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Massimo Bontempelli (12 May 1878 – 21 July 1960) was an Italian poet, playwright, novelist and composer. He was influential in developing and promoting the literary style known as magical realism.


Life

Massimo Bontempelli was born in Como to Alfonso Bontempelli and Maria Cislaghi. His father was a train engineer on the State Railways and frequently moved with his family to other cities for work reasons. Massimo attended the R. Liceo Ginnasio Giuseppe Parini in Milan, where his literature teacher was Alfredo Panzini, and in 1897 graduated in
Alessandria Alessandria (; pms, Lissandria ) is a city and ''comune'' in Piedmont, Italy, and the capital of the Province of Alessandria. The city is sited on the alluvial plain between the Tanaro and the Bormida rivers, about east of Turin. Alessandria ...
. Bontempelli graduated from the University of Turin, where he was a pupil of
Arturo Graf Arturo Graf (1848–1913), Italian poet, of German ancestry, was born at Athens, Greece. He was educated at the University of Naples and became a lecturer on Italian literature in Rome, till in 1876 he was appointed professor at Turin Turi ...
and Giuseppe Fraccaroli. He taught literature in Cherasco and then in Ancona for seven years, doing his writing on the side. Starting from 1904 he published a series of collections of poems and short stories, as well as a tragedy in verse, ''Costanza'', and a comedy, ''Santa Teresa'', all works of a classicist character. He then abandoned teaching when he could not secure a position at a secondary school. After leaving teaching in 1910 and settling in Florence, Bontempelli worked as a journalist for ''Il Marzocco'', ''La Nazione'', the ''Nuova Antologia'', the weekly ''Le Cronache literarie'', ''Il Nuovo Giornale'', ''Il Fieramosca'' and ''
Corriere della Sera The ''Corriere della Sera'' (; en, "Evening Courier") is an Italian daily newspaper published in Milan with an average daily circulation of 410,242 copies in December 2015. First published on 5 March 1876, ''Corriere della Sera'' is one of It ...
'', as well as for the Sansoni publishing house. An adherent of Giosuè Carducci in the debates with followers of
Benedetto Croce Benedetto Croce (; 25 February 1866 – 20 November 1952) was an Italian idealist philosopher, historian, and politician, who wrote on numerous topics, including philosophy, history, historiography and aesthetics. In most regards, Croce was a lib ...
, he published essays in the field of literary criticism as well as a volume of stories ''Sette Savi''. In 1915 he began as cultural manager of the Italian Publishing Institute and moved to Milan, overseeing the publication of classics of Italian literature. At the same time he was a collaborator of the Milanese newspaper ''Secolo'' and a war correspondent for the Roman newspaper
Il Messaggero ''Il Messaggero'' (Italian : "The Messenger") is an Italian newspaper based in Rome, Italy. It has been in circulation since 1878. History and profile ''Il Messaggero'' was founded in December 1878. On 1 January 1879, the first issue of ''Il M ...
. A convinced interventionist, in 1917 he enlisted as an artillery officer, while also collaborating on the military newspaper ''Il Montello'' and obtaining two medals for valor and three war crosses. Discharged in 1919, he published a volume of poems written between 1916 and 1918, ''Il Purosangue''. He then published the novels ''La vita intense'' (1920), which he had already published in installments in ''Ardita'', the monthly supplement of ''Il Popolo d'Italia'', and ''La vita operosa'' in 1921. It was his time as a journalist in Paris in the years 1921 and 1922 that put him in contact with the new French avant-gardes and profoundly changed his image of the modern artist. In the short novels ''The chessboard in front of the mirror'' (1922) and ''Eva ultima'' (1923) he employed a style inspired by the irrational arbitrariness and the apparent randomness of dreams, a writing approach that largely coincides with the pronouncements of the
Surrealist Manifesto Four Surrealist Manifestos are known to exist. The first two manifesto A manifesto is a published declaration of the intentions, motives, or views of the issuer, be it an individual, group, political party or government. A manifesto usually ...
by
André Breton André Robert Breton (; 19 February 1896 – 28 September 1966) was a French writer and poet, the co-founder, leader, and principal theorist of surrealism. His writings include the first ''Surrealist Manifesto'' (''Manifeste du surréalisme'') o ...
(1924). Alongside his friends
Alberto Savinio Alberto Savinio , born as Andrea Francesco Alberto de Chirico (25 August 1891 – 5 May 1952) was a Greek-Italian writer, painter, musician, journalist, essayist, playwright, set designer and composer. He was the younger brother of 'metaphysical ...
