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Italian and Italian American Studies

Italian and Italian American Studies: Radio Journalist Lisa Sergio

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Italian and Italian American Studies: Radio Journalist Lisa Sergio

Gerbi, Sandro; Schutt, Will

On the evening of May 9, 1936, a slim, elegant woman stood in Rome’s Piazza Venezia and – in perfect English – broadcast Mussolini’s famous speech on the conquest of Ethiopia. Her name was Lisa Sergio (1905–1989), her nickname “the golden voice” of Mussolini. A Florentine journalist, with American parents, she was fired from her job at the Propaganda Ministry the following summer, most likely for gossiping about a brief affair with her boss, Mussolini’s son in law, Galeazzo Ciano. 

Aided by Nobel-winning Guglielmo Marconishe established herself in the US and resumed broadcasting, now as a liberal commentator, surrounding herself with a network of luminaries, including Eleanor Roosevelt. After the war, she was accused by the FBI of Communist sympathies and in the McCarthy years banished from the radio. Tired of this situation, in 1960, she moved to Washington, where she re-invented herself as a travelling lecturer in current affairs. She remained in the US for the rest of her life.

Details

Published by: Palgrave Macmillan

Publication Date: 2026-01-17

Format: Hardcover

ISBN-13: 9783032084958

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-032-08496-5

Dimensions: 210cm x148cm

Pages: 269

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