Liz and Dick – larger than life and famously falling in love
in Rome. Gotta love it, and I do. Enough to drag Bill to Liz and Dick sites in
and around Rome.
Imagine - on an enormous screen |
Reading Furious Love
– the recent book about “the marriage of the century” – or should we say
marriages? – further stoked my enthusiasm.
And, of course, their torrid love affair began in a city we adore, Rome.
And, of course, their torrid love affair began in a city we adore, Rome.
First stop: Cinecittà. They met in January 1962 (essentially for the first time) in Rome’s
Hollywood, Cinecittà, on a sound stage for Cleopatra,
determined not to like each other. But they couldn't help themselves. The sparks
flew, and they still can be seen on screen in that overproduced epic, perhaps
best known for the scene in which the Egyptian empress enters the Eternal City
on a gigantic, sphinx-like float. Cinecittà now has tours. So you can walk where
these famous two did their courtship dance.
Entertainment on villa grounds, via Appia Antica |
Second stop: the grand villas of via Appia Antica. While they were filming Cleopatra, Liz lived in an “expansive Italian villa” on the old
Appian Way. We couldn't find the villa,
but we can imagine it: “The pink marble
mansion came complete with swimming pool, acres of pine forests, two butlers,
and three maids.” Perhaps it’s a bit
like Eugenio Sgaravatti’s on via Appia Antica - whose villa we know because he
invites all of Rome to a spring party.
Salvator Mundi International Hospital on the Gianicolo |
Fellini on via Veneto |
Fourth stop or stops: following the paparazzi from Piazza Navona to via Veneto. They continued their torrid affair. They were followed all over Rome - from Tre Scalini, the famous spot for “tartuffo” ice cream on Piazza Navona, to via Veneto, where Federico Fellini was filming La Dolce Vita. You may recall the reporter in Fellini’s film is called “Paparazzo” (buzzing insect) – and, so, the paparazzi in Rome, on Vespas, found Liz and Dick. And the world discovered the paparazzi effect.
Porto Santo Stefano today |
Sixth stop: another
lavish sound stage. In 1966 Taylor and
Burton were back in Rome to film Franco Zeffirelli’s The Taming of the Shrew – an appropriate vehicle for the couple, who
celebrated their second wedding anniversary on March 15, 1966. In the film of
the Shakespeare play, Burton is Petruchio, the domineering husband, and Taylor
is Kate, the wife who won’t be submissive – at least until the end. It was Zeffirelli’s first film, and
Elizabeth’s first Shakespearean role.
Playing another furious couple |
Dinocittà morphing into Cinecittà World |
takes a lot of imagination to look back and forward |
The project seems hardly to have gotten off the ground, and we were not allowed to step inside the gates. Sadly, the current state of Dinocittà makes it difficult to bring to mind the films made there besides The Taming of the Shrew; among them King Vidor’s War and Peace with Henry Fonda and Audrey Hepburn (1956) and John Huston’s The Bible (1966) with George C. Scott and Ava Gardner, Huston himself, and Peter O’Toole. Press releases in 2002 said a Brian DePalma movie would be made there “next year.” But those are the latest press releases on the www.romastudios.com Web site. Not much to see there, but if you get into maps, you can find it at this link.
Still, for those of us paying homage, it’s a nice drive outside Rome, on km 23.270 of the Pontina, on the west side of that harrowing road to the seashore. It’s only 2 km north of Pomezia, a city founded in the Fascist era that we find intriguing.
Ponti and Loren's villa in Marino, circa 1964 |
Last stop: the small town of Marino in the Colli Albani just
outside Rome. Taylor and Burton couldn't seem to stay away from each other or
from Rome. He holed up there when she
announced her separation from him in 1973, and she went back to see him there as
they tried to make up. He was staying at
Carlo Ponti’s immense villa in Marino. Burton needed to get his drinking under
control to star in Ponti’s The Voyage,
with Ponti’s wife, Sophia Loren. (For more photos of the villa, see this link.)
And here Burton writes Elizabeth several pleading letters datelined “Rome”:
“…[I]f you leave me, I shall have to kill myself. There is no life without you, I’m afraid. And
I am afraid.” – Burton.
Her response: “I
don’t want to be that much in love ever again.”
And so we leave our furiously in love couple, where they had
their highs and their lows – Rome.
Dianne
3 comments:
Good old times !
Address of Elizabeth Taylor's villa was 448 via Appia Pignatelli.
(Later home to Franco Zeffirelli, next door to Valentino).
Elizabeth's villa was at 448 via Appia Pignatelli.
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