Hubris

Remembering Rapallo—A Year In The Life

Diana Farr Louis

Eating Well Is The Best Revenge

By Diana Farr Louis

“It was May 1971 and I was sitting on the sofa in the darkened living room of the Bacigalupo family in central Rapallo, either before or after a delicious lunch. Two streets in from the palms, cafés, and ramblers of the ‘lungomare’ seaside promenade, this viewless first floor apartment shared none of the beauty of the Italian Riviera and yet it was one of the liveliest, warmest places on it.” Diana Farr Louis

Diana Farr Louis

ATHENS Greece—(Weekly Hubris)—12/24/2012—“One day, many years from now, you will look back at this time here as one of the best in your life.”

It was May 1971 and I was sitting on the sofa in the darkened living room of the Bacigalupo family in central Rapallo, either before or after a delicious lunch. The shutters were invariably lowered, both to shut out the traffic noise and the glaring Mediterranean sun. Two streets in from the palms, cafés, and ramblers of the lungomare seaside promenade, this viewless first floor apartment shared none of the beauty of the Italian Riviera and yet it was one of the liveliest, warmest places on it.

The owners, Bubi (short for Giuseppe) and Frieda Bacigalupo, were doctors: she a pediatrician; he a physician. Frieda, a native of Pennsylvania, had fluffy white hair, pink cheeks, and enormous energy, which she dedicated to looking after people, starting with her small patients but including anyone and everyone with the slightest problem or worry. Bubi, slim, elegant, humorous, and kind, ran the Villa Chiara, a clinic where he treated not only my father but most probably all the celebrities who used to flock to Rapallo in its heyday. He knew every one of them, from silver screen legends such as Lillian and Dorothy Gish, Tallulah Bankhead, Sexy Rexy Harrison and his wives, Lilli Palmer and tragic Kay Kendall, to more literary types such as Isaiah Berlin, Max Beerbohm, and Auberon Herbert (who appears as “Boy” McCalster in his brother-in-law Evelyn Waugh’s Bridehead Revisited).

By the time I settled in Rapallo in October, 1970, as an escapee from divorce and other difficulties in New York and following my parents’ lead (see https://weeklyhubris.com/sailing-with-the-costa-line-1971/), such personalities were thin on the ground and everyone I met was English or Polish, 65 going on 90, and overly fond of the bottle, either whisky or vodka. Like my parents, they had come to stretch their pensions in the sunny land of the inexpensive lira, and Rapallo seemed to be more retirement home than resort.

The Bacigalupos saved me. Not only were they welcoming and hospitable, they also had two bilingual sons, Massimo and Andrea, who were to become friends for life and constant companions during my eight months as a Rapallo resident. There were countless sails (with swims) on the Vagabonda II, a lovely wooden sailboat with a sky-blue hull; walks and picnics on the steep mountains above Portofino and Santa Margherita, improbably wild and rugged compared to the manicured villas and palazzi on the coast; tennis games and horse shows, where Andrea won prizes; dinner parties up at Massimo’s rustic peasant cottage, where we watched and sometimes filmed obscure “underground movies;” and frequent lunches or dinners chez Frieda and Bubi.

Frieda and Bubi Bacigalupo, Rapallo, 1960s.
Frieda and Bubi Bacigalupo, Rapallo, 1960s.

I seem to remember the conversation being mostly in English, perhaps out of deference to my rather shaky grasp of Italian, but Frieda and her mother, Mary Natale (whom my mother called Mary Christmas) were native speakers too, and I was never left out. One topic surfaced regularly and that was diet.

The menu invariably began with some sort of pasta: spinach gnocchi, trenette al pesto with potatoes and green beans (with the pasta al dente but not the beans), pansotti (big ravioli) with walnut sauce, or spaghetti with butter and a grating of white truffle and a little Parmigiano. Or perhaps porcini, in the fall. Then we might move on to fish or a veal roast with vegetables and, of course, a fresh green salad, but pasta was the pièce de résistance.

As summer approached, Bubi would start his diet in order to slim down just a kilo or two in order to appear svelte in his bathing suit—not American-style baggy trunks but more like Johnny Weissmuller’s Speedos of the day. The diet consisted of naked pasta, un-sauced, and it worked. Frieda, on the other hand, who fretted about being plumpish, complained that merely looking at it made her fatter. She would stare mournfully at her undressed lettuce leaf for a moment before she regained her usual exuberance.

Ezra Pound on the tennis court, Rapallo, 1930s.
Ezra Pound on the tennis court, Rapallo, 1930s.

