Gaspare Canino was born in Partinico, in the
province of Palermo, on 28 May 1900. The Canino family came from
Trapani and in 1700 moved to
Palermo, where Alberto (don Liberto Canino), who later became a
puppetmaster, was born; at first he made
cylinder pianos. Don Liberto had two sons that inherited their father's art: Antonio e Luigi. Antonio settled in Partinico and Luigi in Alcamo. The latter married Maria Concetta La Rocca and had five children: Alberto, Giuseppe, Gaspare, Guglielmo and Rosetta. In 1913 Don Luigi expatriated alone to
Argentina in search of his fortune, leaving the family; his son, Gaspare, after a quarrel with his uncle, whom he lived with, started to wander through
Sicily, until he settled in the small theatre-laboratory of his father, who came back home after four years and resumed his activity of puppetmaster. Gaspare and Guglielmo continued the work they had learnt: Guglielmo settled in
Sciacca, while Gaspare remained with his father in Alcamo. Gaspare got married with Antonia Fundarò, and had three daughters: Maria Concetta, Melchiorra e Rosetta. As Don Luigi could not run the activity any longer, because it implied also a continuous work of maintenance, it was up to Gaspare to get the old little theatre of via Manzoni in order, and represent the enterprises of
Charlemagne and his
paladins, Guido Santo,
Jerusalem Delivered, Trabazio emperor of
Constantinople,
Saint Genevieve,
Beati Paoli, the
brigand Giuseppe Musolino and the
Battle of Roncevaux Pass. Besides there were some
farces with comic popular characters like "Virticchiu and Nofrio". In the 1960s cinema and television attracted young people, so fewer people went to see the
Opera dei Pupi. One day, dottor Antonio Pasqualino, who was passionate about Sicilian puppets, decided to buy all that the puppet masters wanted to sell, and created the Museo internazionale delle marionette (International Museum of Puppets) in Palermo; Gaspare sold everything too: his puppets, backclothes,
playbills and wings. On the initiative of
Regione Siciliana, don Gaspare Canino was given a silver
plaque as
Cavaliere of Sicilian
Folklore, at the museum
Giuseppe Pitrè, and on the same occasion he donated an old puppet made by his grandfather Liberto to the foundation. He died in Alcamo in 1977; since 1990 his work has been continued by his niece, Salvatore Oliveri, who builds puppets, has a puppet theatre inside the
Castle of the Counts of Modica in Alcamo and gives public shows. == Works ==