1 April 2026

Simona Ventura - TV presenter

Star of sports and entertainment shows

Simona Ventura has been one of  Italian TV's most familiar faces
Simona Ventura has been one of 
Italian TV's most familiar faces
The presenter Simona Ventura, whose career spanning forty years has showcased an outstanding versatility and made her one of Italian television’s most familiar faces, was born on this day in 1965 in Bentivoglio, a small town about 15km (nine miles) northeast of Bologna in Emilia-Romagna.

Ventura has made her mark in entertainment and reality TV but has also enjoyed a high-profile presence in sports broadcasting, especially football.

Her career highlights include hosting the live Sunday afternoon football show Quelli che il calcio for a decade and leading L’isola dei famosi - an Italian reality show similar to Survivor and the UK’s I’m a Celebrity: Get Me Out of Here - for eight editions.

Ventura also has the distinction of being one of only three women to be granted the role of main host of the Sanremo Music Festival, having fronted the prestigious annual song contest in 2004. 

Other highlights include covering the 1990 FIFA World Cup - hosted by Italy - plus UEFA Euro 1992 and the 1992 Olympics as a TV sports journalist.

At different times, she has been a staple of both national public broadcaster Rai and the commercially-owned Mediaset network, fronting major variety shows such as Mai dire gol, Le Iene, and Festivalbar.  She has also enjoyed a long-running relationship with X-Factor Italia as a judge. 

Although born in Bentivoglio, Ventura moved at an early age to Chivasso, just outside Turin in Piedmont. After studying physical education at high school, she became interested in television as a career. In common with many girls with ambitions in that direction, she found her looks opened doors. She entered and won a beauty pageant in the Liguria resort of Alassio and made her television debut in 1988 as an assistant to the host of a game show on Rai Uno.


With aspirations beyond being merely a showgirl - the term that described the such roles in Italian entertainment programmes - Ventura pursued her passion for sport, joining Telemontecarlo as a trainee sports journalist, which provided the chance to report for the station at the Italia ‘90 World Cup tournament, the European championships in Sweden in 1992 and the Olympic Games in Barcelona the same year. 

By the autumn of 1992, she was reporting on Serie A matches for the Sunday afternoon Rai magazine programme, Domenica In, which in turn persuaded the producers of Rai Due’s long-running Sunday night football highlights show La Domenica Sportiva, traditionally an all-male platform, to give her the role of host. 

Simona Ventura in 1988, at the start of her media career
Simona Ventura in 1988, at the
start of her media career
Moving to Mediaset in the mid‑1990s broadened her appeal: she became a familiar face on high‑profile variety shows such as Mai dire gol, Scherzi a parte, Festivalbar, Le Iene, Matricole, and Zelig. These programmes showcased her comedic timing and strong rapport with live audiences.

In 2001, Ventura returned to Rai to host Quelli che il calcio, a role she held until 2011. The programme blended football culture with entertainment in a format that suited her energetic style. She was chosen as the first host of L’isola dei famosi in 2003, keeping the position for the popular show’s first eight seasons.

Her most prestigious assignment came in 2004 when she became only the third woman to be appointed the main presenter of the Sanremo Music Festival, after Loretta Goggi (1986) and Raffaella Carrà (2001). She was scheduled to return to Sanremo in 2021 as co-host alongside Amadeus but had to withdraw after testing positive for COVID-19.

After a decade at Rai, Ventura signed an exclusive contract with Sky in 2011, serving as judge, presenter, and creative lead on projects including X Factor and Simona Goes to Hollywood. She later returned to Mediaset, appearing as a contestant on L’isola dei famosi in 2016.

Away from television, Ventura has appeared in acting roles in a number of films, including Fratelli Coltelli (1997), La fidanzata di papà (2008), and a cameo in Sofia Coppola’s Somewhere (2010). 

In 2023, she was a contestant in both Il Cantante Mascherano (The Masked Singer) and Ballando con le Stelle (Dancing with the Stars), finishing runner-up in the latter with partner Samuel Peron.

The winner of multiple awards in recognition of her longevity and impact on Italian television, Ventura has since 2024 been married to journalist Giovanni Terzi. She has three children - Niccolò, Giacomo, and adopted daughter Caterina - from her previous marriage to footballer Stefano Bettarini. 

The Duomo di Santa Maria Assunta, with its striking facade, is one of the highlights of Chivasso
The Duomo di Santa Maria Assunta, with its
striking facade, is one of the highlights of Chivasso
Travel tip:

Chivasso, where Simona Ventura grew up, is a town about 20km (12 miles) northeast of the centre of Turin, situated on the left bank of the Po river, close to where it is joined by the Orco. It is known for its medieval centre, late‑Gothic cathedral, and long history as a strategic crossroads in the Canavese region. Inhabited since the Neolithic period, the town is remembered in history for its heroic resistance against French troops during the War of the Spanish Succession. Chivasso’s architectural and cultural highlights include the Duomo di Santa Maria Assunta, a jewel of late Gothic architecture with a richly decorated terracotta façade and an octagonal tower, the last remnant of the town’s medieval castle, and the Palazzo Santa Chiara, originally intended as a convent, later transformed into the town hall. It includes a charming miniature 19th‑century horseshoe‑shaped theatre.  The historic centre features medieval arcades, elegant streets such as Via Torino and a number of lively squares with cafés and pastry shops. Chivasso is famous for its nocciolini - tiny hazelnut meringue biscuits made from Piedmont hazelnuts, sugar and egg white. 

The remains of the Castello di Bentivoglio still bear a red cross from its days as a military hospital
The remains of the Castello di Bentivoglio still bear
a red cross from its days as a military hospital
Travel tip:

Bentivoglio, northeast of Bologna, is a small town best known for its Renaissance‑era castle, the Navile Canal, and one of Italy’s most important museums of rural culture. Between Bologna and Ferrara, the town has been shaped to a large degree by the Navile Canal, which historically links Bologna with the Adriatic and runs through the town. The aforementioned castle, the Castello di Bentivoglio, was built in the late 15th century by Giovanni II Bentivoglio, lord of Bologna from 1463 to 1506, and incorporates an earlier 1390 fortress. Serving as a hunting and leisure retreat, it was named Domus Jocunditatis, or the House of Joy. During the First World War, it housed a military hospital for the Italian Red Cross. In 1945, during their retreat, the Nazis destroyed the 14th-century castle tower, as part of a policy of removing any elevated point from which the advancing Allies could track their progress. Bentivoglio’s Villa Smeraldi houses the Museo della Civiltà Contadina, one of Italy’s most significant museums of rural culture, set in a 19th‑century villa and English‑style park. The nearby Oasi La Rizza, a wetland area, is famous for the recent return of the white stork, which now nests there after centuries of absence.

More reading:

Edda “Edy” Campagnoli, fifties showgirl who married a famous footballer

Raffaella Carrà - singer, dancer, television presenter and actress

How the historic Sanremo Music Festival inspired Eurovision

Also on this day:

1946: The birth of football coach Arrigo Sacchi

1953: The birth of football coach Alberto Zaccheroni

1954: The birth of footballer Giancarlo Antognoni

April Fool’s Day - Pesce d’Aprile


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