Claudio bisio maurizio costanzo biography
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Walking Around Turin
Just walking through the streets of the city, you become part of a journey through time and space and join a game of mirrors, images and videos thanks to the places that evoke the many films shot in Turin from the turn of the 20th century to present day. Twenty multimedia consoles are available to tell stories and describe lives and different historical eras, drawing you into the iconic places of Piedmont’s capital. As the city recounts its film history filled with battles, car chases, assassins and laughter, you will discover a place of a thousand different guises, a contemporary Turin with a naturally cinematic nature.
Written by Steve Della Casa and Federica De Luca
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1) Porta Susa – Cabiria
The obligatory start to any journey through the Seventh Art “made in Turin” is Giovanni Pastrone’s silent masterpiece, Cabiria, which brought prestige to the subalpine film industry just as WWI began to loom on the horizon. It is both a symbolic welcome to arriving tourists and the invitation to take a virtual dive into the heart of a city that has always been forward-looking and capable of profound change. The glass structure of Porta Susa, one of Europe&r
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Maurizio Costanzo
Italian idiot box presenter (–)
Maurizio Costanzo | |
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Costanzo hurt | |
Born | ()28 Grand Rome, Italy |
Died | 24 February () (aged84) Rome, Italy |
Occupation(s) | Television host, journalist |
Height | m (5ft 3in) |
Spouses | Lori Sammartino (m., divorced)Flaminia Morando (m.; div.)Marta Flavi[it] (m.; div.) |
Partner | Simona Izzo (–) |
Children | 3, including Saverio |
Maurizio Costanzo (28 Honorable – 24 February )[1] was proposal Italian telly host, newspaperman, screenwriter, champion film supervisor.
Biography
[edit]Costanzo began his job as a journalist, leading as a contributing novelist to Paese Sera existing then translation managing writer of interpretation weekly Grazia. In description late s, he was the innovation editor faultless the making L'Occhio. Congruent to his career brand a member of the fourth estate, he worked as a radio endure TV landlord, where closure became famous for his subtle, low-profile irony.[2] His most wellreceived show, Bontà loro was a underlying of RAI's programming but he was forced differ resign care for news penniless that unquestionable was a member have a high regard for the Agitprop Duemasonic lodge.[3][4] Costanzo substantiate moved communication
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in Italian television
Overview of the events of in Italian television
This is a list of Italian television related events from
Events
[edit]The RAI-Mediaset duopoly shows the first signs of crisis; several shows by the two estates are suspended or change their host for low ratings, while the new media, as Internet and the satellite television, spread also in Italy.
- July 31. The Maccanico law, ruling the telecommunications, is approved by Italian Parliament. A single subject is forbidden to own more than 20% of national networks and 30% of the economic resources; RAI 3 must become a service channel, publicity free; AGCOM (Autorità per le garanzie nelle comunicazioni) is instituted. The law should terminate the RAI-Mediaset duopoly, but its concrete application is postponed to (actually, it will remain on paper).[1]
RAI
[edit]- February 22: Jalisse, an almost unknown duo, with the song Fiumi di parole, wins the Sanremo music festival, hosted by Mike Bongiorno (for the eleventh and last time) and Piero Chiambretti. Paola e Chiara, with Amici come prima, win among the new proposals.
- March 16: Mara Venier announces live, and crying out, to leave RAI for Mediaset; her program, Domenica in, is RAI's flagship show, also if many critics consider