Italian singer and actress (1943?2021)
Raffaella Carra
|
---|
|
Born
| Raffaella Maria Roberta Pelloni
(
1943-06-18
)
18 June 1943
|
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Died
| 5 July 2021
(2021-07-05)
(aged 78)
|
---|
Resting place
| Porto Santo Stefano
cemetery
|
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Occupations
| - Singer
- actress
- dancer
- television presenter
- radio presenter
- model
|
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Years active
| 1952?2021
|
---|
Musical career
|
Genres
| |
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Instrument(s)
| Vocals
|
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Labels
| |
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Musical artist
|
Raffaella Maria Roberta Pelloni
(18 June 1943 ? 5 July 2021), better known as
Raffaella Carra
(
Italian:
[raffa??lla
kar?ra]
), was an Italian singer, dancer, television presenter, actress and model.
[1]
Considered a
pop culture icon
in Europe and Latin America,
[2]
[3]
between the 1970s and 1980s she became a pioneer of
feminism
and
women's sexual freedom
in the television and music industry,
[4]
[5]
as well as an
LGBT icon
and an icon
of fashion
and design.
[6]
[7]
Carra released 25 studio albums in 37 countries, between Europe and Latin America, selling over 60 million records worldwide, which includes "
A far l'amore comincia tu
", "
Fiesta
", "
Forte forte forte
", "
Pedro
", "Tanti auguri" and "Tuca Tuca", singing in Italian, Spanish, English and French.
[8]
[9]
She became a successful TV host and personality in Italy, Spain and Argentina, being recognized with several awards, including 12
Telegatto
and two
TP de Oro
. After an acclaimed acting debut in Italy, Carra signed an acting deal with
20th Century Fox
in
Hollywood
, also starring in French and Spanish films, working with
Mario Monicelli
,
Marcello Mastroianni
,
Frank Sinatra
,
Edward Mulhare
,
Trevor Howard
,
Jean Marais
and
James Coburn
.
[10]
[11]
After her death, Carra was honored with the Sorriso Diverso Venezia Award at the
78th Venice International Film Festival
for her contributions in the Italian music and show industry.
[12]
Early life
[
edit
]
Carra was born on 18 June 1943 in
Bologna
[13]
to Raffaele Pelloni and Angela Iris Dell'Utri (of Sicilian ancestry) and had a brother named Enzo (died 2001).
[14]
[15]
[16]
Her parents, however, separated shortly after the wedding
[17]
and Carra spent most of her childhood between her mother's bar and the ice cream shop in
Bellaria ? Igea Marina
.
[18]
At the latter establishment, she grew up watching the television programme
Il Musichiere
, learning by heart titles, ballets, and refrains of the songs.
[19]
When she was only eight years old, she left the Romagna Riviera to continue her studies directly in
Rome
at the National Academy of Dance.
[20]
At the age of 14 she dropped out of ballet classes.
[21]
In 1952 she began her studies at the
Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia
until she graduated in 1960.
[21]
Career
[
edit
]
1950s and 1960s: youth, early career and Hollywood
[
edit
]
At the age of 9, while walking with her mother in Rome and through a family friend, she met the director
Mario Bonnard
who cast her in his film
Tormento del passato
, in which she played the character of Graziella.
[22]
[21]
Carra made her debut as a recognized actress in 1960 in the film
Long Night in 1943
and in 1963
I compagni
directed by
Mario Monicelli
and starring
Marcello Mastroianni
.
[21]
That same year she worked in the French film
La chance et l'amour
with
Michel Piccoli
.
[23]
She then appeared in many Italian
peplum
films, including
Fury of the Pagans
(1960),
Atlas in the Land of the Cyclops
(1961),
Mole Men Against the Son of Hercules
(1961),
Ulysses Against the Son of Hercules
(1962),
Pontius Pilate
(1962) and
Caesar the Conqueror
(1962), as well as comedies and action films such as
5 marines per 100 ragazze
(1961),
The Terrorist
(1963),
The Organizer
(1963), and
La Celestina P... R...
(1965).
[24]
[25]
[26]
In 1965, Carra moved to
Hollywood
after signing a contract with
20th Century Fox
[27]
and following in the footsteps of her fellow artists
Gina Lollobrigida
,
Sophia Loren
and
Virna Lisi
, Carra appeared in the film
Von Ryan's Express
alongside
Frank Sinatra
,
Edward Mulhare
and
Trevor Howard
.
