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Born
Rosario Tindaro Fiorello

16 May 1960 (age 60)
OccupationShowman, comedian, television personality, singer, radio personality, television host, actor, musician, producer
Spouse(s)Susanna Biondo
Websitehttp://www.rosariofiorello.it

Rosario Tindaro Fiorello (born 16 May 1960), known just as Fiorello, is an Italian comedian, singer, radio, and television presenter.

Career[edit]

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Fiorello was born in Catania, Sicily and raised in Augusta, Sicily. He began his career working in tourist villages, first as a barman, and then as an entertainer. Near the end of the 1980s, Fiorello was brought to Milan by Bernardo Cherubini, whom he had met in Valtur Villages. Bernardo, brother of Jovanotti, who introduced him to Claudio Cecchetto[1] , who directed Radio Deejay and where he met Antonio Germinario, a talent-scout, that become his manager for many years. Soon afterwards, Fiorello began hosting the show 'Viva Radio Deejay' with Marco Baldini.

Having become popular through the TV show Karaoke[2], Fiorello went on to host various TV shows. Soon after, he endured a period of drug problems that kept him away from the world of TV. However, he returned to show business and television in the 1990s, displaying great abilities as a showman, first in the Mediaset networks, then with RAI in 2001, 2002, and 2004 with Stasera Pago Io.

Since 2002, Fiorello[3] has hosted the radio broadcast Viva Radio 2[4] together with Marco Baldini and the musician Enrico Cremonesi, during which Fiorello shows off his skills as a singer, mimic and entertainer. The authors of the program were Rosario Fiorello with Marco Baldini, Francesco Bozzi, Alberto De Risio, Riccardo Cassini and Federico Taddia. In the summer of 2003, was published the 1st of a long series of CD's that collected the best of his radio show. The CD's included the imitation of: Mike Bongiorno and the Forgetful of Cologno (Berlusconi), Andrea Camilleri, Antonio Cassano, Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, Gianni Minà, Franco Califano, Carla Bruni, Oliviero Toscani, Marina Flaibani from Onda Verde, Nanni Moretti, Vittorio Cecchi Gori, Ignazio La Russa, the prince Albert of Monaco, Monica Bellucci and her husband Vincent Cassel and many more.In 2007 Fiorello and Baldini realized the single Chi Siamo Noi[5], that included many gags of their radio show Viva Radio 2, the song was written by Rosario Fiorello, Corrado Rizza, Domenico Scuteri and Luca Leonori and it was in the Italian pop chart.

Fiorello's skills as a vocalist have brought him to the cinema as well. He has participated in such varied roles as: a dubber in cartoons (most recently Garfield), to an appearance in the film The Talented Mr. Ripley[6], in the role of Fausto, a young Italian friend of the main characters.

Traveler su 1071 usb microscope driver. His younger brother Giuseppe Fiorello is an actor.

In 2008 came out the compilation 'Pronto c'e' Mike'[7] with his gags on the phone with Mike Bongiorno during the radio show 'Viva Radio 2', with a book written by Aldo Grasso. On 14 November 2011 Fiorello[8] back on television with a new program entitled 'Il più grande spettacolo dopo il weekend' (inspired by the song 'Il più grande spettacolo dopo il Big Bang' of his friend Lorenzo Jovanotti). The first episode showed excellent results, with 10 million viewers and almost 40% share. The data, already outstanding, to further improve in the second episode (with over 12 million viewers and a share of almost 43% [10]) and third (almost 12 million viewers and over 43% share).

Impressions and characters[edit]

Fiorello's most famous imitations include Mike Bongiorno, and that of Silvio Berlusconi as a character called Smemorato di Cologno who, in the parody, loses his memory every time something related to communism is mentioned. Smemorato di Cologno is a pun on the main character of the Italian comedy 'Lo smemorato di Collegno', Cologno being instead the headquarters of Berlusconi's well-known media company.

