The theatre is mentioned explicitly by
Pliny the Elder and implicitly by
Suetonius and
Tacitus. According to Pliny, the emperor displayed the seized possessions of a former
consul in his private theatre (
theatrum peculiare). The theatre was used by Nero for rehearsals of his subsequent public singing performances in the
theatre of Pompey and was large enough to satisfy his vanity when filled with people. Suetonius writes that during the
Neronia festival the emperor promised to exhibit himself
in hortis ("in the gardens"), an indirect reference to his theatre. Finally, Tacitus states that during the
Juvenalia Nero sang
per domum aut hortos, another hint to the building. It is also possible that the
domestica scaena mentioned by Tacitus as the place from which Nero admired the
Great Fire of Rome in 64 AD does not refer to the tower of
Gaius Maecenas on the
Esquiline Hill, but to the scene ("scaena") of his theatre. This, lying on the right bank of the Tiber, was well away from the affected areas and therefore a safe observation point, unlike the tower which was in the middle of the fire. At the beginning of the second century AD, the building was dismantled to recover its materials, as evidenced by five marble columns found
in situ. The theatre is mentioned last in the middle of the 12th century in the
Mirabilia Urbis Romae, a pilgrims' guide of the city. Around 1480 in the area of the theatre, Cardinal
Domenico della Rovere began construction of Palazzo Della Rovere, possibly entrusting this work to
Baccio Pontelli. The remains of the theatre were found during excavations from 2020, under the direction of the special archaeological superintendence of monuments of Rome. Within the excavation, remnants of costumes, coloured glass goblets, pottery, and cooking utensils were found. Several road tracks were also found, connecting the site to the
Portus Maior, the landing place on the Tiber downstream of
Ponte Sant'Angelo. ==Architecture==