Raffaele Viviani

Viviani appeared at age 4 on the stage, and by age 20 he had acquired a solid nationwide reputation as an actor and playwright. He also played in Budapest, Paris, Tripoli, and throughout South America during his career. His plays are in the "anti-Pirandello" style, less concerned with the psychology of people than with the lives they lead. Viviani's best known-work is ''L'ultimo scugnizzo'' (The Last Urchin) (1931), ''scugnizzo'' being the underclass Neapolitan street child. Viviani composed songs and incidental music for many of his earlier works. One such well-known melodrama is ''Via Toledo di notte'' (''Via Toledo by Night''), a 1918 work which even incorporates American cakewalk and ragtime rhythms to tell the story of the "street people" of Via Toledo, the most famous street in Naples. Provided by Wikipedia
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