February 23, 2026

Naples Mourns the Great Angela Luce

Famed Neapolitan singer and actress Angela Luce died of heart failure in Naples on February 20, 2026. She was 87. Born Angela Savino on December 3, 1938, to a family of artisans who crafted shoes, silk flowers, and fashion accessories, she remained a daughter of Naples in spirit and in art throughout her life.

A luminous presence in Neapolitan-language theatre, Luce appeared in more than 80 films following her 1956 debut in Ricordati di Napoli. Over the course of her career, she recorded 18 albums between 1972 and 2009. Her musical journey began at just 14, when she performed the iconic Zì Carmilì at the Piedigrotta Bideri festival, marking the start of a career that would span seven decades.

Her accolades were numerous. She won the David di Donatello for her performance in L’amore molesto, directed by Mario Martone, a film that earned international recognition at Cannes. On screen, she shared roles with some of Italy’s greatest actors, including Marcello Mastroianni, Vittorio Gassman, Nino Manfredi, Alberto Sordi, Ugo Tognazzi, Vittorio De Sica, and Totò, among others.

Luce became a living bridge between the classic Neapolitan musical tradition—rooted in café-chantant—and the evolving cultural landscape of the 20th century. For younger generations, she was the voice that reintroduced them to two centuries of Neapolitan repertoire. Her signature interpretations included Raffaele Viviani’s So’ Bammenella ’e copp’ ’e Quartiere, featured in Napoli Notte e Giorno directed by Giuseppe Patroni Griffi and presented at the Spoleto Festival; Ipocrisia by Pino Giordano and Eduardo Alfieri, which placed second at the Sanremo Music Festival in 1975; and Voglia, her own composition with Angelo Fiore, which won the 1984 UNICEF Award.

On stage, Luce performed in the works of Eduardo Scarpetta and frequently collaborated with Eduardo De Filippo, appearing with him in theatre and on television. Her performances carried Neapolitan drama far beyond Italy—to the Wiesbaden Festival in Germany, the Théâtre Sarah Bernhardt in Paris, The Old Vic in London, the Mark Hellinger Theatre in New York, and the Teatro Coliseo in Buenos Aires.

Deeply devoted to her faith and her city, Luce volunteered from 2011 onward at the annual September 10 Serenata alla Madonna, honoring Our Lady of Piedigrotta. Private by nature, she chose never to marry, dedicating her life entirely to her art. She spoke candidly, however, of a tormented relationship with singer Peppino Gagliardi and of a profound love for a man outside the entertainment world, Amedeo, who died tragically in 1974.

Just days before her passing, Luce recorded a message of encouragement to the owners and staff of Naples’ historic Teatro Sannazzaro, which suffered severe damage in a February 2026 fire—a final gesture of solidarity with the theatrical community she cherished.

Angela Luce’s beauty, generosity of spirit, and intimate rapport with her audiences were legendary. With her passing, Naples loses not only a star, but a guardian of its voice.

~ By Antonio Isernia

Celebrating the First Sunday of Lent

The Temptation of Christ, Gustave Doré
In illo témpore: Ductus est Jesus in desértum a Spíritu, ut tentarétur a diábolo. Et cum jejunásset quadragínta diébus et quadragínta nóctibus, póstea esúriit. Et accédens tentátor, dixit ei: Si Fílius Dei es, dic ut lápides isti panes fiant. Qui respóndens, dixit: Scriptum est: Non in solo pane vivit homo, sed in omni verbo, quod procédit de ore Dei. Tunc assúmpsit eum diábolus in sanctam civitátem, et státuit eum super pinnáculum templi, et dixit ei: Si Fílius Dei es, mitte te deórsum. Scriptum est enim: Quia Ángelis suis mandávit de te, et in mánibus tollent te, ne forte offéndas ad lápidem pedem tuum. Ait illi Jesus: Rursum scriptum est: Non tentábis Dóminum Deum tuum. Íterum assúmpsit eum diábolus in montem excélsum valde: et osténdit ei ómnia regna mundi, et glóriam eórum, et dixit ei: Hæc ómnia tibi dabo, si cadens adoráveris me. Tunc dicit ei Jesus: Vade, Sátana; scriptum est enim: Dóminum Deum tuum, adorábis, et illi soli sérvies. Tunc relíquit eum diábolus: et ecce Ángeli accessérunt et ministrábant ei. ~ Gospel (Matthew 4: 1-11) *
We observed the First Sunday of Lent at the traditional Latin Mass at Our Lady of Peace Church in Park Slope, Brooklyn. Before Mass, we prayed the Holy Rosary, the Litany of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and the Stations of the Cross in Latin. As is our custom, we offered our Sunday Rosary for the Beatification of Servant of God King Francesco II of the Two Sicilies and for the Canonization of Beata Queen Maria Cristina di Savoia.

