).
Pantalone is front and center, while just to the right and slightly behind is Harlequin in motley costume, "the oldest known version of Harlequin's costume". The re-interpretation of the "devil" stock character as a
Zanni character of the
commedia dell'arte took place in the 16th century in France.
Zan Ganassa, whose troupe is first mentioned in
Mantua in the late 1560s, is one of the earliest known actors suggested to have performed the part, although there is "little hard evidence to support [it]". Ganassa performed in France in 1571, and if he did play the part there, he left the field open for another actor to take up the role, when he took his troupe to Spain permanently in 1574. Among the earliest depictions of the character are a Flemish painting () in the Museum of
Bayeux 's Harlequin costume as depicted in his
Compositions de rhétorique, 1601
Tristano Martinelli is the first actor definitely known to have used the name "Harlequin" (or "Arlequin") from French folklore and adapted it for the comic
secondo Zanni role, and he probably first performed the part in France in (or just before) 1584 and only later did he bring the character to Italy, where he became known as Arlecchino. The motley costume is sometimes attributed to Martinelli, who wore a linen costume of colourful patches, and a hare-tail on his cap to indicate cowardice. Martinelli's Harlequin also had a black leather
half-mask, a moustache and a pointed beard. He was very successful, even playing at court and becoming a favourite of
Henry IV of France, to whom he addressed insolent monologues (
Compositions de Rhetorique de Mr. Don Arlequin, 1601). Martinelli's great success contributed to the perpetuation of his interpretation of the Zanni role, along with the name of his character, after his death in 1630, among others, by
Nicolò Zecca, active in
Bologna as well as
Turin and
Mantua. The character was also performed in Paris at the
Comédie-Italienne in Italian by
Giambattista Andreini and
Angelo Costantini () and in French as
Arlequin in the 1660s by (1636–1688), who combined the Zanni types, "making his Arlecchino witty, neat, and fluent in a croaking voice, which became as traditional as the squawk of
Punch". but returned in 1716 (after his death), when
Tommaso Antonio Vicentini ("Thomassin", 1682–1739) became famous in the part. The rhombus shape of the patches arose by adaptation to the Paris fashion of the 17th century by Biancolelli. ==Characteristics and dramatic function==