The road to Monticchiello is the cypress-lined avenue that defines the Val d'Orcia: a snaking ribbon between sentinel cypresses, climbing a ridge to a medieval village of 200 residents surrounded by walls and the golden Val d'Orcia landscape. The road goes nowhere else โ Monticchiello IS the destination. Since 1967, the residents have performed the Teatro Povero (Poor Theater) โ a community theater production written, directed, and acted by the villagers themselves, about themselves, exploring the issues of their community: depopulation, memory, agricultural change, identity. The performances (last two weeks of July) take place in the piazza, and the audience sits on church steps and stone walls watching their neighbors act out the drama of being a 200-person village in a global economy. It is one of the most extraordinary cultural phenomena in rural Italy. Val d'Orcia โ
Plan my Val d'Orcia trip โThe cypress road: Drive or cycle from the SS146 (between San Quirico and Pienza) โ the road climbs through the iconic landscape. The photograph is FROM the road looking at Monticchiello on its hill, NOT from the village looking out. The village: Medieval walls (partially intact), a single gate, a piazza with a church (Santi Leonardo e Cristoforo), stone houses, and the particular silence of a place with 200 people. Teatro Povero (last 2 weeks of July): Performances at 9:30pm in the piazza. Tickets โฌ12-15 (buy in advance at teatropovero.it or at the door). The content changes yearly โ the villagers debate, write, and rehearse for months.
Getting there: Car from Pienza (8min), San Quirico (8min), Montepulciano (15min). No public transport. No accommodation in the village (stay in Pienza, San Quirico, or Montepulciano). Eat: La Guardiola (the one restaurant โ €25-35, excellent Val d'Orcia food, terrace view). Duration: 30min-1h (village), longer during Teatro Povero (arrive early for dinner + show). Combine with: Pienza (8min), San Quirico (8min), Montalcino (25min).