theatre Festival of Almagro held during the month of July in five distinct areas, including this corral.[5] Additional history details were disclosed by Concepcion Garcia de Leon Álvarez, and published in La Construction del Corral de Comedias de Almagro in 2000.

Structure

Additional information

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI