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Il 1° maggio del 1947, vicino Palermo, mentre è in corso la Festa del Lavoro, alcuni banditi sparano sulla folla provocando 12 vittime e più di 30 feriti. Giovanni Minoli racconta la strage di Portella della Ginestra, per molti il primo grande mistero dell'Italia repubblicana.

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00:25Don't cry, don't shout, it's a holiday wish, but what holiday?
00:28I got so scared that I thought they were going to surround us and kill us all.
00:35My mother took the first blows, my sister took the first blows too.
00:42A mother called Sarafina Piatta, who killed her son, was getting off during the journey from here to
00:50Piana, with her dead son in her arms like the Madonna.
00:54There was a man named Cardarella and he called me, come here, come here.
01:01And then I get emotional.
01:16Come here, get in this hole.
01:20And they kept shooting, you could see the bullets coming right up there, there was a bit of dust.
01:29Then when they finished shooting they ran down there and there were wounded, many wounded.
01:38We were having a party, a Labor Day.
01:41That's what we were doing, we were just having a party.
01:44And at this party they shot at us.
01:47On May 1st 1947, near Palermo, while Labour Day was taking place, some bandits shot at the
01:54crowd, causing 12 deaths and more than 30 injuries.
01:58And the Portella della Ginestra massacre.
02:01For many, the first great mystery of the Italian Republic.
02:04But what exactly happened that day?
02:08Tomorrow, May 1st, we're going to shoot at Portella della Ginestra with this communist thing.
02:11And for whom?
02:12He doesn't know, he says a day of liberation has come for us.
02:15Who am I trying to tell you and who am I telling you?
02:19The massacre occurred around half past ten.
02:30I was looking up there, it's up there where that stone is.
02:38There were those who were shooting, I saw them, there were five of them, the ones I saw were five.
02:52The perpetrators were identified by four hunters who were on the mountains of Portella della Ginestra on May 1st 1947 to
03:00a hunting party.
03:01The four hunters claim to have been disarmed and kidnapped by a group of men who then set out
03:07to shoot into the crowd.
03:09Among them they recognized the man in the white raincoat with the binoculars around his neck.
03:13It's Salvatore Giuliano.
03:15We're sure it was Giuliano, but we still don't know who ordered it.
03:22Salvatore Giuliano's gang shot at the unarmed workers that day.
03:28But even today we still don't know the motive for the massacre, its instigators and the names of those who hindered the
03:34investigations.
03:35So, to try to answer these disturbing questions, let's start with the legendary bandit of Montelepre.
03:44His criminal history begins four years earlier, in 1943, in a Sicily that had just been liberated by the Americans,
03:51where food is rationed and wheat smuggling is rampant.
04:09The son of immigrants to the United States, Salvatore Giuliano is a young farmer from Montelepre, just outside Palermo.
04:16My brother found himself going for some wheat, to feed his family,
04:24he came across a river called Iato, with the carabinieri, they ordered us to stop
04:30and after having taken the wheat from us, in short, they asked him to take it to the American garrison.
04:41When Giuliano refuses to hand over the wheat to the police, a firefight breaks out.
04:50Giuliano, from smuggler, becomes the titan.
04:54Cattle theft, robberies, kidnappings, blackmail, murders.
04:58This is the activity of the Giuliano gang.
05:04The gang controls a vast territory around Montelepre.
05:08It is his kingdom and among those mountains the king of Montelepre appears elusive.
05:15Well hidden in the mountains, Salvatore Giuliano can count on a group of loyal followers and an important right-hand man,
05:23Gaspare Pisciotta.
05:24Meanwhile, down in the valley, on the estates of the large landowners, a very harsh clash begins.
05:32From Rome, the government wants to abolish sharecropping, but when the peasants occupy the land, the owners don't agree.
05:39In order not to give up their privileges, they are even willing to use the armed wing of the mafia against the farmers.
05:47hungry.
06:01And there, the area around Portella, especially Piana degli Albanesi,
06:06they are areas crossed by an ancient red tradition of struggles for land.
