
Gino Capriolo Theater Library
The Gino Capriolo Theater Library is a specialist collection dedicated to theatrical history and dramatic literature in Naples, Campania. Named after the Neapolitan theatre scholar and playwright Gino Capriolo, the library serves as a documentary centre for the rich performing arts tradition of Naples, a city whose theatrical heritage spans from the commedia dell’arte to the 20th-century stage.
At a glance
- Type
- Specialist theatrical library and documentary archive
- Period
- Collections focusing on Neapolitan theatrical history from the 17th century to the present
- Style
- Archive and library institution
- Location
- Naples, Campania, Italy
- Coordinates
- 40.8416° N, 14.2521° E
Overview
The library collects and preserves scripts, printed editions of Neapolitan dramatic texts, playbills, photographic archives, and critical literature relating to theatre in Naples and the Campania region. Naples has one of the most distinctive theatrical traditions in Italy, encompassing the dialect theatre rooted in commedia dell’arte masks — most notably Pulcinella — as well as the works of Eduardo De Filippo, one of the 20th century’s most celebrated European playwrights. The Capriolo library documents this continuum from early modern performance to contemporary stage practice.
History
Neapolitan theatre has been a vital cultural force since the 16th century, when commedia dell’arte troupes touring from Naples brought the Pulcinella character to stages across Europe. The 18th and 19th centuries saw Naples develop as a major operatic centre — the San Carlo opera house, founded in 1737, is the oldest continuously active opera house in the world. The spoken theatre tradition, culminating in the internationally acclaimed works of Eduardo De Filippo in the 20th century, provides the scholarly focus for much of the Capriolo collection.
What you see
The collection encompasses printed editions of Neapolitan dialect plays, original manuscripts and typescripts, production photographs, and the personal papers of theatre figures associated with the Neapolitan stage. Playbills and programmes from historic theatres such as the San Ferdinando and the Mercadante document performances across several generations. Researchers use the archive to study the evolution of the Neapolitan dialect stage from its improvised early-modern roots to the literary theatre of the De Filippo era.
Cultural significance
Naples’s theatrical tradition is a UNESCO-recognised element of Italian intangible cultural heritage, and the Capriolo library is a primary research resource for the study of that tradition. Its focus on dialect theatre preserves a linguistic and performative heritage that exists at the intersection of local identity and global influence, given Pulcinella’s reach into European popular culture.
Practical information
- Address
- Naples, Campania, Italy
- Hours
- Check official website or contact the library for current opening times and access conditions
- Admission
- Check official website
Getting there
Naples is served by Naples Centrale railway station with high-speed connections to Rome (70 minutes), Milan, and Florence. The historic centre is accessible via the Circumvesuviana and metro lines. Naples Capodichino Airport has direct international connections. Once in the city, local metro and bus services connect to the main cultural institutions.
Sources & resources
Find it on the map
See this place and what’s around it →📷 Diventa un fotografo di Cultural Heritage Online
Condividi le tue foto dei luoghi: restano pubblicate con la tua firma come autore. Più vengono viste, più ti fai conoscere — e presto un concorso premierà le foto più apprezzate.
Accedi o registrati gratis per aggiungere una fotoDo you manage this place?
This page is read by travellers and heritage enthusiasts who find it on Google. Keep it accurate — and make it work for you. Free for non-profit heritage institutions.
