Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Kevin Spacey reads poem about forsaken boxer at Rome museum

- By Colleen Barry

MILAN >> Actor Kevin Spacey read a poem about a wornout and dejected boxer during an unexpected performanc­e at a Rome museum Friday night, weeks after a criminal sexual misconduct case against him collapsed in Massachuse­tts.

Spacey’s appearance at the National Roman Museum was not publicly announced in advance. The museum had posted a cryptic notice on its website saying a two-time Oscar winner would be reading works by Italian poet Gabriele Tinti during a rare evening event — but didn’t name the person.

During the reading, Spacey stood next to an ancient Greek bronze statue of a battered fighter while reciting Tinti’s “The Boxer.” The poem is about a fighter left bleeding at ringside, cast aside despite previous glory

Anyone familiar with the rapid downward course of the former “House of Cards” actor’s career after sexual misconduct allegation­s were made against him in 2017 would have an easy time finding meaning between the lines.

Video clips published in Italian media and by U.S. news site The Daily Beast show Spacey dramatical­ly intoning the verses, including one reading: “The more you are wounded, the greater you are. And the more empty you are. They used me for their entertainm­ent, fed on shoddy stuff. Life was over in a moment.”

Barbie Latza Nadeau, The Daily Beast’s Rome correspond­ent, said four journalist­s were invited to the reading and promised sit-down interviews with Spacey that did not materializ­e.

“Everyone in the tiny room was left speechless by Spacey’s unapologet­ic performanc­e. By the time it was over, a bigger crowd had gathered outside, and he read the whole poem again to them,” Latza Nadeau wrote.

She said the most poignant parts of the reading came near the end, when he read the lines “You have to suck the heart of a hero as long as it beats” and “I shook the country, made the arenas vibrate, tore my opponents to shreds. I lit up the darkness, collected insults, compelled applause. Not everyone knew how to do this.”

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