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The silent film Cenere (Ashes) is the only cinematic ""expression""
of Eleonora Duse (1858-1924), the greatest of all Italian
actresses. Taken from the homonymous novel by Grazia Deledda (Nobel
Prize for Literature in 1926), it offers us the highest proof of
Duse's silence and of her spiritual meditation as an artist: on the
screen she remembered all the ""mother-roles"" that she had created
for the theatre, and used them to create a new performance for a
new medium. The genesis, the development and the difficulties
involved in the making of Cenere, are evident in the essays of this
collection. Duse's perfectionism was too advanced for the rules of
the Italian movie industry of the 1910s: now we render historical
justice to the many facets of her work, and not only as an actress,
illustrating her broader opinion of the silent movie industry as it
developed in war-time Italy. The publication of the current
collection marks the 100th anniversary of the making of Cenere, and
brings together, for the first time in English, a broad survey of
scholarship surrounding Duse's only film performance seen within
the creative, political and historical context of its time.
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