Entremés
Entremés, is a short and comic theatrical performance
of one act, usually played during the interlude of a performance
of a long dramatic work, in the 16th and 17th centuries in
Spain. Later it became the sainete.
When the genre begun it was written both in prose and verse,
but after Luis Quiñones de Benavente (1600-1650) defined
the genre, all works were written in verse. The usual characters
of the entremés were the common people; the plot usually
satirized the customs and the occupations of the characters,
subjects that couldn't be treated in the dramatic works during
which the entremés works were played.
Sometimes the playings included songs that were the origin
to another genre, the tonadilla.
Some of the most important authors of this genre are: Miguel
de Cervantes, Francisco de Quevedo, Luis Quiñones de
Benavente, Luis Vélez de Guevara, Alonso Jerónimo
de Salas Barbadillo, Alonso del Castillo Solórzano,
Antonio Hurtado de Mendoza, Francisco Bernardo de Quirós,
Jerónimo de Cáncer y Velasco, Pedro Calderón
de la Barca, Vicente Suárez de Deza y Ávila,
Sebastián Rodríguez de Villaviciosa, Agustín
Moreto and Francisco Bances Candamo.
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