06:12And so, the mafia and the peasant movement have been posing, since the times of the Sicilian fascists,
06:19that is, since the end of the nineteenth century, as two opposing entities.
06:39There were large participations of farmers, women, children, priests,
06:45with red flags, with white flags.
06:48There is an extraordinary popular movement, with very harsh, violent clashes.
06:55It was during a rally that Girolamo Licausi, secretary of the Communist Party in Sicily,
07:00for the first time he speaks to the farmers about their rights.
07:02And he did so in the presence of the mafia boss at the time, Calogero Vizzini.
07:06In 1944 I accompanied Licausi to Villalba to hold a rally where it was forbidden to speak,
07:14because Calogero Vizzini was there, and for the first time the mafia fired.
07:24Licausi was wounded in the knee and remained limping for the rest of his life.
07:32The mafia doesn't use half measures against the peasant movement's demonstrations.
07:37That protest must be crushed.
07:40But those are also the lands where Salvatore Giuliano's gang moves,
07:44and those are his people.
07:46Thus, in the eyes of many, Julian takes on the role of avenger,
07:50an enemy of the rich who protects the poor.
07:53They considered him a victim before, because he was the one who had started a black market
08:00of a few kilos, let's say, of wheat, while there were the big harvesters.
08:10The State has always been a distant State.
08:13In Sicily the State was considered the policeman who had to repress,
08:19the tax people, who have to improve taxes, this was the State.
08:29He was with the people, and the people were with him.
08:33Because when there was a problem, and if they succeeded in Giuliano,
08:36Giuliano is the problem that solved it.
08:38They stole my cows, they did this to me,
08:41They killed my animals, they broke into my house.
08:45Giuliano was there and solved the problem.
08:50So there is a myth, there is a myth, and in that area the myth means something,
08:56that is, it means that this man is able to challenge the State on one hand,
09:02and on the other hand he is a man who thinks of the people.
09:07Salvatore Giuliano has become a charismatic leader,
09:11his criminal forays and the rest are intertwined with a profound malaise.
09:16In fact, the idea of ​​a Sicily that was sovereign and separate from Italy was spreading more and more on the island,
09:22and the great rise of the Sicilian independence movement,
09:27led by Andrea Finocchiaro Aprile.
09:29A strong separatist movement that was encouraged and also organized by the agrarians,
09:38it was supported by the mafia and had Andrea Finocchiaro Aprile as its political leader.
09:49September 1945, the National Unity government orders the arrest of Finocchiaro Aprile.
09:59When the separatists looked around for someone to use as an element of violent blackmail
10:09on the nascent institutions, it was logical that they turned to Giuliano.
10:14And so essentially his political interlocutors were these separatists.
10:24For Giuliano this is an opportunity not to be missed.
10:27His criminal activity now has no future.
10:29Giuliano sees the possibility of his redemption and impunity for the crimes he committed.
10:34In Giuliano's headquarters, in Sagana, a few kilometers from Montelepre,
10:38Some separatists go to the bandit to offer him the promise of amnesty once the separatists have won.
11:00From December 1945 to February 1946, the Giuliano gang began a series of attacks against the Carabinieri barracks.
11:08There will be dozens of victims.
11:121947 begins with De Gasperi's trip to America, a trip that seems fundamental to everyone.
11:18De Gasperi receives a check for the reconstruction of Italy.
11:22In exchange, he pledges to fight communism.
11:25A few months later, De Gasperi formed a new government.
11:28For the first time since the liberation, communists and socialists were excluded.
11:34But on April 20, 1947, in Sicily, the people's bloc formed by communists and socialists,
11:40surprisingly wins the regional elections.
11:42The left's victory in the Sicilian regional elections forced Christian Democracy to ally itself with the monarchist and separatist right.
11:51And here, perhaps, is a first clue to understanding the reasons for the Portella della Ginestra massacre.
11:58In fact, those who supported Giuliano in the separatist cause are now thinking of employing him in the fight against communism.
12:05And the opportunity arises, it arises ten days after the victory of the Popular Front.
