The dream town of 'Vigata' |
Like so many Camilleri fans, I was saddened to hear that
this wonderful, talented author died on 17th July 2019 from cardiac
arrest. He was 93 years old and had
written so many books, about 100, many translated into English, and there is one
yet awaiting publication. I have loved
them all, spiced as they are with his unique sense of humour amidst the most
horrifying violence. Truly, humour is
what saves us human beings from total madness, defuses difficult situations and
Camilleri knew how to gently mock even the dreaded Mafiosa. He helped us to change our views of Sicily as
a gangster driven island filled with cowed people. We see it now as place of strange barren
beauty, delightful, honey-coloured buildings, ruined ancient temples and baroque
architecture, interesting characters and good-hearted people, plus great and
healthy food dishes (mainly fish). He introduced Sicilian phrases and dialect
into his stories and many Sicilian actors or ordinary people of the town were
used in the TV series that followed on, adding authenticity and charm. And the Sicilians have much to thank him for
helping their own renewed interest in their island history plus an upsurge in
tourism to help the economy. Apparently,
some of his books are now used in Sicilian schools.
Andrea Camilleri (Getty Images) |
Camilleri was about 67 and had retired from a respected
career as a TV director and author when his first book on Montalbano was
published by Sellerio. It’s called The
Shape of the Water. It immediately
seized the Italian imagination and more followed on, often with intriguing
titles such as The Voice of the Violin, The Scent of the Night, The Paper Moon
and many others, all in 180 page format, ten pages per chapter. Many stories commence with a strange dream
from which Montalbano awakes in a panic, dreams which are sometimes precognitive,
coming true in an alarming manner. It seems that Camilleri loved to hear the
stories from Alice in Wonderland as a child.
The strange dipping into the depths of the unconscious mind, the
alternative world of our dreams, the sense of things not being as they seem to
the rational mind must have arisen from this early fascination of his and a
sense of the supernatural enters the stories in subtle ways, flashes of
cognition, the Inspector’s solitary walks filled with pauses pregnant with
thoughtfulness and feeling. Montalbano
comes over as a man of great depths, modest, honourable and basically
kind. He reflect Camilleri’s own
personality for the author was very left wing, advocating the rights of all
people and seeing them as human beings, not labelling them as immigrants,
criminals or deranged, but showing the motives that drove them, the poverty,
fear, greed and all the human foibles and human greatness.
What is it about the Inspector Montalbano series produced by
RAI TV which has captivated people in so many countries from Italy to Australia? It’s that intriguing, indefinable
atmosphere, produced firstly by Franco Piersanti’s haunting title music that
accompanies a glorious swirling aerial view of the imaginary town of
Vigata. The overhead shot moves over a hilltop
town and then pans down to the seascape where a lonely swimmer carves his way
to a totally empty shore, clambers out, seizes a towel on the beach and
towelling himself vigorously, walks up stone steps to his beautiful apartment
with balconies overlooking the beach and the sea.
The police HQ at 'Vigata' |
Here Montalbano thoughtfully ponders his
mysterious, complex cases over a strong cup of coffee or a solitary, silent
meal on the balcony (cooked by his amazing housekeeper, Adelina) or else in a
corner of Enzio’s restaurant. Here’s a
detective who loves his food and likes to concentrate on it and not chatter
while he eats (how I approve of that!) , keeps fit, is considerate of others,
gentlemanly towards women, but still exhibits a fine Sicilian temper with
fools. He cares about people, has strong
friendships and maintains a strangely distant, yet loyal love-affair with
Livia, a lady who lives on mainland Italy.
In order to evoke the surrealism in Camilleri’s
stories, the streets are always
strangely empty of people and traffic and a brooding silence seems to pervade
the town. There is a Pirandello feel
about all this and Camilleri has sometimes been compared to that other great
writer (whose most famous work is Six Characters in Search of an Author). Apparently the two writers were distantly
related. This slightly unreal, almost
dreamlike atmosphere in the books has been captured by the direction of Alberto
Sironi and by the superb acting of the star, Luca Zingaretti, who had to adjust
his Roman Italian to a Sicilian accent in order to play the part.
One of the most
delightful holidays of recent years was when we visited Sicily on a Montalbano
tour. We were conducted around all the
locations which made up the imaginary town of Vigata, actually Scicli, with other
locations in Modica, Punto Secca and Donnafugata Castle, all in the province of Ragusa in
South Eastern Sicily.
We sat outside the
famous apartment on the beach and swam in ‘Montalbano’s sea’. It was a great experience to be with other
fans, all thrilled with the fact of ‘being there’. Watching the series again afterwards made it
so much more fun when I could say gleefully, ‘Look, we were there!'
Punta Secca, the apartment |
Just to add to the surreal atmosphere surrounding Camilleri’s work, he died on the night of a partial lunar eclipse that glowed a deep dark red for some minutes. A Paper Moon.
RIP Andrea Camilleri, we shall miss you, a wonderful man and a great author.