and Giorgio de Chirico, he pioneered surrealistic experiments in Italian art, which he defined as magical realism. Settling in Rome, he became part of the Teatro degli Undici, founded by Luigi Pirandello's son Stefano and Orio Vergani, and made friends with Luigi Pirandello, who pushed him to write plays for his company. The results were ''Nostra Dea'' (1925) and ''Minnie la candida'' (1927), perhaps Bontempelli's theatrical masterpiece, a fairy-tale drama, albeit plausible, that takes place in an atmosphere that always oscillates between nightmare and play. On 8 August 1926, in the villa of Pirandello, near Sant'Agnese, he was challenged to a duel by Giuseppe Ungaretti, due to a controversy that arose in the Roman newspaper "Il Tevere". Ungaretti was slightly wounded in the right arm and the duel ended in a reconciliation. In 1926, he, along with Curzio Malaparte, founded the journal "900". James Joyce, Max Jacob, and
Rainer Maria Rilke René Karl Wilhelm Johann Josef Maria Rilke (4 December 1875 – 29 December 1926), shortened to Rainer Maria Rilke (), was an Austrian poet and novelist. He has been acclaimed as an idiosyncratic and expressive poet, and is widely recogni ...
sat on the editorial committee and Virginia Woolf and Blaise Cendrars were among the contributors. The magazine ceased publication in 1929. In March 1927 Bontempelli, who had separated from his wife, began a relationship with Paola Masino, who was thirty years younger. Masino worked with Bontempelli on "900" and together they wrote the unreleased drama, "The Sinking of the Titanic", then moved with him to Paris, where they encountered artists and intellectuals such as Ilya Ehrenburg, Paul Valéry, Max Jacob,
André Maurois André Maurois (; born Émile Salomon Wilhelm Herzog; 26 July 1885 – 9 October 1967) was a French author. Biography Maurois was born on 26 July 1885 in Elbeuf and educated at the Lycée Pierre Corneille in Rouen, both in Normandy. A member of ...
, André Gide, Emil Ludwig, Giorgio de Chirico,
Alberto Savinio Alberto Savinio , born as Andrea Francesco Alberto de Chirico (25 August 1891 – 5 May 1952) was a Greek-Italian writer, painter, musician, journalist, essayist, playwright, set designer and composer. He was the younger brother of 'metaphysical ...
, and Pirandello. During the 1920s and early 1930s, Bontempelli had ties to fascism. In 1924 he joined the P.N.F., together with Luigi Pirandello. He served as a secretary of the fascist writers' union from 1928 and spent time abroad lecturing on Italian culture. A convinced supporter of fascism, which he saw as the most suitable political means to support the birth of a modern society in Italy, Bontempelli was made a member of the Royal Academy of Italy on 23 October 1930. Back in Milan in 1931, he published ''My life, death and miracles''. The following year he moved to Frascati and in 1933 he and Pier Maria Bardi founded the art magazine ''Quadrante''. He began to distance himself from fascism in the 1930s. On 23 August 1936 he published the critical article ''The usual cues'' in the ''Gazzetta del Popolo'' of Turin; on 29 June he published the article ''The frogs ask many kings'', which attacked the proposal to establish a national register of art critics. On November 27, 1938, at the commemoration speech for Gabriele d'Annunzio, he criticized the "military obedience" which had become a national custom. In 1938 he refused to accept a university post formerly held by Attilio Momigliano, a Jewish professor removed from the chair of Italian literature at the University of Florence, and was kicked out of the Fascist party, drifting towards Communism. Prohibited by the authorities from writing for a year, he and Masino left Rome and resided in Venice, in a sort of "golden exile", at the villa of Baron Franchini. Through all this Bontempelli remained a member of the Royal Academy until 25 July 1943. After the fall of Mussolini he returned to Rome, but the death sentence issued by the Republic of Salò, the new regime led by Alessandro Pavolini, forced him and Masino to hide in a friend's house. Upon the liberation of Rome, he founded the weekly ''Città'' with Masino, Alberto Moravia, Savinio and
Guido Piovene Guido Piovene (27 July 1907 – 12 November 1974) was an Italian writer and journalist. Biography Born in Vicenza into a noble family, Piovene graduated in philosophy in Milan and then devoted himself to journalism, notably collaborating with ...
. In 1945 he returned to Milan where he created, together with Ugo Betti, Sem Benelli, Diego Fabbri and other playwrights, the National Drama Writers Union, with the aim of safeguarding the work of playwrights and other theatrical authors. In 1948 Bontempelli won a Senate race on the Popular Democratic Front ticket but the results were voided in 1950 when his role editing an anthology of Italian literature for school children, which triggered the provisions barring anyone who had authored school texts from holding public office for five years after adoption of the new Constitution was discovered. In 1953, Bontempelli's "L'amante Fedele" won the Strega Prize, Italy's most prestigious literary award.


