Who Knows (Chissà)? Fun Facts

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There are a lot of things I’m learning about Rome and Italy, and some of them are surprising, so I’ll periodically share them as they strike me. If you know these things already—brava! If you don’t…now you do!

Roman BusPublic transportation isn’t very efficient. I needed to stop thinking like a New Yorker (must live near a subway!) and start walking like a Roman. The buses are often too crowded to get on, or don’t show up for ages while you’re waiting. The subway doesn’t really go very many places, especially not in the heart of centro storico (like Piazza Navona or Campo dei Fiori). But the good news is, everything in the center is so close, you can walk easily from the Colosseo to Trastevere in about 30 minutes, if you don’t stop and shop along the way!

Apartment hunting: It’s just like New York! It helps to work your connections and if you go with a broker, be prepared to pay a fee of at least one month’s rent in addition to whatever the landlord is asking. My first trip here I took the first place I saw and lucked out with a little studio right near the Colosseo. This time, it took me about a month and visits to about 6 or 7 places to find the right one. On a tight budget of about 800€/month, it wasn’t easy to find. Testaccio, where I really wanted to live (a neighborhood across the river from Trastevere, very Roman and accessible by public transport but not so touristy), was out of my price range. I found quickly that being on a good bus line would be key: one apartment took me an hour and half to reach by taking a bus, a metro and a local train. I checked that one off the list.

I became like Goldilocks. One apartment was too small, one was too dark and several weren’t in areas where I could easily walk to a restaurant for dinner (there I go thinking like a New Yorker again).

Finally, an artist friend gave me a tip that a sculptor she knew was looking for a subletter for her apartment in Monteverde Vecchio.

Villa Pamphilj

Villa Pamphilj

I didn’t know the area but when I went to see the place, the neighborhood was charming, with lots of little shops and restaurants. Two buses stop right by the apartment or it’s an easy walk down the hill into Trastevere to the 8 tram (perhaps the most reliable line in town). And the apartment itself is lovely, with a huge terrace and a view of Rome. This was taken from my terrace after a rainstorm:

St. Peter's Basilica from Monteverde Vecchio

St. Peter’s Basilica from Monteverde Vecchio

The best part is that it fits my budget. So there’s no hot water in the kitchen and the “shower” is, well, more of a hip-bath. It’s mine for the next few months, with no broker fee, and did I mention the view?!

Things I Love: Zeffirelli Celebrates Rome

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Andrea Bocelli & Monica Bellucci in Zeffirelli's Homage to Rome

Andrea Bocelli & Monica Bellucci in Zeffirelli’s Homage to Rome

Here’s an amazing video directed by Franco Zeffirelli in 2009, featuring Andrea Bocelli in a bodice-ripping scene with Monica Bellucci. Of course, Bernini makes it in there, too. It’s been around but I just saw it for the first time, so I thought I’d share. It’s so trashy-novel awesome, I can’t resist!

 

Book Review: The Ultimate Bernini Book?

 

20130504-003242.jpgA book I’ve been reading and using for research, and for anyone who wants to learn more about Gian Lorenzo Bernini, is Bernini: His Life and His Rome, by Franco Mormando (University of Chicago Press, 2011). The book is incredibly comprehensive and I’ve found it invaluable in my efforts to learn more about my 400-year-old boyfriend. It’s a bit on the academic side, but to get down in the weeds of Bernini’s life, as much as is known at any rate (how I wish there were love letters or diary entries from the man himself!), this book is very well researched. Mormando draws from biographies of the great artist written around his own time (some more reliable than others—one is by Bernini’s own son, Domenico), as well as the author’s own extensive digging into the artist’s history.

The book dwells more on Bernini’s political maneuverings and how he excelled as a courtier through the “reins” of numerous popes. The Cavaliere, it turns out, probably wasn’t a very likeable guy—intense, with a quick temper, exacting of his assistants—he clearly put most of his interpersonal energies toward schmoozing the Powers That Be, who, after all, were his meal ticket (GLB was one of the richest guys in town at the time).

This book isn’t for leisure reading—but if you’re looking for a thoroughly researched work on an artist that changed Rome, this is it.