12:11And on May 1st 1947, in the Piana di Portella della Ginestra, Labor Day was celebrated.
12:23Every year all the workers from Piana, San Giuseppe, and San Cipirrello came here to celebrate this first of May.
12:35At the time, in 1947, I was 22 years old, I was always together, so to speak, with our leaders, with our flags.
12:44And we came here to always celebrate like these traditions that celebrated.
12:51Comrades, friends, workers, every first of May.
12:57While he was speaking, the speaker said the first sentences that I remember, comrades and comrades, workers, of the arm of the
13:07mind.
13:07Today we are here to celebrate this May Day.
13:11This was a great first win.
13:14And this shame of eropetism.
13:17Because due to our ignorance, we are successive.
13:23I started shooting.
13:25But we didn't know they were shooting.
13:28We knew it was a party.
13:34I was looking up there, up there where that stone is.
13:42Those who were shooting were there, I saw them.
13:45There were five of them, the ones I saw were five.
13:48Because looking over here, then I saw my father who had fallen down the embankment of the road over there.
13:57And they still kept shooting.
13:59You could see bullets coming in close by, because there was a bit of dust.
14:06After that, when they finished shooting, they were the ones running down.
14:10And there were wounded there, many wounded.
14:26May 3rd.
14:27At 11 a.m. throughout Italy, a general strike of protest and mourning will take place.
14:31Nine people died in Sicily, more than one hundred were injured.
14:34The Roman procession is led by a double row of cyclists.
14:37Hands on each other's shoulders as if returning from the workshop.
14:40Silence, order, and dignity in pain and protest.
14:43This is how the people respond to the brigandage of the massacrers.
14:48At the Constituent Assembly, the debate on the massacre is heated by the declarations
14:53of the then Minister of the Interior, Mario Scelba.
14:58This is not a political crime.
15:00And it cannot be a political crime because no political organization
15:05could claim the demonstration and its organization for itself.
15:10Saying that it is not a political crime also means placing it in a restrictive context
15:16and limiting because it is instead a political crime.
15:20It has all the characteristics of a political crime.
15:23And if we want to make a distinction it is much more a political crime
15:26than a mafia crime due to its sensational nature.
15:30It's an episode of political terrorism, that's clear.
15:33It was the men of the Giuliano gang who shot at Portella della Ginestra.
15:37But why did they do it?
15:39On whose orders?
15:41In that 47 Giuliano is now public enemy number one.
15:47But it is hidden in the mountains, it is protected by its people
15:50and nobody knows where exactly it is.
15:53Then a week after the massacre an American journalist
15:57he manages to meet him in person.
15:59His name is Mike Stern.
16:03Having arrived in Palermo on May 8, 1947, he immediately went to the police station.
16:07And I saw the whole Giuliano file
16:12and they told me that he had emigrated to France.
16:21Then I went to Montelepia.
16:25Nobody, I was asking which house Giuliano lives in.
16:30Never heard of it.
16:33Nobody knew anything.
16:35But a man of about 60, short and stocky,
16:39he introduces himself to Mike Stern.
16:42And this was Giuliano's father.
16:45Shortly after, they are all in Salvatore Giuliano's family home.
16:50It was a hot day to die for.
16:53And they served me pasta.
16:56During that lunch, Stern manages to conquer
16:59the trust of the Giuliano family.
17:01Then they caught me.
17:05And someone started driving my jeep.
17:11And I don't know where we were going,
17:14but Giuliano was
17:15somewhere,
17:19maybe 10-15 minutes,
17:22far from the house
17:23in Montelepia.
17:24He's a handsome man.
17:44Stern is won over by Giuliano's personality.
17:47He is fascinated by her sense of rebellion against an unjust society,
17:51writes the journalist.
17:52Torrid Julian kills,
17:54but if he didn't kill,
17:55he would be the best person in this world.
17:58I described it,
18:00a Robin Hood
18:02who robbed the rich
18:05to give to his poor mother.
18:08During a break,
18:10Stern watches Giuliano write a letter.