After Mass, we broke our strict Lenten fast (no meat, dairy, or eggs)—first with coffee and cornetti, then later with a modest Sicilian repast.

Regrettably, our engaging discussion on the manufactured decline of Western art was cut short by the approaching winter storm.

~ By Giovanni di Napoli, February 22nd, Feasts of the Chair of San Pietro Apostolo at Antioch and Santa Margherita da Cortona
During Lent, the altar is stripped of flowers in
keeping with the Church's penitential tradition
Stations of the Cross
Some of the statues in the church were recently repositioned
Crocchè di patate e arancini
Anelletti chî vròcculi arriminati e muddìca
Polpette
Parmigiana di melanzane
Notes:
At that time Jesus was led by the Spirit into the desert, to be tempted by the devil. And when He had fasted forty days and forty nights, afterwards He was hungry. And the tempter coming said to him: If Thou be the Son of God, command that these stones be made bread.' Who answered and said: 'It is written: Not in bread alone doth man live, but in every word that proceedeth from the mouth of God. Then the devil took Him up into the holy city and set Him upon the pinnacle of the temple, and said to Him: If Thou be the Son of God, cast Thyself down. For it is written: That He hath given His angels charge over Thee, and in their hands shall they bear Thee up, lest perhaps Thou dash Thy foot against a stone. Jesus said to him: It is written again: Thou shalt not tempt the Lord Thy God. Again the devil took Him up into a very high mountain and showed Him all the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them, and said to Him: All these will I give Thee, if falling down Thou wilt adore me. Then Jesus saith to him: Begone, Satan! For it is written: The Lord thy God shalt thou adore, and Him only shalt thou serve. Then the devil left Him: and behold angels came, and ministered to Him. ~ Gospel (Matthew 4: 1-11)

Photo of the Week: The Fontana della Pigna in the Cortile della Pigna, Vatican

Photo by New York Scugnizzo

Two Upcoming Catholic Women's Retreats

February 22, 2026

Why I Write After Sixteen Years and Eleven Months

On this, our sixteenth-year and eleven-month anniversary,* I want to clarify something about the words I share here. My posts are not meant as virtue signaling, nor are they intended to showcase any supposed holiness on my part. They are, first and foremost, a way for me to work through my thoughts and struggles. If others find value in them, that is a gift. I write just as much for myself as for anyone else.


The truth is that I am deeply uncomfortable when people compliment me on being “holy” or “virtuous”—if they only knew how far that is from the truth. I am the first to admit that I am a sinner in desperate need of God’s mercy and forgiveness. I do not stand above anyone. If I appear “very religious,” it is only because so many around me are terribly irreligious. It is like being the tallest dwarf in the room—hardly a testament to stature.


I do not write for accolades. Proof of this is simple: I write under a pseudonym. If I craved praise, I would attach these words to my real name and seek recognition. Yes, it is nice to be appreciated, but praise never sits comfortably with me. If affirmation—or worse, popularity—were the goal, I would not be doing this, but something more fashionable instead.


I also do not write for money. I haven’t made a penny from any of this. It is a labor of love, freely chosen. In a world obsessed with monetization and branding, I am content to remain nameless, faceless, and unpaid. The poverty I embrace is by choice, for the sake of something higher.


This work is not about virtue, vanity, or profit. It is about honesty, struggle, and a desire to cling to truth, even when I fall short. Any benefit to others is something for which I am grateful. But understand this about me: I am not a saint, a sage, or a prophet. I am simply someone stumbling forward, trying to give form to what I believe and seek to live out.


Sixteen years and eleven months of writing, reflection, and labor. No fortune, no name—only continuity. Imperfect yet persistent. That is enough.


~ By Giovanni di Napoli, February 21st, Feast of St. Peter Mavimenus


*As seventeen is considered unlucky in Duosiciliano culture, it seems fitting to pause here just short of it for a small celebration. The superstition goes back to the Roman numeral XVII, which can be rearranged to spell VIXI—“I have lived”—a phrase tied to death. For this reason, rather than tempt fate, we’ve decided to mark our sixteenth year and eleventh month of writing with joy and gratitude, leaving the ominous 17th for others to brave.