[28]
In 1966, she guest starred in an episode of the American television series
I Spy
with
Bill Cosby
and
Robert Culp
. Feeling homesick and not liking life in Los Angeles, she decided to return to Italy that same year
[28]
where she starred in several Italian and French films such as
Le Saint prend l'affut
(1966), the
Our Man Flint
parody
Il vostro super agente Flit
(1966),
Why Did I Ever Say Yes Twice?
(1969), and
Cran d'arret
(1970), as well as a few television shows.
[24]
[25]
[26]
On 3 March 1967, Carra was broadcast on the National Programme
Tutto per bene
, a TV adaptation of the novel of the same name by Luigi Pirandello.
[26]
In January 1968, she presented a special broadcast on the second national network, entitled
Tempo di samba
. In June of the same year, she participated in the play
Processo di Famiglia
,
[25]
by
Diego Fabbri
and, at the end of the following year, she starred in
Il sorriso della gioconda
.
[24]
Changing her surname
[
edit
]
In the mid-1960s the director
Dante Guardamagna
gave her the pseudonym Carra; fond of painting, he combined her real name, Raffaella, which reminded him of the painter
Raphael Sanzio
, with the surname of the painter
Carlo Carra
.
[29]
1970s: international success
[
edit
]
In 1970 Carra participated as a guest actress in the programme
Io, Agata e tu
[
it
]
together with
Nino Ferrer
.
[21]
Shortly after,
Radiotelevisione italiana
(RAI) hired her to present
Canzonissima 70
, a Saturday night show in which she was also an actress and dancer.
[21]
She also presented
Canzonissima 71
and
Canzonissima 74
in which she released her hit single "Ma che musica Maestro" which sold 200,000 - 250,000 copies in Italy.
[30]
[31]
[32]
In 1971, she participated alongside
Georges Descrieres
in the French-produced television series
Arsenio Lupin
, starring in the episode entitled
La donna dai due sorrisi
.
[33]
In 1974 she hosted on Rai
Milleluci
together with singer
Mina Mazzini
.
[34]
After her success on the Italian market, in 1975 Carra made her first appearance in Spain on
Television Espanola
(TVE) when she performed in the variety show
¡Senoras y senores!
[
es
]
; she subsequently released a compilation album with Spanish versions of her songs.
[21]
In 1976, TVE hired her to host four episodes of the variety show
La hora de...
[
es
]
.
[21]
During these years Carra concentrated more on her singing career, achieving success in countries including Spain, Germany, France, Holland, Belgium, the UK, Greece, and in particular Latin American countries.
[35]
One of her most resounding successes was the song
A far l'amore comincia tu
, the English version of which reached ninth place in the
UK Singles Chart
, besides obtaining several gold and platinum records worldwide.
[36]
In 1976 Carra recorded the album
Forte forte forte
, which was released in 36 countries around the world, earning her a Gold certification in Canada.
[37]
The album was followed up in 1977 with
Fiesta
, which features Eurodisco songs; the title track has been described as "symbol" of the soubrette.
[38]
In 1978 Carra was a guest on the Chilean programme
Sabado gigante
.
[39]
That year she released the song "Hay que venir al sur", the Spanish version of "Tanti Auguri", and it was another of Carra's greatest hits.
[40]
1980s: return to RAI and success in Latin America
[
edit
]
In 1980 she starred in the film
Barbara
, shot in
Argentina
and distributed for the South American market and which was her last feature film as a leading actress.
[41]
That same year she recorded the album
Mi spendo tutto
which features the song "
Pedro
", one of her biggest hits.
[42]
In 1981 she presented
Millemilioni
, which was the first experiment in international television cooperation: five specials, each filmed in a different capital:
Buenos Aires
,
Mexico City
,
London
, Rome and
Moscow
.
[43]
In 1982 she presented
Fantastico 3
alongside
Corrado
,
[44]
and sang the opening theme song, "Ballo ballo", a song that would be the focus of some controversy, as accused by some of plagiarising "
Eleanor Rigby
" by
the Beatles
.
[45]
Riding the wave of the success of
Fantastico
, the disc
Raffaella Carra 82
was released, it was arranged and composed, among others, by Franco Bracardi and Danilo Vaona, and written by Gianni Boncompagni, G. Belfiore, and Giancarlo Magalli. Later that year, Carra appeared as the guest of honour at the
Vina del Mar International Song Festival
in
Chile
.
[39]
In February 1983, she was also a guest at the
Sanremo Music Festival 1983
.