18:12He had in his pocket a letter that he wrote to Truman.
18:17And then I wanted
18:21take possession of the letter.
18:23In the letter to Truman,
18:25Giuliano claims he wants to fight against communism.
18:27Dear President Truman,
18:29What we need first of all is your great and powerful moral support.
18:34So I said to Giuliano,
18:36Look,
18:37our President doesn't read English,
18:40he doesn't read Italian.
18:43At that time,
18:45leave it to me,
18:46I'll translate it.
18:52He gave me a piece of paper
18:57where he made the drawing
18:59that he is breaking the chain
19:04that keeps the bag attached to the size
19:08and a cord
19:11that he is throwing the sack towards America.
19:18The last thing Americans wanted
19:22is to have a sack between your feet.
19:28But it was his idea
19:30how can this be discussed.
19:43Did you also talk about Portella della Ginestra?
19:47I have never heard the word Porta della Ginestra.
19:50Mike Stern denies speaking to Giuliano
19:53of the massacre that had occurred only seven days earlier.
19:56And the relationship between the bandit and the journalist
19:58and the American garrison in Sicily
20:00will never be fully clarified.
20:03What is certain, however,
20:04is that the investigations on Portella della Ginestra
20:07proceed slowly.
20:09Also because some investigators
20:10they appear to be in collusion with banditry.
20:13Some members of the police force
20:15even high ones were deeply polluted
20:18from contacts, exchanges of favors
20:20with the brigand groups
20:22and therefore a decisive investigative action
20:26would also have revealed,
20:28ex post, these complicities.
20:34After the Portella della Ginestra massacre
20:37these relationships become uncomfortable.
20:39June 27, 1947
20:41the bandit Salvatore Ferreri
20:43police informant
20:44he was killed by the police
20:46together with his father Vito
20:47his uncle Antonino Coraci
20:48and his companions Giuseppe Fedele Pianello.
20:51So we are faced with a situation
20:55in which the state apparatus
20:58those who were in charge of repression.
21:02While Giuliano was killing the police
21:06the other men from the apparatus
21:08from the State
21:09they were dealing with Giuliano
21:11thinking that Giuliano could
21:13to be an arm
21:16to be used if necessary
21:18to block and hunt down the communists.
21:22In this dark plot
21:24Giuliano remains untouchable
21:26for some it is an expatriate
21:27for others it continues to hide
21:30among the mountains
21:30for others he was killed
21:32but then on September 20, 1947
21:35it's the same bandit
21:36who decides to break the silence.
21:39Giuliano writes a letter
21:41to the director of the Voice of Sicily
21:43the communist Girolamo Licausi.
21:45Mr. Director
21:46following further events
21:48of the latest newspaper news
21:49a little bit of delirium
21:51It surprises me how my name
21:52he fell into the shameless mouth
21:54of all these gentlemen and great gentlemen.
21:56If my question meets
21:58it's a reasonable feeling
21:59I want to ask
22:00why a Giuliano
22:01lover of the poor
22:03and enemy of the rich
22:04can it go against the working masses?
22:06Ravatolo sings Sicilian stories
22:08Ciccio Busacca
22:10to make you feel
22:13the whole story
22:15of the oblivious Giuliano.
22:17It is the period of greatest notoriety
22:20for the bandit.
22:21Giuliano is vain
22:22and lets himself be interviewed
22:23from any journalist
22:24go look for it
22:25among the mountains
22:26and around Montelebre.
22:27But among all those
22:28who found it
22:29he also found it
22:31a beautiful lady.
22:32November 1948
22:33journalist Maria Ciliacus
22:36manages to reach
22:36Salvatore Giuliano
22:37among the mountains.
22:38The bandit ends
22:40they say by falling in love with her
22:41and she will describe it
22:43in a series of articles
22:44like a romantic thinker
22:45one who does justice
22:46of the tyrant's evil guards.
22:48After that meeting
22:50the journalist is questioned
22:51but refuses to provide
22:52details useful for investigations.
