Naples
Miscellany 20 (late-February
2009)
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to
all Naples Miscellany pages:
The easiest way to drive
to Bagnoli from anywhere on via Posillipo,
the
long
coast
road that moves up from Mergellina,
has
always
been to
drive up to the high west end of the road and over the cliff (using the
convenient Coroglio road,
of course). It winds down the other side of the Posillipo hill and puts
you out at the site of the old steel mill near the isle of Nisida, then on
the road through Bagnoli and along the
coast to Pozzuoli. The Coroglio
road has always been very difficult to maintain, being subject to
landslides from the cliff-face above. That cliff is webbed with steel
netting for much of its length. The road is closed again after a hefty
landslide and there is no realistic forecast on how long it will take
to reopen. (In this photo, taken from the North Pier in Bagnoli, the
Coroglio road, from the bottom, starts at the buildings at sea level
and goes through a series of switchbacks, running past the entrance to
the old Roman Seiano grotto—visible
low-left of center in photo—and finishes out of view in the upper left
on top of the cliff.)
A letter from Giuseppe Verdi,
dated May 27, 1861, addressed
to Leopoldo Tarantini, the administrator of the San Carlo theater at
the time, has been acquired from a private party for 4 million euros
(about 5 million
dollars) by the Campania region of Italy (of which
Naples is the capital). The letter will be on display in the Royal
Palace. In the letter, the composer expresses his regret that he
will
unable to conduct his Un Ballo in
maschera at San Carlo after having initially accepted the
invitation to do so; he speaks of the possibility of conducting the
work at San Carlo at some later date. Both the date and the opera are
interesting. (See this link.) The
Kingdom of Naples fell in February of 1861 at the Siege of Gaeta; the new Kingdom of Italy
was proclaimed immediately. The first opera in the new
pan-Italian San Carlo was Verdi's Battle
of
Legnano (which had actually opened in January, while the siege
in Gaeta was
still going on. The opera program of that season had nothing to do with
the Bourbons; Garibaldi had taken Naples in September, 1860. Maybe he
liked the Battle of Legnano.)
Verdi's Un Ballo in
maschera had originally been composed for San Carlo in 1857 but
was rejected by the Neapolitan censors. It was originally called Una vendetta in domino and
dealt with the assination of Swedish king Gustav III in the 1790s. After
being watered down with a different title, time-frame and location,
the
work still didn't pass censorial muster, so Verdi broke his contract,
sued San Carlo and had the work performed in its censored version (now
the tradtional one)
in Rome in February, 1859. The letter comes only a
few months after the unification of Italy and one wonders whether the
letter had to do with which version of the opera was under discussion.
In any event, the revised Un ballo
in maschera played at San Carlo the next season (1861/61) under
another conductor.
"Carnevale, ogni scherzo
vale" is the Italian expression that indicates that you can
play any prank you want on Mardi Gras, sort of like a combination of
April Fool's Day and Halloween in other places. Such pranks usually
have to do with throwing flower and eggs on people—hah-hah—and now
inflicting even more damage with handy-dandy spray paint cans. No more.
(Sure.) The mayor has just signed a law that imposes a 200 euro fine on
offenders (or their legal guardians, since most offenders are minors)
and 400 for repeat offenders.
How
about
it,
punk?
Do you feel lucky?
Neighborhood Watch patrols in
Naples are about to get the
go-ahead from the city government. No one is sure if it's a good idea.
Theft and vandalism have been such a problem that shop-owners along the
east end of Corso Umberto, near the train station, have banded together
and proposed the idea of heavily armed, "Make-my-Day"-vigilantes
stringing up ne'er-do-wells ...no...no... of unarmed civilian patrols
whose mere presence will deter evil-doers. There is a model for this in
some towns in northern Italy. The Vatican is against it, but I don't
know why.
- The restored church of Sant'Anna
dei
Lombadi, also known as Santa
Maria di Monteoliveto has been reopened for visitors. Even in a
city full of historic churches, this one is particularly worthwhile.
(See the above link.)
- The umpteenth on-again plans for the future of Bagnoli are
now off again. You can catch up on the past at Bagnoli and Bagnoli,
future (1) (2). In
any event, the paper reports this morning that there is no money for
anything—not for building the new boat harbor (the one that never got
built because Naples lost out in its bid for the 2007 Americas Cup, and
certainly not for the "Napoli Studios," the film studio that was to be
a "Cinecittà in the shadow of Vesuvius" (in reference to the
famous film complex in Rome) built on the gigantic ex-premises of the
defunct Italsider steel mill. Rest assured, says someone, that the land
will be cleaned up in time to be used as a seaside venue for something
called Culture Forum 2013.
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