Tag: "review"

Roberto Benigni’s TuttoDante in New York

If you attended TuttoDante show in New York, write and send your comments/reviews/photos to www.unbenignidanobel.it .
Send a message to
info@unbenignidanobel.it – we’ll publish your articles in our website.

Here are some photos from yesterday night: Roberto Benigni performing on the stage of Hammerstein Ballroom, Manhattan Center, and after the show meeting friends and journalists (in the last two pictures
you can see Jim Jarmusch behind Roberto Benigni) :

If you’re going to San Francisco…

“If you’re going to San Francisco Be sure to wear some flowers in your hair”……

If you’re going to see Roberto Benigni in San Francisco, be sure to write and send your comments/reviews/photos to www.unbenignidanobel.it .

[Send a message to info@unbenignidanobel.it - we'll publish your articles in our website.]

Roberto Benigni is making his American stage debut at the Davies Symphony Hall on May 26 in San Francisco with his one-man show TuttoDante.

Roberto Benigni in TuttoDante

Where: Davies Symphony Hall, 201 Van Ness Ave., San Francisco


*The first live comments from Twitter
during and after the show:

- Benigni wonders why no the bidet in his hotel? Troppo Forte!

- Pope productized purgatory to increase revenue! Benigni is hilarious!

- it was una cosa incredibile! The last part was an elocution like rendition of Canto 5.
Dante’s poetry an infinite labyrinth of words that express infinite emotions of man.

- Intoxicated by Dante Alighieri’s poetry Roberto Benigni’s comedy and theatrical rendition of Canto V; forza l’amore.

- roberto benigni was hilarious in tutto dante. guys in nyc try to get a ticket , he’s coming there next.

- Went to see Roberto Benigni perform (and discuss) Canto V of Dante’s Inferno. Fantastic.

- Saw Roberto Benigni in TuttoDante at Davies Symphony Hall last night. Part stand-up act, part in-depth lecture and all inspiring. Genius!

- Still laughing at the incredible show (‘TuttoDante’ w/Roberto Benigni) I saw last night- he is an amazing talent.

- The only thing that I didn’t like was that the sow had to finish! Thanks Roberto Benigni!!!!! (Giovanna)


Tom Waits attended TuttoDante show in San Francisco, he was seen in the audience of Davies Symphony Hall.
In a recent interview, Roberto Benigni answered to a question about “Down by Law“: “[...] For me it was a dream, this is such a wonderful memory, such a wonderful souvenir. And what it is very rare, I met also Tom Waits and John Lurie, the musician and the singer, and we are still very close friends.“.


After the long weekend a little culture was in order. We went along to the Davies Symphony Hall to be entertained by the famous Italian comic Roberto Benigni.
After a very light-hearted and engagingly funny introduction and warm up. He led us all through a very deep and thought-provoking journey by walking us through the 3rd circle of hell in Dante’s Inferno. He finished off the evening with an inspired and heartfelt recitation from Dante.
[Credit: The Spotted Zebra]


…..Did you like TuttoDante show? Join our Facebook group “TuttoDante di Roberto Benigni (the group now has more than 1300 members).

A nice review about TuttoDante in London

(The Teenage Theatre Critic) – My word this was something special. Dante’s Divine Comedy seems all the rage right now but Roberto Benigni’s “Tutto Dante” is about as far from Romeo Castellucci’s abysmal “Inferno” as it’s possible to conceive. From the off it was clear that the sheer energy and bravado of Benigni was going to be hard to resist. Seldom have I heard a man enthuse more about art and life than Benigni. Most in Britain would be embarrassed to express such love for the arts but he does it with such wild abandon that I couldn’t help but feel the same.

The opening half hour or so amounts to the most high-brow stand-up you’re ever going to come across. His English isn’t quite perfect (although it’s very impressive and he did the entire show effectively without notes) but his Tigger like energy and endless passion for everything he talked about made the slightest joke hysterical. He merely had to mention Silvio Berlusconi to have the entire audience crying with laughter. The tone shifts slowly into the more serious Dante content but the tone was never heavy with a constant stream of stories that never got dull.

He was most exposed when he got to the nitty gritty of the text and often shifted into Italian, although he tried hard not too and considering the huge proportion of the audience who spoke the language it didn’t much matter either way, but from a non-speaker it became a little confusing. His real love for the subject was entirely evident however no matter what he was saying or in what language. When he finally read the passage (Canto V of Inferno) it was like hearing a great Shakespearean actor declaiming for all his worth. I could only cursorily understand, although single words were enough to jog my memory of the hour long lesson that had preceeded. Lesson is really the wrong word; if all my lessons had been this compelling I’d be a much smarter guy than I am.

Benigni is a great entertainer but he’s also a fabulous educator, producing pearl after pearl of fascinating insight whether directly linked to Dante or not. The remarkably easy mix of comedy with textual analysis is shockingly impressive; I don’t think I’ve ever come across anything quite like this before. I left the theatre feeling that not only had I enjoyed myself thoroughly but that I’d learnt something worthwhile and even more curiously felt better about the world we live in. “TuttoDante” is a majestic, life affirming evening, a journey I’d take over and over again if I had the chance. I couldn’t have higher praise for Roberto Benigni, a true genius.

Posted by The Teenage Theatre Critic at 07:00, 6 april 2009

Roberto Benigni at Theatre Royal – A review by The Telegraph

Italian national hero, Benigni, delivers one-man show Tutto Dante – a comical yet serious enterprise.

By Cassandra Jardine (The Telegraph)

The atmosphere at Roberto Benigni’s one-man show Tutto Dante (“Everything about Dante”) was more akin to a football match than a night at the theatre. With tutti gli Italiani in the UK, it seemed, assembled at the Theatre Royal, there were whoops and stamping feet before the man himself even bounced on stage, accompanied by circus music and whirling lights.

Benigni has long been a national hero in Italy. Climbing over the seats to collect his Oscar for the 1997 tragicomedy La Vita è bella (Life Is Beautiful) was only the most conspicuous of his acts of iconoclasm. Since the 1970s he has been adored as a satirist of Italy’s politicians. But, over the past three years, he has added to his hero status through his touring show dedicated to Italy’s medieval literary giant, Dante Alighieri, author of The Divine Comedy.

But before Benigni got down to the serious business of the evening, he acted as his own warm-up artist. His jokes about Italy’s prime minister Silvio Berlusconi raised easy laughs, but were none the less funny for that – not least because he delivered them in English. The advance publicity had said that the show would be in Italian, with no surtitles (because he improvises), so the shift was greeted with relief from the minority of the Brits – and sighs of disappointment from the Italians. “It will be like Mr Bean in Rome talking about Milton,” said Benigni. But despite his comic delivery, this was a serious enterprise, a homage to a great era of 13th- and 14th-century Italian culture.

In the years immediately before Dante (1265-1321) was writing, he explained, the Florentines (of whom Benigni is one) gave us our banking system (ho, ho), the piano and violin, the artistic breakthroughs of Giotto and the lettered notes in which our music is written. To him, however, The Divine Comedy is the period’s crowning achievement, the first poem in which the author uses “I” and reflects contemporary life.

Having never got much further than the famous first line: “Nel mezzo del camin di nostra vita,” my Italian became increasingly stretched as he explained various nuances of his chosen section, the Fifth Canto of the Inferno which deals with lechery.

By the time he reached the final section – a recitation of the poem itself – I was out of my depth. It didn’t matter. He recited the words so animatedly, but with such reverence for the 11-syllable lines, that it was like listening to great music. Millions of Italians have so far risen to their feet to cheer at the end of this show; this evening was no exception.

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