troupe
I Gelosi performing, by
Hieronymus Francken I, ,
Musée Carnavalet, Paris However, , Scala became the company's resident
stock character, Flavio. Much of the company had been made up of actors who were seeking work after separating themselves from
Ganassa. Scala also held the position as director with the Ganassa Company from 1571 up until practicing under Francesco Andreini in 1577. Members of the company included Vittoria Piisimi, Isabella Arreini, Lodovico da Bologna, Giulio Pasquati, Simone da Bologna, Gabriele Panzanini, Orazio Nobili and a host of other notable playmakers. Records also show that Scala also invested his time into another theatre company under the name Confidenti, which also ended up being successful. Confidenti made a home for itself in France in the year 1571. While the company had established a positive reputation for itself, much of its members were shareholders. This stock character made up the male half of the pair of young lovers that were central to the plots of scenarios in Italian ''commedia dell'arte
. Typically, the innamorati'' were as much in love with one another as they were with themselves and frequently kept apart by circumstances outside their control. Scala is credited with bringing the famous sixteenth-century actress and poet
Isabella Andreini into
I Gelosi to play opposite him as his
inamorata, making him considered the stage's first professional producer. Isabella, the sixteen-year-old wife of the actor
Francesco Andreini (whose
stage name was Capitan Spavento), went on to become such a celebrated actress in her own right that a new role known as the
Isabella was created in her honor. She later died while traveling from Paris to Italy in 1604. Following his work with
I Gelosi, Scala was associated as an actor and occasionally as an agent with the
i Accesi (Stimulated Ones),
i Desiosi, (Desired Ones), and
i Uniti (United Ones) from 1579 through 1596. ==Staging and portraying Scala's work==