-
Ernest Hemingway’s World War I novel (written in 1929) tells the story of an American soldier wounded while fighting for the Italian army. He convalesces in a Milan hospital, and, after inadvertently deserting while escaping the Germans, reunites with his love in Stresa on Lake Maggiore. They stay at the Des Iles Borromées hotel (where Hemingway himself often stayed) before fleeing by boat across to Swiss Locarno.
-
It’s 1937, and a group of stodgy society Brits and bored Yanks loosen their mores and inhibitions on the shores of Lake Como. Vanessa Redgrave and Uma Thurman head up the cast of this 1995 film by John Irvin. You can visit its setting, the Villa Balbianello, Lake Como.
-
H V Morton, who in his youth gained fame scooping the story of Tutankhamun’s tomb discovery in the 1920s, became one of the 20th-century’s best, if little-known, travel writers. His 1950s journey through Italy is an erudite combination of travelogue, history and wonderful prose, all of it surprisingly undated.
-
After a long absence from La Scala, Verdi offered this Egyptian melodrama.
-
The “Giuseppe Verdi” Sym-phony Orchestra of Milan has since 1999 played in this reinvented 1930s’ cinema, which stood derelict for decades after World War II. Riccardo Chailly conducts concerts from late September to May.
-
This is high-tech nightclubbing, with TV screens, internet feeds, concerts broadcast live and a magnetic card that keeps track of your tab (you pay when you leave). The music ranges from modern pop and hip-hop to 1960s and 70s revival – the owners are a group of Serie A footballers who are often seen here when not on the field.
-
The first of many fun-loving Donizetti premieres.
-
This stalwart from the mid-1980s still offers you the best chance in all of Milan to spot a genuine international supermodel. Though a perfectly standard discotheque from 1986, glitzy Hollywood continues to draw the most beautiful people in town, so dress to impress.
-
Written in the 1800s, Alessandro Manzoni’s novel is a window into Lombard life in the 1600s, set in Milan and Manzoni’s Lake Como hometown of Lecco during Spanish rule. It is required reading for all Italian schoolchildren and has been translated into many languages.
-
Film director Michelangelo Antonioni takes the slow death of affection between a couple, masterfully played by Marcello Mastroianni and Jeanne Moreau, and sets it against a backdrop of rapidly industralizing Milan in 1960.
Advertisement
-
-
Rome guide
Travel
-
Crete guide
lizzie
-
Megan's New York guide
ma7655
-
paris93581's New York guide
paris9
-
Rome guide
Oliver
-
KN's in Vienna
kinana
-
-
-
Chris' Barcelona Birthday
helen8
-
Daves Nature Scotland
dvc214
-
Barcelona guide
Anna19
-
i99's Crete guide
imejl9
-
-
La Nivola e il Santo ChiodoInside the world's largest Gothic cathedral hangs a cross suspended from the chancel roof. Inside this cross is Milan's holiest relic, a nail purportedly from the cross on which Christ died. Except... Read more
-
Milan Film FestivalHeld at the Piccolo Teatro and the Castello Sforzesco, Milan's annual film festival functions as a talent scout and a distributor in an alternative market, attracting aspiring filmmakers from all... Read more
-
MITO September MusicMITO September Music reinterprets classic and contemporary music in the light of multiculturalism. Held at some of the most fascinating venues in Milan and Turin, the festival features famous... Read more
-
Stevie WonderSuperstar US singer-songwriter Stevie Wonder brings his first European tour for ten years to the DatchForum in Milan. Read more











symbol, to start adding attractions to your
tailor-made travel guide.