“Every woman must have the right to become whoever she wants.” Noemi’s metamorphosis on the new issue of Vanity Fair

“Everyone must be free to become the dream he has of himself, without fear, without any fear.” She is a transformed Noemi the one to which Vanity Fair dedicates the cover of the issue on newsstands from 24 February. Exclusively and one week from the performance at the Sanremo Festival, Veronica Scopelliti, real name of the artist, talks for the first time about the metamorphosis that led her to lose a lot of weight, to discover an unprecedented voice and to get to grips with her past.

«In the other body I no longer felt myself. So I defended the dream I had of myself. I learned not to be afraid of the honesty of asking myself “Who am I?”. And I got close to what I think I want ». Besides the exclusive interview, Noemi also talked about herself in a co-authored monologue with Vanity Fair, a video in which the singer narrates the pressures, doubts, attacks and judgments that always surround the body of women.

«After the cover with Vanessa Incontrada, this issue of Vanity Fair dedicates another chapter to women’s bodies “, declares the director of Vanity Fair, Simone Marchetti. “It is a theme that is dear to us, a question that affects everyone, men and women, above all a fact that has returned strongly to the news due to the recent insults that a teacher has poured out against Giorgia Meloni, leader of the Brothers of Italy. We chose to put the story of the singer Noemi on the cover because it is the story of a woman, an artist and a person who has chosen to pursue their dream. And the problem is never her or her dream. But we: how we choose to respect or judge it, what words we use to describe it ».

The debate continues inside the newspaper with a report on the battles for the recognition of the right to abortion in South America (last December 30, Argentina made the voluntary termination of pregnancy legal), the interview with Male Musk, 70-year-old supermodel and Elon Musk’s mother, a dialogue withKitty Spencer, Lady D’s niece, on the right to dream, the story of Rosalía, The most famous Spanish pop star in the world, on the priority of “representing strong women” and a confrontation with “Mrs. Faceboost” Michela Taccola on her passion for aesthetic medicine which is not “a war against time”, but the desire to give herself the best possible image first of all.

On the occasion of this important issue, Vanity Fair also comes up Clubhouse, the new social network that puts aside the image and leaves room for the voice, to talk about the body as an instrument of protest and self-affirmation. The first appointment is scheduled Thursday 25 February with Carlotta Vagnoli, activist and popularizer, and aElla Bottom Rouge, burlesquer and activist. The second, to be held Friday 26 February, Will see as the protagonist Marina Pierri, writer and television critic, for a lesson on the evolution of the female body in TV series.​ ​

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