Then, the conversation would take off and we would chat about past and present, literature and art, Italy and the US. The only famous person I met at that table was Ezra Pound. Bubi had apparently played tennis with him as a teenager before he went on to become a national champion in the 30s, while Massimo had engaged T.S. Eliot’s “il miglior fabbro” in chess and would go on to become an authority on this controversial poet.

Alas, the talk that evening did not flow easily. After his disgrace at broadcasting propaganda for Mussolini and his subsequent stay at St. Elizabeth’s mental hospital in DC, Uncle Ezra had vowed never to speak of either poetry or politics again. So, that evening, he was mostly silent. Frieda tried to draw him out but the only statement I recall was his pronouncement on how the Church calculates Easter: “It always falls on the first Sunday after the first full moon after the Vernal Equinox.”

How lucky was I to have Frieda as my son’s pediatrician that year. Aged five, he’d never been sick (despite his traumatic birth) before and he never would be again but, in Rapallo, he managed to contract chicken pox, mumps, German measles, and tonsillitis. Because he was such a spindly kid, Frieda wanted to toughen him up with Vitamin B12 shots before the tonsillectomy. Though she had formidable powers of persuasion, she managed just one. The jab hurt so much, he’d slip under the bed every time he heard her voice, so she sent him to the surgeon unfortified.

But Frieda was more than a doctor. She served as president of the American Women’s Club of Genoa and on the boards of the local library and cultural organizations. In 1972, the Italian state declared her a Cavaliere della Repubblica (comparable to receiving an OBE, Order of the British Empire) and, upon her death in 1983, the International Federation of American Women’s Clubs funded a scholarship in her name.

Bubi, who outlived her by 16 years, became the author of a charming portrait of his home town, Ieri a Rapallo (Yesterday in Rapallo), filled with gossip, history, and delightful reminiscences. This year, on the 100th anniversary of his birth, Massimo (now Professor of American Literature at Genoa University) co-curated an exhibition of photos and texts on “The World of Giuseppe and Frieda Bacigalupo, International Culture in Rapallo, 1912-1999” in the old Norman castle at Rapallo. It was such a success that from December 6th to January 11th it will be on display in Genoa at the Palazzo Ducale.

Ieri a Rapallo, a portrait of Rapallo’s golden years.
Ieri a Rapallo, a portrait of Rapallo’s golden years.

I know that very few readers will have the chance to see it, to get to know this remarkable couple and their circle. I won’t be able to attend myself. But seeing some of the comments and photos has reminded me of what a privilege it was to be close to them. To hear Bubi describe 60s dancing as “shake before using,” to watch him monitoring the boiling of the pasta in my mother’s kitchen when she invited him to dinner, to inherit Frieda’s Fiat 500 when I left Rapallo for Athens . . . to hear her call me “Cara.”

When Bubi told me how I would look back on my time with them, I didn’t want to hear it, didn’t want to believe the idyll was over, but he was right. Thanks to them, Rapallo occupies a unique place in my heart, my third home after New York and Athens.

Diana and Duff, at home in Rapallo, winter 1972
Diana and Duff, at home in Rapallo, winter 1972

RECIPE

Trenette with Pesto, Potatoes, and String Beans

I’ve been back to Rapallo several times since 1972 but, in 1999, I was a guest of Oldways Preservation & Exchange Trust on their spring tour of Liguria. On that trip I met the marvelous Fred Plotkin, an authority on opera and Italy in general, and Liguria in particular. I’ve lifted this recipe from his literary cookbook, Recipes from Paradise (Little, Brown & Co., 1997), which contains hundreds of anecdotes and quotes from other illustrious writers, from Mark Twain to Charles Dickens, Nietzche to Yeats, who lived in this charmed part of Europe. It is a fitting complement to the world of Giuseppe and Frieda Bacigalupo.

As Fred says, “This is the classic pasta dish of Genoa [made with] Trenette . . . dried flat strands of pasta . . . . While pasta is famous throughout Liguria and beyond, the addition of potatoes and string beans is classically Genovese . . . .”

4 ounces/110 g fresh thin string beans, washed, cut in half, tips cut off

2 medium potatoes, washed, peeled, cut into bite-size cubes

12 ounces/350 g trenette

4 tablespoons/60 ml pesto

1 tablespoon cooking water from the pasta pot

Freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano (optional)

Bring a large pot of cold water to boil. When it reaches a boil, toss in a pinch of sea salt. When the water returns to a boil, add the string beans and potato cubes. Cook for 5 to 7 minutes, or until you can poke a fork easily into one of the potato cubes. The add the trenette and cook until al dente, following the instructions on the package. While the pasta is cooking, place the pesto in a large serving bowl and stir in 1 tablespoon of hot water from the pasta pot. When the pasta are al dente, drain them along with the string beans and potatoes in a colander. Immediately transfer to the serving bowl, toss well, and then serve in individual bowls. You may add a pinch of Parmigiano-Reggiano to each dish, but do not overdo it or the dish will dry out (remember, there is already cheese in the pasta). Makes 4 servings.