22:54For this she is arrested
22:56and will pay
22:56four months in prison.
23:02Even from this story
23:03the Sicilian storytellers
23:05they draw inspiration
23:06to narrate
23:06the deeds of the king of Montelebre.
23:13Then it's time
23:14by three Italian journalists
23:15Jacopo Rizza
23:16Ivo Meldolesi
23:17and Italo D'Ambrosio
23:18that they make
23:19for the magazine Oggi
23:20perhaps the most extraordinary
23:22news report
23:23never done
23:24about an outlaw
23:25still at large.
23:27Taking hundreds of photos
23:39and even turning
23:40a little film with Giuliano
23:42leading actor
23:42and Pisciotta
23:43who acts as his sidekick.
24:00The communist senator
24:02Licausi
24:02director of the newspaper
24:04The Voice of Sicily
24:05he responds from his newspaper
24:06to the letter
24:07by Salvatore Giuliano
24:08pointing to the bandit
24:09the path to moral redemption
24:10the confession.
24:13You are lost
24:15your life is over
24:18You will be killed
24:19or treacherously
24:19from the mafia
24:20which today shows
24:21to protect you
24:22or in conflict
24:23from the police
24:24Report loud and clear
24:25with all the details
24:26who armed
24:27your hand
24:28all those
24:29that induced you
24:30to the crime
24:30that now abandon you
24:32and they betray you
24:33Jerome
24:34Licausi
24:34He told Giuliano
24:35delivered
24:36otherwise
24:37you will be killed
24:38be careful
24:40he told him
24:41You come
24:42and you say
24:43confess
24:46you tell the whole truth
24:47on Portello
24:48you say it all
24:49what was
24:50because if you don't say it
24:52if you don't open up
24:54you will be killed
24:56they will kill you
24:59the betrayal
25:00it nests
25:01between the walls
25:01of every house
25:02he lies in wait
25:03in the corners
25:03of every street
25:06the bandits
25:07they know
25:07their enemy
25:08but they have no choice
25:10they know that one day
25:12or the other
25:12they will end up like so many others
25:14maybe riddled with bullets
25:15of shots
25:15at the bottom of a well
25:24in the meantime
25:26they continue to do
25:27what they have always done
25:28here
25:29to Bello Lampo
25:30in his triangle
25:31August 19th
25:331949
25:34Giuliano turns
25:34the most daring
25:35of businesses
25:35against the police
25:40the barracks
25:41is under siege
25:41the road
25:42mined
25:43one of the trucks
25:44of reinforcements
25:44sent by the command
25:45blows up
25:46with a load
25:46of seven deaths
25:47a few days later
25:48the sloth
25:49by Bello Lampo
25:49the government decides
25:50the suppression
25:51of the inspectorate
25:52public safety
25:53in Sicily
25:53and creates the CFRB
25:55body forces
25:56repression of banditry
25:57entrusted to the command
25:58of the colonel
25:58of the carabinieri
25:59Ugo Luca
26:07in the net
26:08of the colonel
26:09Ugo Luca
26:09more bandits fall
26:11and who is not killed
26:12he is arrested
26:15after yet another
26:17massacre
26:17of carabinieri
26:18the circle
26:19it tightens
26:19around
26:20Salvatore Giuliano
26:21and his lieutenant
26:22Gaspare Pisciotta
26:23the end
26:24In short
26:25it's close
26:25with the overwhelming
26:27victory
26:27of the DC
26:28to the elections
26:29of 48
26:30the communists
26:30they are less scary
26:31and the bandit
26:33Julian
26:33it's no longer needed
26:37at 3:30
26:38of this night
26:39afterwards
26:40to a violent person
26:40firefight
26:41supported with forces
26:42of the CFRB
26:43in the territory
26:44from Castelvetrano
26:45he was killed
26:46the bandit
26:47Salvatore Giuliano
26:49from the cemetery's Victory
26:50is taken out
26:51the body
26:52Giuliano was 28 years old
26:54on his face
26:55of which he was taken
26:56the cast
26:56they are not read
26:57almost no more signs
26:58of a sinister fate
26:59and yet it's him
27:03he had with him
27:04your own arsenal
27:05the binoculars
27:06which focused on the victims
27:07the weapons with which
27:08committed
27:08the approximately 300 crimes
27:10which had earned him
27:11more than 90 mandates
27:11of capture
27:14the Corriere della Sera
27:16by title
27:16four carabinieri
27:17in the heart of the night
27:19they face
27:19and they kill Giuliano
27:21after half an hour of fire
27:23De Gasperi and Scelba
27:24they compliment each other
27:25with Colonel Luca
27:26who will be promoted to general
27:28in ten days
27:30from death
27:31by Salvatore Giuliano
27:32the weekly
27:32the European
27:33publish an article
27:34by Tommaso Besozzi
27:35from the title
27:36there is only one thing for sure
27:37who is dead
27:37thus demolishing
27:38the official version
27:39of the carabinieri
27:40Besozzi speaks
27:41with the people
27:42beats the countryside
27:43question the witnesses
27:44too many details
27:45they don't come back
27:48who betrayed him?
