Showing posts with label Sulmona. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sulmona. Show all posts

1 October 2025

Milly Carlucci - TV host

Former actress is the face of Ballando con le Stelle

Milly Carlucci is host and artistic director of the hit Italian TV show Ballando con le Stelle
Milly Carlucci is host and artistic director of the
hit Italian TV show Ballando con le Stelle
The television host and former actress Milly Carlucci was born on this day in 1954 in Sulmona, a picturesque town in central Abruzzo, about 52km (32 miles) inland from the coastal city of Pescara.

With a career spanning nearly five decades, Carlucci has been a well-known and popular personality on Italian television since the late 1970s, establishing a reputation for elegance and professionalism and a list of credits that grew rapidly through the ‘80s and ‘90s.

But it is in her current and most enduring role, as the presenter of the pro-celebrity dance contest Ballando con le Stelle - the Italian version of the US hit Dancing with the Stars and the UK’s Strictly Come Dancing - that she has established herself as a giant of small-screen entertainment.

Having fronted the show from its inception in 2005, Carlucci is also its artistic director and project manager. Now into its 20th season, Ballando con le Stelle has become a flagship for the state television network Rai and is currently its longest-running variety show still on air.


Born Camilla Patrizia Carlucci, she was brought up in a household in which discipline was a virtue instilled in her from an early age. Her father, Luigi Carlucci, reached the rank of General in the Italian Army. Her mother, Maria, was known for her cultural refinement and interest in the arts, which helped nurture Milly’s creative instincts.

Carlucci on the set of the 2025 edition of Ballando con le Stelle
Carlucci on the set of the 2025
edition of Ballando con le Stelle
The Carlucci family moved frequently due to her father’s military postings, and Milly spent much of her childhood in Udine, in the northwest of the country, before settling in Rome. 

She attended the Terenzio Mamiani high school in Rome’s Prati district, where he shone in her studies but also revealed a talent for roller skating, winning an Italian championship as a member of the successful Skating Folgore Roma team.

Carlucci enrolled at Sapienza University of Rome to study architecture, but her interest in performance and natural ability to command a stage gradually eclipsed her academic pursuits. Articulate as well as elegant, in 1972 she entered and won the Miss Teenager Italy beauty contest.

This victory opened doors into modelling and television. She also studied classical dance and took part in amateur theatre productions, honing the stagecraft and composure that would become her trademarks. 

At times required to join the ranks of the showgirls that at the time were ever-present backdrop in Italian variety shows, Carlucci soon began to land presenting roles, first at the local Rome television station, GBR, and then with Rai, for whom she fronted various light entertainment shows including the Italian version of Jeux Sans Frontières. It was this show that made her famous, and she presented it for four seasons.

Carlucci enjoyed a brief career as a pop singer in the 1980s
Carlucci enjoyed a brief career
as a pop singer in the 1980s
For a while, Carlucci had a parallel career in acting, appearing in popular Italian films such as The Taming of the Scoundrel (1980), Pappa e ciccia (1983), and Tomorrow I'm Getting Married (1984). Her role as Urania in The Adventures of Hercules (1985) further cemented her status as a screen favourite.

Blessed also with a beautiful singing voice, she was briefly a recording artist as well, releasing a number of pop singles and two albums in the 1980s.

However, it was television hosting that has truly defined Carlucci’s legacy. Apart from a few years in the 1980s when she worked for Silvio Berlusconi’s Fininvest networks, she has been a fixture on Rai for the best part of five decades, with a long list of successes from the popular game show Scommettiamo che...? (Shall we bet that…?), which she co-hosted with the late Fabrizio Frizzi, to the more recent Il cantante mascherato, the Italian version of The Masked Singer.

She has also become established as Rai’s go-to host for special events in the entertainment world. Having proved herself on big occasions such as the Sanremo Italian Song Festival, on which she was a co-host with Pippo Baudo in 1992, she was the long-running host of the annual Pavarotti & Friends concerts (1995 to 2003), in which the great operatic tenor performed in duets with famous guests. She hosted the David di Donatello film awards in 1997 and 1998, as well as 17 editions of the prestigious Ischia International Journalism Award.

Carlucci at the funeral of her friend, Luciano Pavarotti, in Modena in 2007
Milly Carlucci at the funeral of her friend,
Luciano Pavarotti, in Modena in 2007
Yet nothing has come close to the success of Ballando con le Stelle, in which celebrities and sports stars dance with professional partners over 12 episodes, with couples marked by judges in the studio and by the viewing public, and eliminated one-by-one until a champion emerges at the end of the series.

Carlucci has been the host for every series so far, until this year alongside co-host Paolo Belli, whose Big Band provides the musicians. Belli is starring in the 2025 edition as a competitor. The panel of judges includes the fashion and set designer Guillermo Mariotto, whom Carlucci has known since the 1990s and was one of the original panel in 2005. The head judge since 2007 has been Glasgow-born Carolyn Smyth, who has been a dance teacher based in Italy since 1982. 