[46]
"Soli sulla luna" and "Ahi" written by Valsiglio - Peace ? Depsa, are songs recorded specifically for the occasion, recorded ? "in a hurry" ? as stated by the same singer.
[47]
From 1983 to 1985, Carra presented
Pronto, Raffaella?
, the first midday programme on Rai that cemented her role as a presenter as the show became a success, with more than 14 million viewers tuning in to watch her interview of
Mother Teresa of Calcutta
.
[21]
Carra also sang the theme song of the programme:
Fatalita
.
[48]
The success of
Pronto, Raffaella?
won her the title of "Female TV Personality at European Level" in 1984, awarded by the European TV Magazines Association.
[49]
In 1984 she signed a two-year, multimillion-dollar contract with kitchen manufacturer Scavolini, with the slogan "the most loved by Italians".
[50]
[51]
That same year, the renewal of the contract with RAI was at the center of a heated controversy with the then
prime minister
,
Bettino Craxi
, who called the amount that the conductor would have earned for an exclusive three years "immoral and scandalous".
[51]
[52]
During this time, Carra released the albums
Fatalita
(1983) and
Bolero
(1984).
[53]
In the 1985?86 television season she was the presenter of the supershow
Buonasera Raffaella
, the first ten episodes of which were broadcast from Rome, while the last five were broadcast live from the studios of the Rai Corporation in New York and thanks to Rai International, visible throughout North and South America. Raffaella also interviewed and duetted with illustrious guests such as
Henry Kissinger
,
Joe Cocker
,
Riccardo Cocciante
,
Patty Pravo
,
Stevie Wonder
,
Ginger Rogers
and
Sammy Davis Jr.
and sang the theme songs "Fidati!" and "Bellissimo". The opening and closing theme songs of the programme are contained in the album
Fidati!
, released in the same year. The programme put Carra once again at the centre of controversy because of high production costs, especially for the episodes transmitted via satellite from the United States.
[54]
[55]
However, the transmission achieved great success, so much so as to arouse the interest of American televisions that invited Raffaella to the most famous talk shows of the time, interviewed by
Johnny Carson
,
Ed Sullivan
and
David Letterman
.
[56]
[57]
[58]
In the 1986?87 season, Carra presented the programme conceived by Corrado in 1976
Domenica in
, and sang both the opening theme song, "Curiosita", and the closing theme song, "Casa dolce casa". In November 1986, during a broadcast, Carra reacted to an article published by the weekly scandal tabloid
Novella 2000
, threatening legal action against the newspaper, which had accused her of neglecting her dying mother.
[59]
Raffaella's mother in fact died in 1987. Raffaella paid tribute during another episode of
Domenica in
, dedicating her song "I thank you life" to her.
[60]
In 1987 she struck a deal with
Fininvest
, with a multi-million dollar contract lasting two years. The first appearance on Canale 5 of Carra dates back to 27 December 1987: on late evenings a special titled
Benvenuta Raffaella
was broadcast, and the
Raffaella Carra Show
debuted shortly after on 9 January 1988. It was followed by
Il principe azzurro
, in the spring of 1989, which was the last programme presented by Carra for Canale 5.
[61]
1990s: work as a presenter
[
edit
]
Once the experience at Fininvest was over, Carra hosted the new programme
Weekend of Rafaella
in which she appeared with a new mature look abandoning tights and bodysuits.
[62]
The programme had a sequel entitled
Ricomincio da due
.
[51]
In early January 1990, Carra returned to Rai to host her new show
Raffaella Venerdi, Sabato e Domenica... E saranno famosi
.
[51]
In June 1990, she co-hosted alongside
Gigi Sabani
, Ricardo Fernandez Deu and
Miriam Diaz Aroca
,
Cuando calienta el sol
, a two-part Rai and TVE jointly produced variety show aired live from
Saint-Vincent
in Italy and
Tossa de Mar
in Spain and broadcast simultaneously to both countries.
[63]
In May 1991, she presented the
Telegatto
awards with Corrado.
[64]
Together with
Johnny Dorelli
, in 1991, she hosted the Saturday night show
Fantastic 12
on Rai 1, which, despite controversy caused by
Roberto Benigni
's appearance, obtained ratings below expectations.
[65]
From 1992 to 1995 Carra returned to TVE, conducting three seasons of
¡Hola Raffaella!
,
[21]
for which she won three
TP de Oro
[51]
and the early evening show
A las 8 con Raffaella
.