Other famous impressions and characters include:

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  • Andrea Camilleri, an Italian writer
  • The Signorina buonasera, a RAI announcer
  • Antonio Cassano, an Italian Football player
  • Avvocato Messina, a lawyer who defends his clients with absurd pleas
  • Barbara Palombelli, an Italian journalist
  • Bruno Vespa, an Italian journalist
  • Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, former President
  • Federico Moccia, an Italian writer
  • Franco Battiato, an Italian singer/songwriter
  • Franco Califano, an Italian singer/songwriter
  • Gianni Minà, an Italian journalist
  • Gianni Morandi, an Italian singer
  • Giorgio Napolitano, current President
  • Giovanni Muciaccia, the presenter of the TV program Art Attack
  • Giulietto e Romeo, two gay truck drivers
  • Ignazio La Russa, an Italian politician
  • Luciano Pavarotti, Italian Operatic Tenor
  • Marco Carta, an Italian singer who won the Sanremo Music Festival in 2009
  • Marina Flaibani of the radio program Onda Verde
  • Martano Volpi, a mad man from Tuscany
  • The 'mostroinviato' (monster-correspondent), which in Italian sounds like 'nostro inviato' (our correspondent)
  • Nanni Moretti, an Italian director and actor
  • Oliviero Toscani, an Italian photographer
  • Paolo Fava, an imaginary jazz player
  • Padre Georg, Benedetto XVI's secretary
  • The hunchback of Notre Dame, a character of Riccardo Cocciante's musical
  • The tenorRoberto Alagna
  • Romano Prodi, former Prime Minister
  • Silvio Muccino as Sasha
  • Tony Sperandeo, an Italian character actor famous for his stereotypical gangster roles
  • Valerio Staffelli, a journalist from the TV program Striscia la notizia

During 16 May 2006 episode, on Fiorello's birthday, Carlo Azeglio Ciampi called to wish him a happy birthday and to congratulate him for his impression, especially for the fact that Ciampi doesn't always pronounce clearly the last syllable of some words.

During November 2006 the newspaper Avvenire (linked with CEI) criticized Fiorello for his impression of Padre Georg. Most of the journalists admitted that they had never listened to the radio program directly.

Discography[edit]

Singles[edit]

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  • La canzone del sole (1991)
  • Azzurro (1991)
  • Una carezza in un pugno (1992)
  • Si o No (Please don't go) (1993)
  • Spiagge (1993)
  • Puoi (1993)
  • Mare Nostrum (1993)
  • Finalmente tu (1995)
  • Ridi (1995)
  • Dimmi dimmi perché (1998)
  • Vivere a colori (1998)
  • Città vuota (2004)
  • L'appuntamento (2005)

Album[edit]

  • Veramente falso (1991)
  • Nuovamente falso (1992)
  • Spiagge e lune (1993)
  • Karaoke Compilation (1993)
  • Finalmente tu (1995)
  • Saro Fiorello (1996)
  • Dai miei amici cantautori (1997)
  • Batticuore (1998)
  • I miei amici cantautori (2000)
  • Fiorello the Greatest (2002)
  • A modo mio (2004)
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  • Andrea Camilleri, an Italian writer
  • The Signorina buonasera, a RAI announcer
  • Antonio Cassano, an Italian Football player
  • Avvocato Messina, a lawyer who defends his clients with absurd pleas
  • Barbara Palombelli, an Italian journalist
  • Bruno Vespa, an Italian journalist
  • Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, former President
  • Federico Moccia, an Italian writer
  • Franco Battiato, an Italian singer/songwriter
  • Franco Califano, an Italian singer/songwriter
  • Gianni Minà, an Italian journalist
  • Gianni Morandi, an Italian singer
  • Giorgio Napolitano, current President
  • Giovanni Muciaccia, the presenter of the TV program Art Attack
  • Giulietto e Romeo, two gay truck drivers
  • Ignazio La Russa, an Italian politician
  • Luciano Pavarotti, Italian Operatic Tenor
  • Marco Carta, an Italian singer who won the Sanremo Music Festival in 2009
  • Marina Flaibani of the radio program Onda Verde
  • Martano Volpi, a mad man from Tuscany
  • The 'mostroinviato' (monster-correspondent), which in Italian sounds like 'nostro inviato' (our correspondent)
  • Nanni Moretti, an Italian director and actor
  • Oliviero Toscani, an Italian photographer
  • Paolo Fava, an imaginary jazz player
  • Padre Georg, Benedetto XVI's secretary
  • The hunchback of Notre Dame, a character of Riccardo Cocciante's musical
  • The tenorRoberto Alagna
  • Romano Prodi, former Prime Minister
  • Silvio Muccino as Sasha
  • Tony Sperandeo, an Italian character actor famous for his stereotypical gangster roles
  • Valerio Staffelli, a journalist from the TV program Striscia la notizia

