Tag Archives: Riccardo Pippa

VISITE

★★★★

Coronet Theatre

VISITE

Coronet Theatre

★★★★

“a moving, sharply observed piece that captures life from every angle”

‘Visite’, created by Teatro dei Gordi with Teatro Franco Parenti, makes its UK debut with quietly moving power. Set in the room where most of life unfolds – a bedroom – the piece traces the rituals, reactions and transitions that carry us from youth to old age with precise observation and beautifully crafted movement.

A bedroom. An older woman. A life distilled. ‘Visite’ compresses a family’s decades into a single room, revealing the weight of ageing while still finding glimmers of joy.

Riccardo Pippa’s movement driven concept – devised with cast members Cecilia Campani, Giovanni Longhin, Andrea Panigatti, Sandro Pivotti, Maria Vittoria Scarlattei and Matteo Vitanza, and shaped by Giulia Tollis’ dramaturgy – asks a simple question: what stories does a single room hold? The result is a series of overlapping and colliding lives as they visit and inhabit one of our most private spaces. Through precise movement and minimal dialogue, we feel time stretch and contract – from the exuberance of youth to the routines of adulthood, followed by the sudden shock of losing your independence. It’s a sharply observed, hard-hitting, hope filled portrait of life in all its seasons.

Pippa’s direction, with assistant Daniele Cavone Felicioni, gives the show’s decades-long arcs real lift. Tight, articulate movement and vivid expression chart the emotional sweep from youthful ebullience to the habits and heartbreaks of adulthood. The time passing sequence, showing routines becoming embedded as age quietly creeps in, is genius. However, the birthday scene is less clear, blurring whether we’re fast forwarding, witnessing grief, showing decline, or perhaps some combination. The stark change of pace in the new bedroom is rather jarring, its relative stillness dragging a little. But this enforced boredom cleverly mirrors the character’s loneliness and ultimately lands the intended point with force. Overall, it’s a striking, compassionate piece of direction.

The design delivers a cohesive, thoughtful world. Ilaria Ariemme’s exaggerated masks land as a pointed metaphor for ageism, while frequent yet subtle costume changes smartly track the stages of life. Anna Maddalena Cingi’s homely scenography – especially the evolving bedding, a tiny detail that could easily have been overlooked – gives the room real lived in warmth. Paolo Casati’s lighting is understated but striking, moving from crisp geometric shadows to softer washes, with a shadow play moment hinting at life outside those four walls. Luca De Marinis’ sound design is witty and perceptive, questioning why ageing means abandoning the music we love, and using volume to cleverly signify freedom and volition.

Campani, Longhin, Panigatti, Pivotti, Scarlattei and Vitanza form a tight, expressive ensemble, bringing real clarity to their shifting roles. Their physical storytelling is strong, charting the journey from youthful optimism to late life fragility well – though a few details could push the octogenarian physicality further. The brief dialogue lands well, especially the wonderfully awkward “Onion” poem, capturing exactly the careful, slightly stilted tone of bedside reading.

‘Visite’ is a moving, sharply observed piece that captures life from every angle. With a little tightening, it has the potential to be extraordinary.



VISITE

Coronet Theatre

Reviewed on 16th May 2026

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Noemi Ardesi


 

 

 

 

VISITE

VISITE

VISITE