Prospero's Kitchen

Diana Farr Louis was born in the Big Apple but has lived in the Big Olive (Athens, Greece) far longer than she ever lived in the US. She was a member of the first Radcliffe class to receive a degree (in English) from Harvard . . . and went to Greece right after graduation, where she lost her heart to the people and the landscape. She spent the next year in Paris, where she learned to eat and cook at Cordon Bleu and earned her first $15. for writing—a travel piece for The International Herald Tribune. Ever since, travel and food have been among her favorite occupations and preoccupations. She moved to Greece in 1972, found just the right man, and has since contributed to almost every English-language publication in Athens, particularly The Athens News. That ten-year collaboration resulted in two books, Athens and Beyond, 30 Day Trips and Weekends, and Travels in Northern Greece. Wearing her food hat, by no means a toque, she has written for Greek Gourmet Traveler, The Art of Eating, Sabor, Kathimerini’s Greece Is, and such websites as Elizabeth Boleman-Herring’s www.greecetraveler.com. A regular contributor to www.culinarybackstreets.com, she is the author of two cookbooks, Prospero’s Kitchen, Mediterranean Cooking of the Ionian Islands from Corfu to Kythera (with June Marinos), and Feasting and Fasting in Crete. Most recently she co-edited A Taste of Greece, a collection of recipes, memories, and photographs from well-known personalities united by their love of Greece, in aid of the anti-food waste charity, Boroume. Her latest book, co-authored with Alexia Amvrazi and Diane Shugart, is 111 Places in Athens that you shouldn’t miss. (See Louis’ amazon.com Author Page for links to her her titles.) (Author Photos: Petros Ladas. Author Head Shot Augment: René Laanen.)

8 Comments

  • Andrea Bacigalupa

    A 4th-generation Italo-Americano whose family had lost all Italian heritage and customs, not even using the surname, met the Bacigalupos of Rapallo while doing genealogical research in Liguria. Among my dearest friends are Massimo and Andrea and their families. I never met Frieda, but did meet Bubi just once, at a dinner in Andrea’s home, a year or so before his death. And in 2002, the two brothers graciously offered me accomodations at their deceased parents’ apartment, the same described in this article. During a week’s stay there, I was always conscious of the spirits of Bubi and Frieda — their gracious environment proclaimed lives lived in beauty.

  • maria clotilde fiori

    In questo mondo alla deriva , solo testimonianze come questa possono infonderci nuova energia per un’auspicabile e autentica rinascita .

  • diana

    Maria Clotilde, penso che avete ragione. E l’amore ed energia di Frieda e Bubi sono ancora tangibile. I am honored by your words. Grazie.

  • Fern Driscoll

    What a wonderful portrait of the senior Baci’s. We came to Rapallo too late to meet them, alas, but have heard wonderful tales over the years. We, too, were most generously offered a dark apartment for a brief stay – I believe it had been Bubi’s office? The next generation of B’s has now turned it into a delightful apartment. We had an opportunity to see the wonderful exhibit (now in Genova) when it was briefly at the Castello in Rapallo. Wonderful!! Hoards of people of course. You paint such a fine portrait of this kind and generous family. And what a babe you were!

  • diana

    Hi there, my dear, I was waiting for you to give some sign of life, since you’re one of the few friends who actually know Rapallo. It made me very homesick to write this, so I’ll have to look back into all those nooks and crannies of memory and try to plumb them for more yarns. Baci to you and L.

  • Charles Rentoul

    I was so interested to read about your year in Rapallo.

    In the summer of 1956, when I was 12, my parents exchanged their flat in London for a flat in San Michele di Pagano for three weeks. I had two brothers (aged 14 and 3) and a sister aged 10. My parents and we four children all drove from London to San Michele in my parents’ Wolseley (with a luggage rack on the roof of the car) – quite a journey.

    What should have been a magical 3 weeks in San Michele was a bit of a disaster. All four of us children and my mother got seriously ill with some sort of typhoid strain. La Dotoressa – as Frieda was called – was simply brilliant, as was her husband. They visited us daily at the flat in San Michele to give us injections of various drugs and it was just so wonderful to be able to speak English to them.

    I have very fond memories of dear Frieda.

  • Diana

    What a nice story, Charles, though I’m sorry you can’t have enjoyed San Michele that much with the whole family sick. I suppose, being rather traumatized, you and your parents never returned to discover the beauty of it. How did you happen upon this story? Thanks for your comment, I will make sure Frieda’s sons see it.