[66]
In the 1994?95 season, she moved to the Spanish counterpart of
Fininvest
,
Telecinco
, with the afternoon programme
En casa con Raffaella
.
[66]
At the end of 1995 she returned to Rai 1 with
Carramba! Che sorpresa
.
[21]
While in 1996 and from 1998 to 2000, she hosted
Carramba! Che sorpresa
,
Carramba! Che fortuna
,
40 minuti con Raffaella
,
Centoventitre
and
I Fantastici di Raffaella
.
[67]
In 1997 she also participated as a protagonist in a four-part RAI miniseries entitled
Una mamma per caso
, directed by Sergio Martino, in which she played the role of a single journalist. It was her last appearance on a scripted TV series.
[68]
That year refused to host the
Sanremo Music Festival 1997
.
[47]
She welcomed 1998 co-hosting with
Ramon Garcia
the TVE broadcast of New Year's
clock bell strikes
live from
Puerta del Sol
in Madrid.
[69]
2000s: between Spain and Italy
[
edit
]
In 2000 she presented the Gran Premio Internazionale dello Spettacolo with
Paolo Bonolis
.
[70]
The following year, alongside Piero Chiambretti, Enrico Papi, Megan Gale and Massimo Ceccherini, she hosted the 51st edition of the
Sanremo Music Festival
, which didn't see a great amount of success. Carra herself acknowledged that she was wrong to opt for a format that was more musical than television.
[71]
After a break of about a year, Carra returned to prime time on Rai 1 with the fourth edition of
Carramba! Che sorpresa
.
[72]
In 2004 she hosted the programme
Sogni
,
[73]
On 19 December 2004 she co-hosted with Ramon Garcia and
Loles Leon
the nine-hours
telethon
Contigo
on TVE.
[74]
On 24 October 2005, she was invited to
Diego Maradona
's programme
La Noche del 10
together with
Robbie Williams
.
[75]
In the spring of 2006, Carra hosted on Rai
Amore
, a replica of TVE's
Contigo
. It was dedicated to long-distance adoptions and it achieved nearly 150,000 adoptions.
[76]
Also in 2006, the actor
Fabio Canino
[
it
]
, assisted by
Roberto Mancinelli
, dedicated her a book named
Raffabook. Piu che un libro uno show del sabato sera
.
[77]
Around the same time,
Tiziano Ferro
published in the album
Nessuno e solo
the song
E Raffaella e mia
, dedicated to Carra, who participated in the videoclip of the song,
[78]
while the Spanish singer
Roser
recorded the album
Raffaella
, a tribute with Carra's greatest hits sung in Spanish.
[79]
In December 2006 she appeared at the gala for TVE's 50th Anniversary.
[80]
On 30 November 2007
Raffica
was released, two CDs and a DVD which collated all the theme songs sung and danced by Raffaella throughout her career.
[81]
In 2008 TVE called her for three programmes related to the
Eurovision Song Contest
. The first was the selection process aired on 8 March
Salvemos Eurovision
.
[66]
She also presented two special galas related to this festival.
[66]
Shortly after, Carra returned to Rai 1 to present a new edition of
Carramba! Che fortuna
that was rewarded by the auditel, with an average of 5,000,000 daily viewers and a maximum of 6,000,000.
[82]
Subsequently, Carra returned to Spain to host an episode of the Spanish version of
Saturday Night Live
on
Cuatro
in April 2009.
[83]
Also in 2008 the book
Mito in tre minuti
by Antimo Verde was published, an artistic biography based on research work.
[84]
On 7 November of that year
Raffica ? Balletti & Duetti
was released, a second box set of two CDs and a DVD with a selection of television performances by Carra.
[85]
That same year Carra hosted and produced
Il Gran Concerto
, a television programme in which
RAI National Symphony Orchestra
performed pieces of classical music and opera.
[86]
2010s: sporadic appearances
[
edit
]
In 2010 she duetted with Renato Zero on the song
Triangolo
from his album Sei Zero. The two also shared the stage at Zero's concert, on 5 October of the same year.
[49]
In 2011, after 13 years of absence, Italy returned to participate in the Eurovision Song Contest, and Rai chose Carra to host and comment from Italy on the final night of the event, as well as present the votes awarded by the jury and televoting.
[66]
In the summer of 2011 French DJ
Bob Sinclar
remixed her classic song
A far l'amore comincia tu
, which was retitled
Far l'amore
. This remix was later included by
Paolo Sorrentino
in the soundtrack of his Academy awarded film
The Great Beauty
.
