Massimo Troisi – actor, writer and director
Tragic star died hours after completing finest work
Massimo Troisi, the comic actor, writer and director who suffered a fatal heart attack in 1994 only 12 hours after shooting finished on his greatest movie, was born on this day in 1953 in a suburb of Naples. Troisi co-directed and starred in Il Postino, which won an Oscar for best soundtrack after being nominated in five categories, the most nominations in Academy Award history for an Italian film. He also wrote much of the screenplay for the movie, based on a novel, Burning Patience, by the Chilean author Antonio Skármeta, which tells the story of a Chilean poet exiled on an Italian island and his friendship with a postman whose round consists only of the poet’s isolated house. Plagued by heart problems for much of his life, the result of several bouts of rheumatic fever when he was a child, Troisi was told just before shooting was due to begin that he needed an urgent transplant operation. Read more…
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Luigi Boccherini – musician
Composer gave the cello prominence in his charming quintets
Cellist and composer Luigi Rodolfo Boccherini was born on this day in 1743 in Lucca in Tuscany. Boccherini is particularly known for a minuet from his String Quintet in E, which became popular after its use by characters posing as musicians in the 1955 film, The Ladykillers, which starred Alec Guinness and Peter Sellers. Though his works became neglected after his death in 1805 they enjoyed a revival after the Boccherini Quintet, which was formed in Rome, started performing them in the 1950s. Boccherini’s father was himself a cellist and double bass player and sent the young Luigi to study in Rome. In 1757 they went to Vienna together where the court employed them both as musicians in the Imperial Theatre orchestra. In 1764 Luigi obtained a permanent position back in Lucca, playing in both the church and theatre orchestras. Read more…
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Domenico Grimani - cardinal and art collector
Owned works by Da Vinci, Titian and Raphael among others
The Venetian cardinal Domenico Grimani, whose vast art collection now forms part of the Museo d'Antichità in the Doge's Palace in Venice, was born on this day in 1461. Grimani acquired works among others by Italian Renaissance masters such as Leonardo da Vinci, Giorgione, Titian and Raphael, as well as by Hans Memling and Hieronymus Bosch, two of the great Early Netherlandish painters of the 15th century. He also owned the illustrated manuscript that became known as the Grimani Breviary, produced in Ghent and Bruges between 1510 and 1520, which is considered one of the most important works of Flemish art from the Renaissance period. Gerard David, Gerard Horenbout, Simon Bening and other illustrators contributed to the work, which was acquired by Grimani for 500 gold ducats, and subsequently bequeathed to the Venetian Republic. Read more…
Orazio Vecchi – composer
Late Renaissance church musician wrote madrigal comedies to entertain audiences
Orazio Vecchi, who is regarded as a pioneer of dramatic music because of his innovative madrigal comedies, died on this day in 1605 in the city of Modena, in the Emilia-Romagna region. His most famous composition, L’Amfiparnaso, was always intended as music for entertainment. It was a set of 15 pieces that were dramatic in nature, although they were not meant for the stage. Vecchi is known to have been baptised in December 1550 in Modena. He was educated at a Benedictine monastery and took holy orders. He knew composers of the Venetian school, such as Giovanni Gabrieli, and he composed himself in the form of sacred music, such as masses and motets, as well as canzonette and madrigals for entertainment. Vecchi served as maestro di cappella at the cathedral of Salò and as choirmaster at the cathedral of Reggio Emilia. Read more…
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Vittorio Grigolo - opera singer
Tenor courted public popularity as way to land 'serious' roles
The operatic tenor Vittorio Grigolo was born on this day in 1977 in Arezzo in Tuscany. Grigolo has performed at many of the world's leading opera houses and starred in Werther by Jules Massenet at the Metropolitan Opera in New York. Yet he has achieved fame as a serious performer after first releasing an album of popular songs and using reality TV shows to put himself in the public eye. Brought up in Rome, Grigolo was a child prodigy who began to sing at the age of four, his love for music inspired by his father, who liked the family house to be filled with the sound of opera arias. He won a place at the prestigious Sistine Chapel Choir School by the time he was nine and at 13 appeared on the same stage as the opera legend Luciano Pavarotti as the shepherd boy in Giacomo Puccini's Tosca at the Rome Opera House. Read more…
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Book of the Day: The Postman (Il Postino): A Novel, by Antonio Skármeta. Translated by Katherine Silver
Antonio Skármeta’s The Postman - originally published as Ardiente paciencia (Burning Patience) - is a short, lyrical novel first published in Chile in 1985. The novel follows Mario Jiménez, a shy young fisherman who abandons the sea to become a postman on the small coastal island of Isla Negra. His only customer is the exiled poet Pablo Neruda, who receives mountains of fan mail. As Mario delivers letters, an unlikely friendship forms. Mario admires Neruda’s poetry and asks for help in wooing Beatriz González, a beautiful barmaid he has fallen for. Neruda teaches him about metaphors, desire, and the power of words, and Mario gradually discovers his own poetic voice. The story unfolds against the backdrop of Chile’s political transformation, culminating in the rise of Salvador Allende and the looming instability that precedes the 1973 coup. The novel blends personal tenderness with national upheaval, giving it both intimacy and historical weight. As well as being the inspiration for Il Postino, which transposes the story from Chile to a small Italian island, it was also turned into a film in Chile, entitled Burning Patience, directed by Skármeta.Antonio Skármeta was a Chilean writer, screenwriter, director and diplomat. As well as being the author of many novels, plays, and short stories, he was popularly known for hosting a television show on literature and the arts. He served as Chile’s ambassador to Germany from 2000 to 2003. Katherine Silver is an award-winning literary translator.


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