Beyond entertainment, Carlucci has also been active in humanitarian work. In 1996, she was named a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, using her platform to advocate for children’s rights and global development initiatives.

She has been married since 1985 to engineer Angelo Donati, with whom she has two children. Her two younger sisters, Gabriella and Anna Carlucci, have also had careers in the entertainment industry, Gabriella as a presenter, Anna as an actress, writer and director.

Gabriella also served for 12 years as a member of the Chamber of Deputies in the Italian parliament, representing Puglia.

Sulmona's elegant Piazza Garibaldi includes a section of the town's 13th-century aqueduct
Sulmona's elegant Piazza Garibaldi includes a
section of the town's 13th-century aqueduct 
Travel tip:

Nestled in the heart of Abruzzo, Sulmona is an historic town renowned for its cultural heritage, dramatic mountain backdrop, and artisanal traditions. Surrounded by the Majella National Park, it offers sweeping views of rugged peaks and verdant valleys. The town’s origins trace back to Roman times, its history visible in ancient Roman ruins, medieval churches, and Renaissance palaces. The town’s centerpiece is the elegant Piazza Garibaldi, framed by arcades and overlooked by an imposing aqueduct built in the 13th century. Nearby, the Gothic-style Church of Santa Maria della Tomba and the Palazzo Annunziata showcase centuries of architectural evolution, the palace a rare example of early Renaissance architecture in Sulmona that survived the earthquake of 1706.  Sulmona is famously the birthplace of the Roman poet Ovid, whose legacy is honoured with a statue and museum. Equally famous is its production of confetti - sugar-coated almonds crafted into elaborate floral arrangements, an Italian  confectionery tradition that dates back to the 15th century. 

Look for accommodation in Sulmona with Expedia

Its tree-lined boulevards give Rome's Prati district something of a Parisian feel
Its tree-lined boulevards give Rome's Prati
district something of a Parisian feel
Travel tip:

Carlucci went to school in the Prati district of Rome, close to the Vatican and St Peter’s Basilica, which is now an affluent residential neighbourhood that is also popular with tourists for offering a relatively quiet place to stay that still provides easy access to the city’s historical centre. It has many authentic Roman trattorie as well as a host of bars and pubs.  Located just north of the Vatican and west of the Tiber River, the area was developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, it was designed with wide boulevards and a grid layout - distinct from the winding alleys of Rome’s historic centre. This gives Prati a Parisian feel, its streets lined with stately buildings and Art Nouveau facades. Its main thoroughfare, Via Cola di Rienzo, is a hub for upscale shopping, featuring Italian fashion boutiques, gourmet food shops, and stylish cafés. Prati is also the home of the vast Palazzo di Giustizia in Piazza Cavour that houses the Supreme Court.

Stay in the Prati district with Hotels.com

More reading:

Pippo Baudo - record-breaking host of Sanremo song contest 

How Maria De Filippi became one of the most popular faces on Italian TV

The former actress who became the face of Sunday afternoons

Also on this day:

1450: The death of Leonello d’Este, Marquis of Ferrara

1910: The birth of Olympic cycling champion Attilio Pavesi

1931: The birth of composer and avant-garde artist Sylvano Bussotti

1961: The birth of football coach Walter Mazzarri


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20 March 2025

Ovid - Roman poet

Writer of Metamorphoses who was mysteriously exiled

The poet Ovid was noted for his imaginative interpretation of classical mythology
The poet Ovid was noted for his imaginative
interpretation of classical mythology
Publius Ovidius Naso, better known as the poet, Ovid, was born on this day in 43 BC in Sumo in the Roman empire, a city which is now called Sulmona, and is in the region of Abruzzo.

The poet is mainly remembered for his work, Ars Amatoria (The Art of Love), which is essentially a manual on seduction written in verse, for the use of the man about town, and for his mythological epic poem, Metamorphoses.

His poetry was to have immense influence on later writers, because of its imaginative interpretation of classical mythology and its technical accomplishment.

Ovid essentially wrote his own life story in the autobiographical poem collection Tristia (Sorrows). His family was well to do and sent him and his brother to Rome to be educated. He studied rhetoric under the best teachers of his day and was considered to have a future as an orator, but he neglected his studies to spend more time on writing verses.

He was intended by his father for an official career but first spent time in Athens and travelled in Asia and Sicily.  Afterwards, he held some minor judicial positions, but he decided that the life didn’t suit him and abandoned his posts to spend his time writing poetry and meeting other poets.