Personal life

In 1909 he married Amelia Della Pergola (1886-1977), with whom he had a daughter, who died a few months later, and their son Massimo (1911-1962). After years of declining health that prevented him from continuing his work, Bontempelli died in Rome at the age of 82 on 21 July 1960. He is buried in the Verano cemetery in Rome. He was in a long-term relationship with Paola Masino that lasted from the late 1920's until his death. After his passing, she edited a two-volume edition of his works. Her book "Me, Massimo and the others-autobiography of a daughter of the century" was published posthumously in 1995.


Works

*1908 Socrate moderno *1912 I sette savi *1916 La guardia alla luna
Watching the Moon
*1919 Il purosangue; Siepe a nordovest *1920 La vita intensa - Romanzo dei romanzi *1921 La vita operosa; Nuovi racconti d'avventure *1922 Viaggi e scoperte; La scacchiera davanti allo specchio (The Chess Set in the Mirror); Ultime avventure *1923 Eva ultima (Last Eva) *1924 La donna del Nadir *1925 La donna dei miei sogni e altre avventure moderne; Nostra Dea *1926 L'eden della tartaruga *1928 Donna nel sole, e altri idilli; Minnie la candida *1929 Il figlio di due madri (The Boy with Two Mothers); Il neosofista *1930 Vita e morte di Adria e dei suoi figli (The Life and Death of Adria and Her Children) *1931 Mia vita, morte e miracoli; Stato d grazia *1932 La famiglia del fabbro; Racconto di una giornata; Valoria *1934 La fame *1935 Nembo

*1934 Galleria degli schiavi; Bassano padre geloso *1937 Gente nel tempo (People in Time) *1938 L'avventura novecentista *1941 Giro del sole *1942 Sette discorsi; Cenerentola

*1945 Le notti (The Nights); L'acqua (Water) *1946 L'ottuagenaria *1947 Venezia Salva *1949 L'innocenza di Camilla *1953 L'amante fedele (The Faithful Lover)


Works in English translation

— ''The Elevator Man.'' The Living Age, 1 October 1926, pp. 68–71.
— ''The Good Wind.' The Living Age, 1 July 1927, pp. 44–47.
— ''Foundations.'' The Living Age, 15 September 1927, pp. 549–551.
— ''Sweet Adeline.'' The Living Age, 15 April 1928, pp. 720–722.
— ''Meeting Batoletti — A Railway Station Extravaganza.'' The Living Age, 15 March 1930, pp. 115–120.
— ''Letters of Introduction'' Translated by W.L. Dale. The Cornhill Magazine, No. 1030, Winter 1961/62 pages 268-271.
— ''Dea by Dea.'' Translated by Anthony Oldcorn in ''Twentieth-Century Italian Drama: An Anthology, the First Fifty Years,'' ed. Jane House and Antonio Attisani (New York: Columbia UP, 1995).
—''Separations: Two Novels of Mothers and Children'' (''Figlio di due madri / The Boy with Two Mothers'' and ''Vita e morte di Adria e dei suoi figli / The Life and Death of Adria and Her Children''). Translated by Estelle Gilson. McPherson & Co, 2000.
— ''The Divine Miss D'' and ''Genuine Minnie'' in ''The Italian Theater of the Grotesque. A New Theater for the Twentieth Century: An Anthology,'' ed. and trans. Jack D. Street and Rod Umlas (Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen, 2003).
—''The Chess Set in the Mirror'' (''La scacchiera davanti allo specchio''). Translated by Estelle Gilson. Illustrated by Sergio Tofano. Paul Dry Books, 2006.
—''The Faithful Lover'' (''L'amante fedele''). Translated by Estelle Gilson with an introduction by Luigi Fontanella. Host Publications, 2007

br> —''On A Locomotive & Other Runaway Tales''. Translated by Gilbert Alter-Gilbert. Xenos Book, 2013.

Watching the Moon and Other Plays
'' Translation and introduction by Patricia Gaborik. Italica Press, 2013. Also includes ''Stormcloud'' and ''Cinderella''.


See also

* Fascism * Italian Fascism *
Futurism (literature) Futurism is a modernist avant-garde movement in literature and part of the Futurism art movement that originated in Italy in the early 20th century. It made its official literature debut with the publication of Filippo Tommaso Marinetti's '' Mani ...


References


External links

* Massimo Bontempelli Papers, 1865-1991 Finding aid for collection of Massiomo Bontempelli papers held by the Getty Research Institute, including listing of holdings and biographical information. * Massimo Colella, ''Ritratto, autoritratto, profezia. Nota su Bontempelli esegeta di Pirandello, in «Pirandello Studies», 42, 2022. {{DEFAULTSORT:Bontempelli, Massimo 1878 births 1960 deaths Italian dramatists and playwrights Italian essayists Male essayists Italian fascists Italian male journalists 20th-century Italian novelists 20th-century male writers Italian male short story writers Members of the Royal Academy of Italy Strega Prize winners Italian male novelists Italian communists Italian male dramatists and playwrights 20th-century Italian short story writers 20th-century essayists Domus (magazine) editors Italian male non-fiction writers