Burattino is one of three ''commedia dell'arte
masks mentioned by Bartolomeo Rossi in the foreword to his 1584 comic pastoral play Fiammella'', as examples of low-life characters who speak the
Bergamasque dialect (usually approximate), the other two being
Pedrolino and
Arlecchino. As a rustic dialect, it signaled the character's low social status and was used in Italian theatre into the 18th century. Burattino is in 21 of the 50
scenarios of
Flaminio Scala, published in 1611. He appears as a house servant, an innkeeper, a gardener, a peasant, a beggar, and a long-lost father. Like Pedrolino, Burrattino is extremely good natured. He is so trustworthy that, in the third of Scala's scenarios, "The Fortunate Isabella", the lone
innamorata Isabella takes him along as her sole accompaniment on a journey across the country. When he later in the play believes (mistakenly) that Isabella has been kidnapped and raped, he weeps and laments at length. Buratino is the protagonist of
Alexei Tolstoy's novel
The Golden Key, or The Adventures of Buratino, which was inspired by The Adventures of Pinocchio, a literary fairy tale written by the Italian author Carlo Collodi. The two characters share many similarities. ==References==