His first work, Amores (The Loves) was successful straight away and was followed by his Epistles of the Heroines, The Art of Beauty, The Art of Love and Remedies for Love. These works all reflected the sophisticated, pleasure-seeking society in which he circulated.


Ovid had three marriages himself. The first two were brief and ended in divorce, but Ovid always spoke of his third wife with affection and respect, and she remained faithful to him and represented his interests until his death.

Eugène Delacroix's painting Ovid among the  Scythians portrayed the poet's life in exile
Eugène Delacroix's painting Ovid among the 
Scythians
depicted the poet's life in exile
While living in Rome, Ovid socialized with other poets, including Horace. He was working on other more ambitious projects, including his works Metamorphoses and The Fasti, when he suffered a major blow.

In 8 AD, the Emperor Augustus banished him to Tomis, which was near modern day Constanta in Romania.

The reason for his exile is not fully known and was never explained clearly by Ovid himself. It has been suggested that it could have resulted from some of his poetry, or that he could have been an involuntary accomplice in the adultery of the emperor’s granddaughter, who was banished at about the same time.

It suggests that either his writing, or his behaviour, was perceived by Augustus to be damaging to his programme of moral reform and to the honour of the imperial family.

Ovid’s punishment did not involve the loss of his property, and so his wife remained in Rome to intercede for him and to protect his interests.

The second volume of a 1727 edition of Ovid's Metamorphoses, published in London
The second volume of a 1727 edition of
Ovid's Metamorphoses, published in London
He never stopped hoping for the chance to return to Rome and kept up a flow of pleas to the emperor, through his wife and friends, in his Letters from the Black Sea, but Augustus and his successor, Tiberius were unmoved. Ovid died in Tomis in 17 AD.

Ovid is regarded as one of the greatest poets of all time and his popularity during his own lifetime has continued over the centuries since. In the 12th and 13th centuries, his poetry was being read in schools and performed by troubadours.

He became even more popular during the Renaissance and by the 15th century, printed editions of his work were being produced, and some knowledge of his work was taken for granted in an educated man.

Over the centuries, poets and artists have been indebted to him for their own inspiration. Metamorphoses - a collection of Greek and Roman myths about transformations remains one of the most important sources of classical mythology to this date. Shakespeare, Goethe, and Ezra Pound have all followed in his footsteps with their own poetry.

Sulmona's historic centre; the arches in the foreground carried a Roman aqueduct
Sulmona's historic centre; the arches in the
foreground carried a Roman aqueduct 
Travel tip:

Sulmona, where Ovid was born, is a town and comune - municipality - in the province of L’Aquila in Abruzzo, about 66km (41 miles) southeast of the city of the same name and just under 150km (93 miles) east of Rome. There is a bronze statue of Ovid in Sulmona’s Piazza XX Settembre, and the city's main thoroughfare, which connects the cathedral and the major piazzas and is lined by elegant covered arcades, shops, cafes, palaces, and churches, is named Corso Ovidio after him. The town’s biggest square, Piazza Garibaldi, hosts a palio-style festival and horse race known as the Giostra Cavalleresca every summer. Sulmona, which is renowned as one of the prettiest towns in the region, is the home of the Italian confection known as confetti.  These are the colourful, sugar-coated almonds, which are given to guests at weddings and other celebrations in Italy. Sulmona is situated in a part of Italy of outstanding natural beauty, on the Valle Peligna plain, adjacent to the Maiella National Park. 

Historic trabucchi platforms are still used by the fishermen of the Abruzzo coast
Historic trabucchi platforms are still used by
the fishermen of the Abruzzo coast
Travel tip:

Abruzzo is a region of southern Italy with a coastline along the Adriatic Sea. It borders the regions of Marche, Lazio and Molise and has some of the highest mountain peaks in the Apennines, such as the Gran Sasso d’Italia and the Maiella. Almost half of Abruzzo’s territory is protected through national parks and nature reserves. This is to ensure the survival of some of its rare species, such as the golden eagle, the Abruzzo chamois and the Marsican brown bear. The region has also become famous for producing wines such as Montepulciano d’Abruzzo, Trebbiano d’Abruzzo, Pecorino and Chardonnay.  Although renowned for its mountainous interior, the region also boasts 133km (82 miles) of coastline, stretching north and south of the resort city of Pescara, the birthplace of writer, patriot and politician Gabriele D’Annunzio. Beautiful sandy beaches characterise the northern part of the coastline, while the rockier southern stretch is notable for the sight of trabucchi or trabocchi, the ancient fishing machines on stilts that jut out over the water, built almost entirely of logs, planks and beams, that D’Annunzio himself described as resembling "the colossal skeleton of a prehistoric amphibian".

Also on this day:

1898: The birth of jeweller Fulco di Verdura

1934: The birth of football coach Azeglio Vicini

1940: The birth of entrepreneur racing driver Giampiero Moretti


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