Archive for July 20th, 2008

20
Jul

Festa de Noantri Begins

Madonna della Fiumarola

Each year in late July, Rome’s Trastevere neighborhood braves the heat to stage the Festa de Noantri, a celebration of the uniqueness of the neighborhood and its inhabitants and a festival in honor of their patroness, the Madonna Fiumarola.  Streets are closed.  Stalls selling porchetta, crepes, and other delicacies are erected.  Piazzas host evening concerts.  Andthe famous Madonna makes a giro around the hood.

La Madonna Fiumarola in Trastevere, Rome

In a long entry last year, we told you all about the statue of the Madonna Fiumarola, recounting the way in which she was fished out of the Tiber River and given shelter in a Trastevere church in 1535.  Since that time, each year during the Festa de Noantri, the Madonna has made a tour around the Trastevere neighborhood — it’s her way of bestowing blessings while checking on the general state of affairs

The Procession of La Madonna Fiumarola, Trastevere, Rome

Last night was the Virgin’s big night.  Dressed in a new cream-colored gown and wearing a lovely coral necklace, she was placed on a giant wooden litter and carried through the streets of Trastevere.  Local priests, in the company of the Cardinal Józef Glemp, led the procession, chanting prayers over a loudspeaker as the Virgin made her way through Trastevere’s narrow and cobblestoned streets.  The police band announced her arrival in each street while hundreds of devotees thronged behind the Madonna asking for her blessings and cheering her with shouts of “Viva Maria!”

La Madonna Fiumarola in Trastevere

20
Jul

Badda Boom, Bada Bing, Renaissance Style

Tony Soprano as the Duke of Montefeltro

This weekend Reuters is reporting the sale of a “Sopranos” inspired painting that depicts James Gandolfini, aka Tony Soprano, as the ultimate Renaissance prince, Federico da Montefeltro, the Duke of Urbino.  Naturally, Edie Falco, who plays Tony Soprano’s wife, Carmela, assumes the position of the esteemed Duchess.

Painted by Sopranos supporting actor Federico Castelluccio, who played the Italian hit man Furio Giunta who fell in love with Carmela (and, as it turns out is an artist in his off-the-screen life), the painting is said to have been sold  to Toronto oil executive Robert Salna for $175,000, the highest price paid for memorabilia from the hit TV series.

From a Reuters story by Daniel Trotta.  Click here for the whole article.




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