We have Lady Gaga in Italy, someone tell her to “pass” through Sanremo

Brown hair, sunglasses, a faux leather mask and a one-shoulder leopard-print kaftan. This is the look that Lady Gaga sports on the streets of Rome waiting to prepare for the filming of Gucci, the new film by Ridley Scott in which she will lend her face to Patrizia Reggiani, Maurizio Gucci’s wife sentenced to 26 years in prison for having commissioned her murder in 1995. At the center of the film, one of the most anticipated of next year, will be in fact, the tumultuous marriage between Patrizia and Maurizio, played by Adam Driver, split between New York, Acapulco and St.

Moritz, and the divorce that led Lady Gucci to devise a plan to get her spouse out of the way.

Gucci, who will see Lady Gaga again in theaters after being nominated for an Oscar as Best Actress for A star is born, will count on a stellar cast that, in addition to Driver, will also involve Robert De Niro Al Pacino, Jared Leto and Jeremy Irons. Based on the book by Sara Gay Forden The House of Gucci: A Sensational Story of Murder, Madness, Glamour, and Greed, Scott’s new film will try to enhance the interpretation of Gaga, struggling with a woman who, for the OTT jewels and oversized sunglasses she wore in the golden years, has been repeatedly called the Italian Elizabeth Taylor. The story of Patrizia Reggiani, which has also become a documentary, Lady Gucci, available on Discovery +, is certainly a succulent narrative material: starting from the bottom up to spend the holidays aboard the Creole, a 200-foot yacht, Patrizia builds for herself a life of comfort and luxury that crumbles in the late Eighties, when her husband Maurizio, with the excuse of leaving for a business trip, leaves her for an old friend, Paola Franchi.

The divorce in 1991 and the sale of the Gucci brand to Bahraini investors stir the waters and lead Reggiani, whose entire identity was now linked to the Gucci house, to devise a plan not to lose the inheritance and implement its own vengeance. On March 27, 1995, 46-year-old Maurizio Gucci enters the lobby of his private office and is shot and killed in broad daylight by a hitman who, according to the court, had been hired by Patrizia, sentenced to serve a 18-year sentence in San Vittore (released in 2016). For Lady Gaga, which we will see in a small part also in Bullet Train alongside Brad Pitt, this is an opportunity not to be missed, even if the Italian fans seem to think of another thing: given her stop in Rome in recent weeks, why not take advantage and try to bring her as a super guest at the Sanremo Festival, perhaps allowing her to see Simona Ventura again, the only presenter to have interviewed her in Italy, and repeat the mythological “there will be a tour” that continues to inflame the Net?

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