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23 June 2025

23 June

Giuseppina Tuissi - partisan

Key figure in capture and execution of Mussolini

Giuseppina Tuissi, who was among a group of partisans who captured the deposed Fascist leader Benito Mussolini as he tried to escape to Switzerland in 1945, was born on June 23, 1923, in Abbiategrasso, near Milan.  Tuissi and her comrades seized Mussolini at Dongo, a small town on the shores of Lake Como, on April 27, 1945, along with his mistress Claretta Petacci.  Having heard that Hitler was preparing to surrender to the Allies, Mussolini was trying to reach Switzerland before flying on to Spain. He and Petacci and their entourage were executed at the village of Giulino di Mezzegra the following day before the partisan group took their bodies to be put on public display in Milan.  Tuissi, however, would herself be killed less than a couple of months later, probably at the hands of fellow partisans who suspected her of betraying comrades. Read more…

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Arnaldo Pomodoro - sculptor

Romagnolo artist best known for his Sphere within Sphere series

The avant-garde sculptor Arnaldo Pomodoro, who became famous for monumental spherical bronze sculptures with their outer surface cracked to reveal intricate interiors, was born in Morciano di Romagna, a small town just inland from the Adriatic coast, on June 23, 1926. Pomodoro’s first Sfera con Sfera (Sphere within Sphere) was installed in the Cortile della Pigna courtyard at the Vatican Museums in Rome in the 1960s and subsequently produced versions for locations around the world, including Trinity College, Dublin, the United Nations Plaza and Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. Pomodoro died yesterday - June 22, 2025 - the day before what would have been his 99th birthday. Broadly speaking, the sfera con sfera sculptures, which contain a smaller sphere at the centre of the larger, broken sphere, separated by layers of what look a little like the inner workings of a watch, represent the fragility of the world or of society and the complexities that lie beneath the surface.  Read more…


Claudio Capone – actor and dubber

The Italian voice of a host of stars

Italy lost one of its most famous voices on June 23, 2008, with the death of actor and dubber Claudio Capone, who suffered a stroke while working in Scotland. He died two days later, at the age of only 55.  Although he began his career with the ambitions of any actor to reach the top of his profession, he was offered an opportunity only a few years out of drama school to do some voice-over work and found the flow of work in dubbing to be so consistent he ultimately made it his career.  Italian cinema and TV audiences have always preferred to watch imported films and TV shows with dubbed Italian voices rather than subtitles and it was down to Rome-born Capone that many foreign stars became famous in Italy, even if they did not speak a word of Italian.  The biggest example of this was the American actor Ronn Moss, who played fashion magnate Ridge Forrester in the soap opera The Bold and the Beautiful.  Read more…

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Francesca Schiavone – tennis player

First Italian woman to win a Grand Slam

Tennis champion Francesca Schiavone was born on June 23, 1980 in Milan.  When she won the French Open at Roland Garros in 2010 she became the first Italian woman to win a Grand Slam event in singles. She was the runner-up in the French Open final the following year. Schiavone won eight titles on the WTA tour and was the runner up in events 11 times.  Her highest career ranking was World Number Four, which she achieved in January 2011.  She helped Italy win the Federation Cup in 2006, 2009 and 2010 and she has had the most wins for the Italian team.  She also appeared in the women’s doubles final at the 2008 French Open.  Schiavone retired from tennis after the 2018 US Open. In December 2019, Schiavone revealed she had been diagnosed with cancer earlier in the year but after successful treatment she was declared free of the disease.  Read more…

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Book of the Day: Mussolini: The Last 600 Days of Il Duce, by Ray Moseley

In his last days, Mussolini, the tyrant, was in the grip of anger, shame, and depression. The German armed forces that had sustained his puppet government since its creation in September 1943 were being inexorably driven out of Italy, the frontiers of his Fascist republic were shrinking daily and Mussolini was aware that German military leaders were negotiating with the Allies behind his back in neutral Switzerland. Moseley's The Last 600 Days of Il Duce is a well-researched and highly engaging book that throws light on the final 20 months of the despot's life and culminates with the dramatic capture and execution of Mussolini - and his mistress Claretta Petacci - by partisans of the Italian resistance on April 28, 1945.

Ray Moseley was chief European correspondent of the Chicago Tribune and in 1981 was runner-up for the Pulitzer Prize in international reporting. During four decades as a foreign correspondent, he spent five years in Rome. He is also author of Mussolini's Shadow: The Double Life of Count Galeazzo Ciano. 

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