February 21, 2026

Il Portastendardo di Civitella del Tronto (n. 56 - Febbraio 2026)

Lent with the Emperor

The Blessed Karl von Habsburg Symposium V

Saturday, March 7, 2026 (8:00AM–5:00PM)

Renaissance Dallas North Hotel
1590 Lyndon B Johnson Freeway
Dallas, TX, 75234

Fifth Gathering:
• Conference
• “Dinner with the Speakers”
• Singles Social Event

It could be said that the last few years of Bl. Karl’s life was one long ‘Lent’.

Ten speakers from several US states and foreign countries will look deep, each in a different way, into how an emperor and a Catholic navigate through personal difficulties, societal disorder, and into personal, interior triumph.

MAKE A PILGRIMAGE TO THE EMPEROR’S LENT—2026

Discover the richness and benefit of a Good Lent– strength and perseverance in troubling times–Kaiser Karl’s way.

JOIN THE HUNDREDS FROM DOZENS OF STATES & EVEN FOREIGN COUNTRIES WHO WILL ATTEND

Click here to Attend

February 20, 2026

Mulberry Street Serenade: Patrizio Buanne Back in Little Italy

Patrizio showing his Two Sicilies pride
Ran into our friend Patrizio Buanne at E. Rossi’s in Little Italy, New York, last night during the American leg of his world tour. Tourists drifted past, unaware that one of Naples’ great modern crooners was inside catching up with friends over conversation.

More: https://patriziobuanne.net/en/home_en/

Novena to San Leone Luca di Corleone

San Leone Luca, ora pro nobis
Pray the novena for nine consecutive days, February 20th through February 28th, in preparation for the feast celebrated on March 1st. Evviva San Leone Luca di Corleone!
Glorious St. Leolucas of Corleone, beloved Patron, you served God in humility and confidence on earth. Now you enjoy His beatific vision in heaven. You persevered till death and gained the crown of eternal life. Remember now the dangers, confusion, and anguish that surround me and intercede for me in my needs and troubles, especially...

(Mention your need here...).

Amen.

St. Leolucas of Corleone, Pray for us.

Our Father...
Hail Mary...
Glory Be...

New Book — Diodoros of Sicily: Bibliotheke Historike: Volume 2

A new title that may be of interest to our readers. Available at Amazon.com

Diodoros of Sicily: Bibliotheke Historike: Volume 2, Books 16-17: The Rise of Macedon under Philip II and the Conquests of Alexander III (the Great) by Phillip Harding

Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Pub. Date: May 31, 2026
Hardcover: $115.00
Softcover $32.99
Language: English
Pages: 448

Read description

Click here to see more books

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February 19, 2026

The Sun Steed and My Father

Patriae Moderatur Amore [1]
It has been some time since I last went horseback riding, so when the opportunity arose, it stirred a flood of memories. As far back as I can remember, if there was a horse within sight, my father would lift me into the saddle, no matter where we were. His love of horses was steadfast, equestrian in his very nature. His first real job was as a stable boy at the Kensington Stables near Prospect Park in Brooklyn.

He would often recall how he lingered too long at the stables before finally rushing home for dinner, leaving no time to bathe. My grandfather ran his table with military punctuality. Seated to his right, still reeking of horses, he barely had time to settle before my grandfather would say, “You stink,” and send him to his room without supper. An aunt would quietly bring him food later.
If a horse appeared on television, everything stopped. We had to watch. I cannot count how many times I sat through Hidalgo.

Proud of his Neapolitan ancestry, he loved that Napoli’s ancient emblem was a rampant black stallion on a golden field—Il Corsiero del Sole, the “Sun Steed.” The horse, long associated with the city, symbolized vitality and sovereign strength. Tracing its origins to antiquity, a colossal bronze horse once stood in Naples, traditionally associated with the Temple of Neptune—symbolizing the unpredictability of the sea and protection from earthquakes.
In the Middle Ages, the horse became linked to the legend of Virgil, who in Neapolitan lore was regarded as a magician and protector of the city. It was said that he fashioned or enchanted the bronze horse as a talisman guarding Naples and its stables from harm. Thus, the ancient monument passed from pagan symbol into medieval legend, its power recast but not forgotten.

The horse also appeared on early Neapolitan coinage and civic imagery and was later connected—symbolically rather than heraldically—to the Aragonese rulers of Naples in the fifteenth century. Over time, the image evolved, but the figure of the horse endured as a sign of independence and power. In my father, it was no symbol at all but simply who he was.

~ By Giovanni di Napoli, February 18th, Feast of St. Bernadette Soubirous

Notes:
[1] Patriae moderatur amore appears beneath Filippo Palizzi’s 1877 depiction of an unbridled horse in the fields beneath Vesuvius, evoking Il Corsiero del Sole. The phrase may be translated as “He is guided by love of the fatherland.”