[87]
Later, together with
Neri Marcore
, she starred in various
TIM
commercials, playing Queen
Isabella I of Castile
.
[88]
In October 2011, for the fourth consecutive year, she was once again the producer of the Rai 3 television programme
Il Gran Concerto
, hosted by Alessandro Greco.
[89]
In June 2012 she participated in the
Concerto per l'Emilia
[
it
]
in support of the people affected by the
earthquake of 20 and 29 May 2012
, in which she sang one of her hits,
Rumore
.
[90]
In January 2013, Carra was meant to return, after ten years, to host the Saturday night show on Rai 1, but the programme, provisionally titled
Auditorium
was later cancelled.
[91]
In February 2013 she became one of the coaches, along with Noemi, Piero Pelu and Riccardo Cocciante, in the programme
The Voice of Italy
on Rai 2.
[92]
On 16 July 2013 she released the dance single
Replay
,
[93]
which was followed up by the album
Replay (The Album)
. The album was released on 19 November 2013, along with the second single
Cha Cha Ciao
, seventeen years after her previous studio album.
[94]
[93]
That same year she appeared as herself in the movie
Colpi di fortuna
directed by
Neri Parenti
.
[95]
In 2014 she participated again in
The Voice of Italy
as a coach with Piero Pelu, Noemi and rapper J-Ax.
[92]
In February of the same year she was a guest at the first evening of the
Sanremo Festival
, where she performed a medley of songs from her latest album.
[96]
In the 2014?15 television season she returned to Rai 1 with a new talent-show with
Joaquin Cortes
, called
Forte forte forte
.
[97]
Starting from 24 February 2016 she returned as a coach in the Rai 2 programme
The Voice of Italy
with Emis Killa, Max Pezzali and Dolcenera; during the final episode she announced that she would leave the programme.
[98]
[99]
On 19 December 2016 she hosted
60 anos juntos
, TVE's 60th Anniversary Gala.
[100]
In the summer of 2017 she became a music producer for one of her contestants, Samuel Pietrasanta.
[21]
On 30 November 2018, the Christmas album
Ogni volta che e Natale
was released, Carra's last release before her death.
[101]
The album features an unreleased track,
Chi l'ha detto
, which was sent to radios on 16 November and released on YouTube along with the music video on 23 November.
[102]
On late 2018 she returned to the television scene after two years of absence, as a guest of
Fabio Fazio
at
Che tempo che fa
[103]
and by
Carlo Conti
at
Un Natale d'Oro Zecchino
.
[104]
In the spring of 2019 she returned to TV as the host of a programme of interviews with well-known personalities from show business, culture and sports, titled
A raccontare comincia tu
, broadcast in prime time on Thursdays on Rai 3 for six weeks, from 4 April to 9 May.
[105]
Following its success, the programme was confirmed with a new cycle of four episodes, aired from 24 October to 4 November.
[106]
2020s
[
edit
]
On 2 October 2020, the musical film
Explota Explota
was released in Spanish cinemas,
[107]
it was directed by Uruguayan Nacho Alvarez, and it was based on Carra's songs, she appears as a cameo.
[108]
Since 25 January 2021, the film has been available in the Italian version (with the title
Ballo Ballo
) on the
Amazon Prime
digital platform.
[109]
The film was nominated for three
Goya Awards
and three
Feroz Awards
.
[110]
On 5 July 2021, after Carra's death, RAI director Stefano Coletta revealed on television that there were plans to ask Carra to present the
Eurovision Song Contest 2022
and the Sanremo Festival that same year.
[111]
Personal life and death
[
edit
]
Carra had a ten-year relationship with the television author
Gianni Boncompagni
, author of her greatest musical hits.
[112]
She later met
Sergio Japino
[
it
]
, who was 9 years younger than her and at that time was the choreographer in two of her programmes:
Pronto, Raffaella?
and
Fantastico 3
.
[44]
Although they separated in the 1990s, they maintained a good personal and professional relationship to such an extent that it was him who announced Carra's death in 2021.
[44]
Previously, she had other romantic relationships with singer
Little Tony
whom she met in 1961 during the filming of the movie
5 marines per 100 ragazze
,
[113]
with
Juventus
footballer
Gino Stacchini
(which lasted eight years) and was also courted by Frank Sinatra, with whom she shared the set of the film
Von Ryan's Express
in 1965, but she rejected his flirting.
[114]
Carra never married, stating that she "did not believe" in marriage. She did not have children, although she wanted to; when she tried to have children, her doctor told her that she would not be able to.
