This article examines the iconographic program and social function of the tableaux vivants performed by the AngloAmerican intellectual elite resident in Venice at the turn of the twentieth century. It considers the highly esteemed tableaux performed at Ca’ Cappello between 1888 and 1910 through a reading of the journals of the society hostess Lady Layard (1843–1912). The annual Christmas tableaux vivants took place amid a vibrant salon culture fostered by wealthy Anglophones and drew inspiration from both the Renaissance and Carnival heritage of Venice as well as the British tradition of Christmas pantomime and masquerade. While the iconography of the tableaux vivants points to the connoisseurship and aesthetic tastes of this elite, the amb...