Luca Zingaretti after Covid: “I’m going home, but a part of me remains with those who are here to fight”

«I’m going home, thanks to everyone for the care and for the affection. A part of me remains next to those who are still here to fight ». To write it is Luca Zingaretti who, on his Instagram profile, shares a shot that sees him sitting on a hospital bed from behind, the suitcase ready and looking at the window. One week after the new episode of the Inspector Montalbano – perhaps the last -, it seems, in fact, that Zingaretti has been hospitalized for Covid (news confirmed by Dagospia) choosing to keep confidential until the end.

Along with the release from the hospital, Zingaretti shares in the Stories a photo of him in a bathhouse dating back to last year, almost as if he wanted to remark how life changes from one day to the next, especially when the crazy variable of Covid-19 positivity comes into play.

His last post was on March 9, the day after the broadcast of The Catalanotti method on Raiuno: «It was good for me yesterday, devastated by nostalgia, to look at myself The Catalanotti method. I felt the smells of Sicilian beaches, I tasted the colors, I tasted the sweetness of our places. It was nice for me to be moved and excited, touched and smile for the weaknesses of our friends, for their defects, for their stories, for their cowardice and for their loves so simply authentic and human ».

Beautiful, sincere words, which take on an even stronger meaning if we think about the fact that they may have been published while Zingaretti was still under observation: «Even more it was nice to discover that yesterday we were as usual, but more than usual, in so many. A result like this means “sharing”. It means “to meet again”, it means a people that when called together respond compactly, with love. And these days it’s not so much, that’s all. Today I don’t want to say thank you, I just want to say “cheers!”, To rejoice with you in this sense of belonging and to celebrate it because we are one. And because we are “those of Montalbano” ».

You may also like