27:50where was he killed?
27:51how and when?
27:53the vast majority
27:54of the Sicilians
27:55he doesn't believe
27:55to the official version
27:57of the conflict
27:57in which he found
27:58death
27:59Salvatore Giuliano
28:03a week later
28:04a new article
28:05reveal the truth
28:06on the death of the bandit
28:07Giuliano would not be
28:09was killed
28:09in a trap
28:10of the police
28:11but betrayed
28:12and murdered
28:13from his lieutenant
28:14the death of the bandit Giuliano
28:26it happens while
28:27in the court of Viterbo
28:28it's in progress
28:29the debate
28:30first degree
28:30for the facts
28:31of small door
28:31of the broom
28:34started in June
28:35of 1950
28:36the process
28:37it ends
28:38in 1952
28:40after 217 hearings
28:44the defendants
28:45there are 31
28:45divided in two
28:46different cages
28:47one for the kids
28:49one for the real ones
28:50components
28:50of the band
28:51the first
28:52they are acquitted
28:53for having committed
28:53the massacre
28:54in a state of subjection
28:55the others
28:56they are condemned
28:57to life imprisonment
28:58Gaspare Pisciotta
29:00he will be arrested
29:00on trial
29:01already started
29:02in addition to confessing
29:03responsible
29:04of Julian's death
29:05Pisciotta
29:06will release
29:07a series
29:07of statements
29:08and accusations
29:08against politics
29:09and the forces
29:10of the order
29:10according to him
29:11co-responsible
29:12of connivance
29:13with banditry
29:15Gaspare Pisciotta
29:16you realize
29:17of that
29:17what are you saying
29:19I said
29:20of having acted
29:20in collaboration
29:21with the colonel
29:22of the carabinieri
29:23and even before that
29:23with the police
29:24that releases me
29:25a card
29:25of free movement
29:26punchers
29:27they were saying
29:28the card
29:28of Giuseppe Faraci
29:30and I was walking
29:31with the card
29:33it's a succession
29:34of mutual accusations
29:35they are made
29:36the names
29:36of characters
29:37politicians
29:37of national importance
29:38which one to choose
29:39Mattarella
29:40of monarchists
29:41like Cosumano
29:41jealous and winged
29:42all of us
29:44we served with loyalty
29:45and disinterest
29:46the separatists
29:47and the monarchists
29:48iddi in Rome
29:49with their charges
29:50while we
29:50they handcuffed us
29:51and thrown in jail
29:53feeling betrayed
29:53from his friends
29:54after the sentence
29:55Pisciotta decide
29:56to speak
29:57and he who for years
29:58it was the alter ego
29:59by Salvatore Giuliano
30:00he certainly has
30:01many things to say
30:03everyone smokes confidently
30:04everyone
30:04bandits
30:05police and mafia
30:06they were all
30:07in the city
30:07the use that the mafia
30:08he also engaged in banditry
30:09it's the tangle
30:11with politics
30:11and the tangle
30:12of the apparatuses
30:13it was let's say so
30:15the metaphor
30:16of a story
30:18now after the conviction
30:20to life imprisonment
30:21Gaspare Pisciotta
30:21he has nothing left to lose
30:23at least that's what he thinks
30:24but it doesn't end like this
30:26it will have to be done one day
30:27another process
30:28the one for death
30:29by Salvatore Giuliano
30:30and then I'll say everything
30:31that I didn't say here
30:32then he says
30:33I'll tell you
30:33which was
30:35when the cause succeeds
30:36in March
30:37in Palermo
30:38in February
30:39it was you the ritual
30:41I didn't have to say it
30:44I wasn't there
30:44nothing pissed off
30:45or what do you want to talk about?