February 18, 2026

Remembering Francisco Elías de Tejada

Madrid, Spain, 6 April 1917 – Madrid, Spain, 18 February 1978

In memory of the “Forgotten Master,” Francisco Elías de Tejada y Spínola Gómez, Carlist philosopher and historian, we pray for the happy repose of his soul.

Eternal rest grant unto Him, O Lord and let perpetual light shine upon him. May his soul, and the souls of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen

Celebrating Martedì Grasso

Focaccia Barese
On the eve of Lent, we celebrated the end of our indulgent Carnevale season with a special Martedì Grasso—Fat Tuesday—celebration. The evening was filled with cheerful excess—a luxurious homemade feast followed by lively games and lots of laughter late into the night.

As is our tradition, since we forgo meat, dairy, and eggs during the Great Fast, our final meal was a conscious feast of all three: rich dishes, generous servings, and no holding back.

Now, feeling satisfied and thankful, we turn our thoughts toward the desert. Through fasting, abstinence, and penitence, we begin the long journey toward the glory of Christ’s Resurrection at Easter. We wish you a blessed and meaningful Lent. ~ Giovanni di Napoli
Pomodori secchi e nodini
Affettati e formaggio
Crocchè di patate, polpette di ricotta, and arancini
Melanzane grigliate sott'olio
Peperoni arrostiti sott'olio
Manicotti
Polpette
Cotoletta alla Milanese
Cupcakes

Michela Musolino at the Corazón Cultural Arts Center in Topanga, California

February 17, 2026

The Passing of Antonino Zichichi and Franco Torpino di Santasilia

In the span of a day, two figures of cultivated Italian life passed from the scene — Antonino Zichichi in Sicily and Franco Torpino di Santasilia of Naples — leaving behind distinct yet complementary legacies of intellect and tradition.
Antonino Zichichi

Professor Antonino Zichichi, nuclear physicist and founder of the Centro Ettore Majorana in Erice, died on February 9, 2026. He was 96.

Born in Trapani, Sicily, on October 15, 1929, Zichichi studied at the University of Palermo before embarking on a distinguished international career. In the 1960s, he conducted significant research at Fermilab in Chicago and at CERN in Geneva, contributing to the development of subnuclear physics during a decisive era.

In 1963, he founded the Centro Ettore Majorana in Erice, naming it for the Sicilian theoretical physicist from Catania. The center became home to the International School of Subnuclear Physics and a meeting place for scientists from around the world. Zichichi later served as president of the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, president of the European Physical Society, and president of the World Federation of Scientists. In 1973, he co-founded World Lab with the American physicist Isidor Isaac Rabi, an organization supporting scientific development in emerging nations.

In later years, Zichichi was among those physicists who publicly affirmed belief in God as Creator, writing several works addressed to a broad readership, including Scienza ed emergenze planetarie (1993), Perché io credo in Colui che ha fatto il mondo (1999), and L’irresistibile fascino del Tempo (2000).

Asteroid 3951 bears his name.

Franco Torpino di Santasilia

Franco Torpino di Santasilia, Neapolitan Marquess, engineer, and devoted custodian of aristocratic culinary tradition, died February 10, 2026, in Marrakesh following complications from a fall. He was 91.

Born in Naples on January 18, 1935, Torpino graduated in physics from the University of Naples in 1960 and worked as a thermal nuclear engineer at the Centrale Elettronucleare del Garigliano for ENEL and General Electric between 1964 and 1971. He later held executive positions at Gruppo Piaggio and Gruppo Giglio.

Inspired by his mother, Duchess Leopoldina Caracciolo di Castagneto, he cultivated a lifelong devotion to the aristocratic cuisine of Naples. In his homes in Naples, Rome, and Morocco, he became known for gatherings that celebrated the ceremonial depth of southern Italian hospitality. His tables welcomed figures from the Italian and international establishment, including members of the Agnelli and Marzotto families, alongside diplomats and public officials.

In 1988, he published La Cucina Aristocratica Napoletana, later republished in 2017, and I primi: 35 ricette ispirate alla Cucina Napoletana di Corte, works that framed cuisine not merely as gastronomy but as inheritance, identity, and culture. He was a member of the Accademia Italiana della Cucina, the American Institute for Food and Wine, and the International Association for Culinary Professionals, and organized numerous conferences dedicated to Neapolitan culinary history.

~ By Antonio Isernia

Photo of the Week: The Fontana della Pigna in the Pinecone Courtyard, Vatican

Photo by New York Scugnizzo

Thursday Night Holy Hour and Mass at the Oratory of St. Josaphat in Bayside, New York