During 16 May 2006 episode, on Fiorello's birthday, Carlo Azeglio Ciampi called to wish him a happy birthday and to congratulate him for his impression, especially for the fact that Ciampi doesn't always pronounce clearly the last syllable of some words.

During November 2006 the newspaper Avvenire (linked with CEI) criticized Fiorello for his impression of Padre Georg. Most of the journalists admitted that they had never listened to the radio program directly.

Discography[edit]

Singles[edit]

  • La canzone del sole (1991)
  • Azzurro (1991)
  • Una carezza in un pugno (1992)
  • Si o No (Please don't go) (1993)
  • Spiagge (1993)
  • Puoi (1993)
  • Mare Nostrum (1993)
  • Finalmente tu (1995)
  • Ridi (1995)
  • Dimmi dimmi perché (1998)
  • Vivere a colori (1998)
  • Città vuota (2004)
  • L'appuntamento (2005)

Album[edit]

  • Veramente falso (1991)
  • Nuovamente falso (1992)
  • Spiagge e lune (1993)
  • Karaoke Compilation (1993)
  • Finalmente tu (1995)
  • Saro Fiorello (1996)
  • Dai miei amici cantautori (1997)
  • Batticuore (1998)
  • I miei amici cantautori (2000)
  • Fiorello the Greatest (2002)
  • A modo mio (2004)

Duets[edit]

  • With Caterina: Il cielo – Favola semplice, (1994)
  • With 360 Gradi: E poi.. non ti ho vista più 2003
  • With Marco Baldini: Chi siamo noi (dall'album Chi siamo noi – Gli inediti di Viva Radio 2) 2007
  • With Giorgia: Più (dall'album Spirito libero - Viaggi di voce 1992-2008) 2008
  • With Claudio Baglioni: Porta Portese (dall'album QPGA) 2009
  • With Max Pezzali: Sei un mito (dall'album Max 20) 2013
  • With Mina: Baby, It's Cold Outside (dall'album Christmas Song Book 2013
  • With Matteo Brancaleoni e Fabrizio Bosso: L'italiano (dall'album Made in Italy) 2015
  • With Daniele Lazzarin|Danti: Fatti mandare dalla mamma 2017

Compilation[edit]

  • Uno è famoso, l'altro no: il meglio di Viva Radio2 CD + LIBRO (2002)
  • Viva Radio 2 (il meglio del 2003) (2003)
  • Viva Radio 2 (il meglio del 2005) (2005)
  • Viva Radio Deejay - Il meglio di.. (2006)
  • Viva Radio 2 (il meglio del 2006) (2006)
  • Fiorello e Baldini visti da dietro (2006) – DVD
  • Viva Radio 2 (il meglio del 2007) (2007)
  • Chi Siamo Noi (Gli inediti di Viva Radio 2) (2007)
  • Pronto c'è Mike: Telefonate al 'vero' Mike Bongiorno con libro di Aldo Grasso (2008)
  • Viva Radio 2 (il meglio del 2008) (2008)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'The History of Canale 5 (Book – pag 122)'. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  2. ^'The TV show ' Karaoke' by Rosario Fiorello'. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  3. ^'Close Encounter with Rosario Fiorello'. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  4. ^'Italian Comic Takes Summer Break, and Radio Fans Mourn'. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  5. ^'The single Chi Siamo Noi'. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
  6. ^'Rosario Fiorello and Matt Damon in the movie 'The Talented Mr. Ripley''. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  7. ^'The Compilation and book 'Pronto c'e' Mike''. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  8. ^'Comedian, singer closes popular Edicola Fiore show'. Retrieved 3 April 2018.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fiorello.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rosario_Fiorello&oldid=957076322'

