Caramba che fortuna maradona biography
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Raffaella Carrà
Italian singer and actress (–)
Raffaella Carrà | |
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Carrà in | |
| Born | Raffaella Maria Roberta Pelloni ()18 June Bologna, Italy |
| Died | 5 July () (aged78) Rome, Italy |
| Resting place | Porto Santo Stefano cemetery |
| Occupations |
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| Yearsactive | – |
| Musical career | |
| Genres | |
| Instrument | Vocals |
| Labels | |
Musical artist | |
Raffaella Maria Roberta Pelloni (18 June – 5 July ), known professionally as Raffaella Carrà (Italian:[rafːaˈɛlːakaˈrːa]) and sometimes mononymously as Raffaella, was an Italian singer, dancer, actress, television presenter and model.[1] She is often widely considered a pop culture icon in Europe and Latin America,[2][3] between the s and s she became a pioneer of feminism and women's rights in the music and television industry,[4][5] as well as a music icon, LGBT icon and an ico
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Italian Style: Fashion & Film from Early Cinema to the Digital Age , ,
Table of contents : •
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Topics and Issues in National Cinema
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
1 Fashion, Film, Modernity
Nostra Dea: the goddess of fashion
Pirandello, cinema, and clothing: elective affinities
“The Tight Frock-Coat”: performing dress
Film, costume, fashion, and intermediality
Italian style: fashion and film
2 Italian Fashion and Film in the s: From the Futurists to Rosa Genoni
The Futurists, fashion, film, and performance
Rosa Genoni: Per una moda italiana: fashioning the diva
3 From the Body of the Diva to the Body of the Nation
The Italian divas and the “gowns of emotions”
Lyda Borelli (–): the ethereal melancholic beauty and Ma l’amore mio non muore! (love everlasting)
The veil: modernity in motion in Nino Oxilia’s Rapsodia Satanica
Francesca Bertini (–): the glamorous embodied
Nino Oxilia’s Sangue Bleu () and Gustavo Serena’s Assunta Spina () New Books
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