The Guardian (USA)

Raffaella Carrà, Italian cultural institutio­n and LGBT icon, laid to rest in Rome

- Lorenzo Tondo in Palermo and Sam Jones in Madrid

In Italy’s week of mourning for Raffaella Carrà, one image summed up her universal appeal: a rainbow flag – the symbol of the LGBT movement – next to her coffin in a Catholic church.

Carrà, who died on Monday aged 78, was a cultural institutio­n in her home country, regarded as its “bestloved woman”. The queen of light entertainm­ent TV, she also acted and topped the music charts of Europe and South America with pioneering, sexpositiv­e pop music.

On Friday, thousands of people accompanie­d her coffin through the streets of Rome to the church of Santa Maria in Ara Coeli for her funeral, which was broadcast live on the public television channel RAI.

“Raffaella has left us. She has gone to a better world, where her humanity, her unmistakab­le laugh and her extraordin­ary talent will shine forever,” said Carrà’s long-term partner, Sergio Japino.

Condolence­s poured in from the worlds of TV, cinema, sport and politics, and from the millions of admirers who followed every move of her 60year career.

“My heart is broken,” said 54-yearold Giusi Angileri, from Marsala. “Raffaella Carrà was the joy of Saturday night. My mother woke me every morning for school singing her songs. La Carrà, for me, represente­d a sweet awakening. She gave me a smile, even if I had to get out of bed to go to school.”

Born in Bologna in 1943, Carrà studied dance but started her career as an actor in the “peplum” genre of Italian historical epic films. After a stint in the US where she acted with Frank Sinatra in the adventure film Von Ryan’s Express, she returned to Italy and became a host on the Broadway-inspired television variety show Canzonissi­ma, which would frequently feature song-and-dance numbers performed by Carrà.

In the conservati­ve Italy of the 1970s, Carrà caused one of the biggest scandals in the history of Italian television when she appeared on stage in front of millions of viewers baring her belly button. The episode infuriated the Vatican and the leaders of the Christian Democracy party, but they could not do anything to stop her.

Conservati­ve Italians were also helpless when in 1978, Carrà released the album Raffaella, which contained a song called Luca that detailed the homophobic prejudices and violent attacks endured by gay people in Italy in the 70s.

In the days following Carrà’s death, the Italian press widely reported on a 2020 Guardian article by Angelica Frey in which Frey discussed how Carrà’s songs had revolution­ised Italian entertainm­ent – and given women agency in the bedroom.

“Her outfits and routines were regarded as racy by the era’s standards and she was occasional­ly censored, but her career endured throughout the 1970s,” Frey wrote. “She became regarded as a feminist icon across Europe. The original Italian version of the song, Do It, Do It Again [a 1978 hit in the UK] encourages women to take control during sex.”

Francesco Vezzoli, the curator of an exhibition of 1970s Italian television for the Fondazione Prada in 2017, said Carrà had done “more to liberate women than many feminists”.

There has also been an outpouring of grief and love in Spain, where Carrà lived and worked in the 1970s as the country emerged from the Franco dictatorsh­ip, telling a Spanish interviewe­r in 1977 that she “always voted Communist”.

In 2017 she was named a global gay icon at World Pride in Madrid, and the following year she was made a dame of the Order of Civil Merit by King Felipe.

“Spain’s an old love,” she said at the time. “I’ve sung in all its cities and what I like about its people is that when they meet me they say: ‘You’re one of us.’ Spain is like my second homeland.”

Further proof of the country’s enduring affection for the singer is evident in plans to name a square in Madrid in her honour. Next Wednesday the Más Madrid party will propose the creation of the Plaza Raffaela Carrà in the centre of the capital.

“She represents freedom for many generation­s, for grandmothe­rs and grandfathe­rs, for mothers and fathers and also for younger people,” the party said. “She was one of the first public figures to talk about sexual freedom and she was an inspiratio­nal figure as both a music and TV star and as an internatio­nal gay icon. Raffaella Carrà was always deeply linked to Madrid, a city where she said she felt free.”

Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, paid tribute on Twitter, calling her “a woman who inspired happiness, courage and commitment in successive generation­s” and adding: “Her music lifted our hearts; her free spirit filled our souls.”

 ?? Carrà’s funeral on Friday. Photograph: Angelo Carconi/EPA ?? Crowds gather in front of the church of Santa Maria in Ara Coeli, Rome, for Raffaella
Carrà’s funeral on Friday. Photograph: Angelo Carconi/EPA Crowds gather in front of the church of Santa Maria in Ara Coeli, Rome, for Raffaella
 ?? Riccardo Antimiani/EPA ?? Raffaella Carrà lies in state in the Protomotec­a Hall, Rome, on Thursday. Photograph:
Riccardo Antimiani/EPA Raffaella Carrà lies in state in the Protomotec­a Hall, Rome, on Thursday. Photograph:

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