Fiorella Kostoris Padoa-Schioppa (born 5 May 1945) is an Italian economist who is Professor at the University of Rome (La Sapienza). She is also a professor at the College of Europe in Bruges. She has published approximately a hundred articles and twenty books in various languages on topics concerning macroeconomics, labor, public finance, unemployment, pension reform and other topics. She was president of ISAE, the Italian independent but government-funded economic think tank until March 2003. She is working on a book on European economic policies and institutions.

Fiorella Kostoris was married to the late Italian economist and politician Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa.

Personal background[edit]

She was born in 1945 in Rome but raised in Trieste in a Jewish family that placed a high value on education and on knowledge of foreign languages. In an interview [1] she described how she was one of only 5 pupils in her class each of whom competed every day to be ranked first by the teacher.[1] She has described herself as very left wing in her youth, even attending Italian Communist Party meetings (although the communists made fun of her for arriving in an Alfa Romeo Giulia sports car). After graduating from Milan's Bocconi University in Economics she went to the United States where she earned a graduate degree at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1968. Of her experience in the US she said 'I came back more of a [classical] liberal, more convinced that overall welfare is maximized by people seeking their own individual well being'. At MIT she met Franco Modigliani and later became an editor of his collected papers.

Her best known book is Italy: The Sheltered Economy (1993) in which she made the case that Italy has a huge and interventionist governmental economic policy compared to other countries and that much of this state action and regulation is irrational and counter-efficient.[2]

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Her controversial policy recommendation[edit]

On 19 March 2004 Kostoris published an article in the newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore entitled Abolire una settimana di ferie per rilanciare l'economia. Kostoris adduced statistics showing that the average Italian worker works fewer hours throughout his career than his European and North American counterparts. Furthermore, the number of hours worked per year is gradually decreasing. If this trend could be reversed Italian economic growth would pick up. The causes of the low hours of work per person are many; they include early retirement, delays in finding a job, strikes for non-contract related reasons, as well as more holidays than other countries. To illustrate the tradeoff between work and leisure Kostoris calculated that if every Italian gave up one week of time off the GNP would increase by 0.3% to 0.4%. The idea was initially endorsed by Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi; in a speech in Cernobbio on 29 March he said 'There are too many holidays. A few days of extra work will produce a beneficial effect on GNP'. But the public reaction was quite negative and the idea was quietly dropped.

While Kostoris was pilloried as a slave driver who wants to force people to work, the substantive issues raised in her article were not seriously addressed.

References[edit]

  1. ^Claudio Sabelli Fioretti (8 November 2001). 'Fiorella Kostoris Padoa Schioppa - Sette' [Fiorella Kostoris Padoa Schioppa - Seven] (in Italian). Archived from the original on 28 October 2007.
  2. ^Powell, Fiorella Padoa Schioppa Kostoris ; translated by John E. (1993). Italy, the sheltered economy : structural problems in the Italian economy. Oxford [England]: Clarendon Press. ISBN9780198287483.

Fiorella 2004 Drivers License

Further reading[edit]

  • ''Abolire una settimana di ferie per rilanciare l'economia'' ['Abolish a week's holiday to boost the economy']. la Repubblica (in Italian). 19 March 2004. Retrieved 29 November 2012.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fiorella_Kostoris&oldid=948679270'




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