30:48maybe he had said it
30:49there was nothing to be done
31:04in prison they poison
31:06with a cup of coffee
31:08Pisciotta
31:08Perfect
31:09it is the
31:10let's say so
31:11it's the story
31:12of the mafia
31:13this
31:13the history of the mafia
31:15with the support of the State
31:16there is a mystery
31:20unresolved
31:23materially
31:24in the definition
31:25of the mandate
31:25of the massacre
31:26materially unresolved
31:28but in my opinion
31:28pretty clear
31:29politically
31:30instead it exists
31:32a much more complex one
31:34problem
31:35how do you say it in English
31:36of cover up
31:37that is, coverage
31:39of responsibility
31:40which is next
31:42to the massacre
31:42and that certainly
31:44involves
31:44a large quantity
31:46of different subjects
31:48which will be very difficult
31:50can ever define
32:04my static mouth
32:07mouth
32:08eh
32:08I knew it
32:09that by dint
32:10to do
32:10a voice-over
32:12here
32:12a voice-over
32:13there
32:13one day or another
32:14a camera
32:15he would have framed me
32:16actor
32:17cabaret artist
32:18comic
32:18television host
32:20all this
32:21in over half a century
32:22career
32:23was
32:23Oreste Lionello
32:25tomorrow in history
32:26it's us
32:27he invented it himself
32:28he invented a style
32:29a feature
32:30a voice
32:31or if here
32:32my name is
32:33Oreste Lionello
32:34this
32:35that you are returning
32:36that you don't know yet
32:37how does it end?
32:40Certainly
32:41Miss
32:42and I'm serious
32:43Yes
32:43it's a thing
32:44that first
32:48Here you are
32:48because it comes inside
32:49the oreno
32:51everything in the race
32:51capegurito
32:52up to 100
32:52if I knew
32:53how were you?
32:54to finish
32:55I
32:55I would call myself
32:57Perhaps
32:57Here you are
32:58how they have changed
32:59the embers
33:00it all seems true
33:02and we
33:03Hey
33:03and who are you going to?
33:04I am an athlete
33:07on the way back
33:08from Mexico
33:09to say that
33:11Oreste
33:11double axle
33:13Woody Allen
33:13it's very reductive
33:15and if Woody Allen
33:15he broke it
33:16in Italy
33:17I say it
33:17without flattery
33:19you have to
33:19Oreste Lionello
33:20you think you're God
33:21and I
33:22I have some models
33:23I will also have to inspire
33:24Orestes only needs to
33:25what a smile
33:26and you saw
33:27passed to quarter
33:28to Italy
33:30a man
33:31an actor
33:31of a talent
33:33amazing
33:33what was his name?
33:35that island
33:36he hangs out
33:37Corsica
33:39fuck
33:42No
33:43Loreoli
33:43it was Ustica
33:45Ustica
33:46never heard of it
33:47he has a driving license
33:48to be able to say
33:49some incredible things
33:50pretending
33:51that it didn't happen
33:52in me
33:52thank you
33:53for helping me
33:54to go out
33:55by Woody Allen
33:56first they called me
33:57in Uri
33:58but they call me
33:58to Julius
33:59to
34:00to
34:00to
34:00to
34:00to
34:01to
34:01to
34:03to
34:03Thank you all
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