The Teatro CortéSe, on Viale del Capricorno in the Colli Aminei district, continues a season rich in cultural rediscoveries. On Saturday, April 18th at 9:00 PM and Sunday, April 19th, with repeats at 6:00 PM and 8:30 PM, Gianni Caputo presents "Quanno pazziavo 'o strummolo," written and directed by him. Not just a recital, but an emotional immersion into the world of Raffaele Viviani, with songs, poems, and biographical anecdotes brought to life on stage.
A journey through Neapolitan memory
After hits like "'O ciardino d' 'e pparole," "Fu re da doppio lodi" about Eduardo De Filippo, and "Prince of Smiles and King of Emotions" about Totò, Caputo delves into the heritage of 20th-century Naples. Here, words become gestures, memory becomes a living presence: a show that avoids sterile nostalgia, focusing on an authentic tension toward what endures.
Music as a beating heart
Accompanying Caputo are Daniele Esposito on accordion and Pierpaolo Iermano on guitar. Their sounds evoke Vivian's atmosphere, a blend of melancholy and vitality. Music isn't a backdrop, but its essence: a counterpoint to the words, a shared breath.
Viviani's humanity, between pain and dignity
Under the direction of Anna Sciotti and the artistic direction of Giuseppe Giorgio, Viviani's world emerges: the least fortunate, the forgotten, crushed by fate but never vanquished. Stubborn figures who rebel against anger and dignity, smiling at their wounds. A pared-down, unrhetorical piece that questions the present from the stage of CortéSe.
In short
The CortéSe Theater, on Viale del Capricorno in the Colli Aminei area, continues a season rich in cultural rediscoveries.
- On Saturday, April 18th at 9:00 PM and Sunday, April 19th, with repeats at 6:00 PM and 8:30 PM, Gianni Caputo brings “Quanno…” to the stage.
- Not just a recital, but an emotional immersion into Raffaele Viviani's universe, with songs, poems, and biographical anecdotes brought to life on…
- A journey through Neapolitan memory. After hits like "'O ciardino d' 'e pparole" and "Fu re da doppio lodi" about Eduardo…
Key questions
What is the main point of the news?
The CortéSe Theater, on Viale del Capricorno in the Colli Aminei area, continues a season rich in cultural rediscoveries.
Why is this news relevant?
On Saturday, April 18th at 9:00 PM and Sunday, April 19th, with repeats at 6:00 PM and 8:30 PM, Gianni Caputo brings “Quanno…” to the stage.
Which detail helps us understand the case better?
Not just a recital, but an emotional immersion into Raffaele Viviani's universe, with songs, poems, and biographical anecdotes brought to life on stage.









The show was intriguing, but not always convincing; the acting sometimes seemed overdone, other times too subdued. The music sometimes overlapped the speech, the set design seemed sparse but worked, you could tell the actors tried to honor Viviani, but something just didn't fit. I remain curious to see further performances.
Interesting initiative, but the review doesn't seem entirely clear; it seems rushed, with jumbled words and broken sentences. I'd like to know more about performances, times, and prices so I can decide whether to go; without this information, it's difficult to judge.
I read the article, but I can't say I completely agree; it leaves a neutral and distant impression. The setting in the Colli Aminei is described as a living place, but the historical context is confused with anecdotes, and the notes seem to overwhelm the words, or blend together poorly.
It seems like an interesting memoir, but I'm not sure about everything; I find the description a bit confusing and fragmented, with sentences that stick together and a lot of unnecessary repetition. The music should help, but the lyrics get lost and I can't quite understand them.