[114]
Instead, she decided to adopt several children from around the world from a distance.
[115]
Raffaella Carra was very attached to
Monte Argentario
[116]
in
Tuscany
, where she lived for many years. Her villa in Cala Piccola was a source of inspiration for many of her broadcasts, even for the title of the TV programme
Carramba! Che sorpresa
.
[117]
She was a big fan of football team Juventus.
[19]
Carra died in Rome on 5 July 2021, at the age of 78,
[118]
[119]
from
lung cancer
.
[120]
Two days later, the funeral procession was held from her home, passing through RAI's central studios, the Foro Italico and Teatro delle Vittorie to reach the
Capitolium
, where the mortuary chapel was set up at Rome's City Hall.
[121]
Carra's ashes, after being cremated according to her expressed will, were taken to the places most dear to the artist, including
Porto Santo Stefano
and
San Giovanni Rotondo
, in the
Sanctuary of Saint Pio of Pietrelcina
.
[116]
Her ashes are preserved in the church of the municipal cemetery of Porto Santo Stefano.
[122]
[123]
Cultural impact and philanthropy
[
edit
]
Vogue Espana
defined the artist an "intergenerational phenomenon, social and cultural in scope, destined to be remembered forever",
[5]
while
The Guardian
considered her the "pop star who taught Europe the joy of sex" in Catholic bigotry.
[4]
Throughout her career, Carra's performance and work ethic have been compared
Donna Summer
,
Barbara Walters
and
Ann-Margret
.
[124]
Women's image liberation and anti-conservatism
[
edit
]
On 13 November 1971, while hosting
Canzonissima
, she performed her new single
Tuca Tuca
wearing a top which showed her navel; she was the first woman to show it on Italian public television, at a time in which it was unusual for women to show their bodies. This event caused controversy in the conservative TV network RAI and was called "too provocative" by the
Vatican
newspaper
L'Osservatore Romano
.
[125]
[126]
In Spanish television, Carra is considered among the pioneers of freedom of expression after the
Franco dictatorship
, as the artist appeared on television schedules in 1976, a year after
Francisco Franco
's death.
[127]
[128]
Fashion and pop icon
[
edit
]
Carra's style and stage presence was praised by liberal critics in the 70s and 80s, becoming a fashion icon over the years.
[129]
[130]
[131]
The distinctive feature that made Carra iconic was her platinum bob cut.
[132]
[133]
Vogue Espana
defined Carra's outfits "visionary" and "controlled transgression" by the time she wore them, as a "new expressive shapes that were openly opposed to the established canons of patriarchal rulership, in a heretofore unthinkable kind of cathodic empowerment".
[5]
With
Mina
and
Patty Pravo
, Carra is considered one of the pioneers of
camp style
, being cited at The
Anna Wintour Costume Center
, wing of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art
, during the spring 2019 exhibition by
Gucci
's
Alessandro Michele
.
[134]
Support for the LGBTQ+ community and "gay icon"
[
edit
]
She was a strong supporter of the LGBTQ+ community. She was awarded a "gay icon" award at the
2017 World Pride Madrid
.
[135]
Political views
[
edit
]
Carra revealed in a 1977 interview that she was a
communist
. She said: "I always vote communist. On a struggle between workers and businessmen, I'll always be on the workers' side."
[136]
Honours
[
edit
]
Discography
[
edit
]
Filmography
[
edit
]
Television
[
edit
]
Mass media references
[
edit
]
- In "
Midnight
", the tenth episode of the fourth series of
Doctor Who
, a monitor transmitting entertainment programmes shows travellers a videoclip of Raffaella Carra singing the song "Do it, do it again". Later in the same episode the audio track from the same videoclip can be heard in the background.
[
citation needed
]
- In the British documentary "Television" on the fiftieth anniversary of the
BBC
, a song from one of Raffaella Carra's shows acts as an example for new generation's morning shows.
- In the third episode of season one of
Drag Race Italia
, a spin-off of the
RuPaul's Drag Race
franchise, the contestants performed in a musical number dedicated to Raffaella Carra, featuring a song written by
Stefano Magnanensi
[
it
]
, and modeled looks inspired by her most iconic outfits.
- This would later be followed by a Night of 1000 Raffaella's runway on the seventh episode of the second season of
Drag Race Espana
.
References
[
edit
]
- ^
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.
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"
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.
External links
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Featured singles
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1979?1989
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1990?1999
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2000?2009
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2010?present
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