Leo Chiosso – songwriter
Writer of lyrics and scripts was inspired by crime fiction
Prolific songwriter Leo Chiosso was born on this day in 1920 in Chieri, a town to the south of Turin in Piedmont. He became well known for the songs he wrote in partnership with Fred Buscaglione, a singer and musician, but Chiosso also wrote many scripts for television and cinema. Chiosso met Buscaglione in 1938 in the nightclubs of Turin, where Buscaglione was working as a jazz singer. They formed a songwriting duo that went on to produce more than 40 songs. However, their friendship was interrupted by the Second World War. Chiosso was taken prisoner and deported to Poland, where he became friends with the writer Giovanni Guareschi, while Buscaglione was sent to a US internment camp in Sardinia. It was only when Chiosso heard Buscaglione playing in a musical broadcast by the Allied radio station in Cagliari that he knew his friend was still alive. They were reunited in Turin after the war and continued to write songs together. Chiosso was an avid reader of American crime fiction, which inspired his lyrics and also suited Buscaglione’s amiable gangster image. Their first hit was Che bambola in 1956, which turned humorous tough guy Buscaglione into a celebrity. A subsequent hit was Love in Portofino, recently recorded by Andrea Bocelli and also the inspiration for one of his albums. Read more…
______________________________________
Giuseppe Conte – politician and academic
Lawyer who led Italy despite having no political experience
Former Prime Minister of Italy Giuseppe Conte was born on this day in 1964 in the town of Volturara Appula in the province of Foggia in Puglia. Conte served as Italian Prime Minister between 2018 and 2021, becoming the longest serving independent prime minister in the history of Italy. He was the fifth technocrat Italian Prime Minister - defined as being appointed without any previous political experience - and the first from southern Italy since Ciriaco De Mita in 1989. A law professor for a large part of his career, Conte is often referred to as ‘the people’s lawyer’ (l’avvocato del popolo), as this is how he described himself during his first speech as Prime Minister. He is now the president of the Italian political party, the Five Star Movement (M5S). Conte’s father, Nicola, was an employee of the local authority, and his mother, Lillina, was a school teacher.After the family moved to San Giovanni Rotondo, another town in the province of Foggia, Conte attended the nearby liceo classico and then went to study at the Sapienza University of Rome. To this day he remains an avid AS Roma fan, having started to support the club while at university. Read more…
_______________________________________
Ugo Bassi - priest and patriot
Unarmed chaplain was a follower of Garibaldi
Catholic priest Ugo Bassi was executed by firing squad on this day in 1849 in Bologna. Bassi had been a preacher of eloquent sermons that attracted large crowds and had travelled all over Italy helping the poor, often himself not having enough food to eat. He was also strongly patriotic and had been a follower of Giuseppe Garibaldi in his fight for a united, independent kingdom of Italy. It was while he was with Garibaldi’s army battling French troops loyal to the Pope in Rome that he was captured and sentenced to death on a false charge of carrying a weapon. His execution was said to have enraged Liberals all over Europe. Bassi was born in 1801 in Cento, a small town in the province of Ferrara, in what is now Emilia-Romagna. Although he was baptised as Giuseppe Bassi, he later changed his name to Ugo in honour of the patriotic and revolutionary poet, Ugo Foscolo. An unhappy love affair led to Bassi becoming a novice in the Barnabite order at the age of 18 and, after studying in Rome, he entered the priesthood in 1833. In 1848, when the revolutionary movement began in Italy, Pope Pius IX was known to be an Italian nationalist and liberal. Read more…
_______________________________________
Dino De Laurentiis – film producer
Campanian pasta seller helped make Italian cinema famous
The producer of hundreds of hit films, Agostino ‘Dino’ De Laurentiis was born on this day in 1919 at Torre Annunziata, near Naples in Campania. He made Italian cinema famous internationally, producing Federico Fellini’s Oscar- winning La strada in 1954 in Rome. After moving to the US he enjoyed further success with the film Serpico in 1973. De Laurentiis was the son of a pasta manufacturer for whom he worked as a salesman during his teens. While selling pasta in Rome in the 1930s he decided on impulse to enrol at the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia in the city as an actor. He quickly realised he had more talent for producing and after gaining experience in the different sectors of the industry made his first film, L’amore canta - Love Song - in 1941 when he was just 22. After serving in the army during the Second World War, De Laurentiis became an executive producer at one of Rome’s emerging film companies, Lux. Among the films he produced for Lux was Riso amaro - Bitter Rice - starring Silvana Mangano, whom he later married and had four children with. The film was a box-office success both at home and abroad. Read more…
_______________________________________
Danilo Gallinari - basketball player
Giant from Lodi province who plays in America’s NBA
Danilo Gallinari, one of only two Italian-born players currently active in America’s National Basketball Association, was born on this day in 1988 in Sant’Angelo Lodigiano in Lombardy. Only nine Italian-born players have participated in the NBA – America’s premier basketball league – since its formation in 1946. Gallinari, who stands 6ft 10ins tall, has played for six NBA teams, the latest of which is Boston Celtics. Previously he had played for New York Knicks, under the coaching of Mike D’Antoni, is an American-born former player who is now an Italian citizen, the Denver Nuggets, Los Angeles Clippers, Oklahoma City Thunder and Atlanta Hawks. Gallinari, whose father, Vittorio, played professional basketball for teams in Milan, Pavia, Bologna and Verona, began his career in 2004 with Casalpusterlengo, a third-level Italian team from a town about 25km (15 miles) from his home in Sant’Angelo Lodigiano. He moved up a tier in 2005 by joining Armani Jeans Milano and then Edimes Pavia, where in 2006 he was named best Italian player in the Italian League Second Division, despite missing half the season through injury. Read more…
_______________________________________
Recording of the Day: Love in Portofino: Andrea Bocelli
Love in Portofino is a CD/DVD compilation highlighting Andrea Bocelli's breathtaking performance in Portofino, Italy on August 11, 2012 and includes songs from Bocelli's 2013 album Passione. Playing to an intimate crowd at sunset the legendary tenor sings the most famous love songs in the world accompanied by 16-time Grammy Award winner David Foster and a 40-piece orchestra. The recording features 15 songs, including Leo the title track, which Leo Chiosso and Fred Buscaglione co-wrote and recorded in 1958. It was written in Italian, although the line ‘I found my love in Portofino’ was sung in English. In 1959, it became a hit for the French singer Dalida, whose version consisted of parts in English, Italian and French and peaked at 15 in the French singles chart. The song has become symbolic of Portofino, the upmarket resort on the Ligurian Riviera, about 35km (22 miles) east of Genoa. The Bocelli DVD includes footage from his 2012 concert as well as views of the resort itself which, when the tourists disappear, is a picturesque fishing village of fewer than 400 permanent residents.
Andrea Bocelli is an Italian tenor known for his powerful and soulful voice. He is considered one of the most popular classical crossover artists of all time, with a discography that includes both opera and pop music.
No comments:
Post a Comment