Skip to main content
x
# 3THINGSTODOINAPRIL

#aselfie with …

a bouquet of daffodils, Santa Zita's flowers.

 

bouquet of daffodils, Santa Zita's flowers.

 

 

8th appointment for the "digital season" of the Teatro del Giglio with a totally new streaming edition. Talk and music to reveal and tell about the various aspects of being a musician, proposing ideas and suggestions to the audience.


A combination between educational TV series and live recitals, retracing ten titles of the Puccini repertoire, from Le Villi to Turandot. A series of appointments of 45 minutes each, every two weeks.

In the program today, Saturday 27 March

How I met Puccini

From Lucca to London and around the world. A little streaming and a little "edutment" TV series (education and entertainment).
Giacomo Puccini, open minded for different communication styles as well as a genius of music, would have appreciated this kind of combination.

 
"How I met Puccini" is a totally new format. Ten titles from the Puccini repertoire, from Le Villi to Turandot, with events of 45 minutes each, scheduled every two weeks, started in December and have accompanied us throughout the winter period.

#thingstodoinmarch

Save the date on the diary for March 25, the "Dante-Day".

According to scholars, in fact, on March 25th 1300 Dante Alighieri started his descent into the underworld "In the middle of the journey of our life...". The rest is part of ... "the Divine Comedy" the most important "novel" of italian literature.
 
And for this reason, in the month of March our three #thingstodo will be dedicated to him.

 
1 - #aselfiewith ... Dante!

 

 

2nd celebration of Dante-Day, the day dedicated to Dante Alighieri recently established by the Government (www.beniculturali.it/dantedì). In fact, March 25 is the date that scholars identify as the beginning of the celestial journey of the Divine Comedy.
The 2021 edition is the most significant, because it coincides with the 700th anniversary of death of the Supreme Poet.

A day in Lucca with Dante

It has to be said that the people of Lucca, among the Tuscans, were not Dante's real  favourites....and  even in the Divine Comedy, except for a few characters, he always mentions them as a bad example, as flatterers, barterers and gluttons.

Subscribe to