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Grant Doyle,
agence Oxbow
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Sydney
NSW 2031
mob: 0438 361
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grant@oxbow.au.com
ABN 34 671 243 862
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© Grant Doyle 2008 |
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The Truman Show
Amid its perfectly preserved mediaeval
streets and breathtaking cliff-top location, Grant Doyle, unlike
the writers who preceded him, is almost lost for words as he
takes time out in Taormina, Sicily’s ritzy Ionian coast
resort.
---------------------------------
Sitting and sipping refreshing drinks
on Caffe Wunderbar’s
alfresco terrace is like being perched on the edge of the world.
Sky and sea seem to fuse in a wall of bright blue. Such is
the hilltop town of Taormina’s precarious setting on
the side of Sicily’s Mt Tauro that lots of places offer
similarly spectacular views.
The cafe's red-vested waiters dart between its outdoor
tables like fireflies. Patrons smoke. This is Italy.
So does the mountain not far in the distance. This
is Etna, Europe's highest and liveliest volcano, its
slopes a pastiche of stark, dark lava and bright, white
snow.
"Un campari ed un sode ed uno birra - Peroni, per favore." The
drinks take a while to arrive. Who cares - there's that elevated
vista to consume. Looking sou-west towards Etna the panorama
sweeps down its smoking slope to the indigo sea at nearby Naxos,
one of the earliest Greek cities in Sicily, first settled in
the fourth century BC. Arcs of sandy beaches speckle the coast
north and south while clearly visible out to sea is the 'big
toe' of mainland Italy.
This wonderful Caffe ‘on the edge of the world’ occupies
a prime corner along the pedestrian-only Corso Umberto 1 at
Piazza IX Aprile. It’s ideal for the twilight passeggiata;
that culturally enshrined Italian rite of promenading and perusing.
Truman Capote (played in the multi-award winning film by
Philip Seymour Hoffman) enjoyed many a martini at Caffe Wunderbar. "It's
a beautiful piazza," he wrote of the bar’s location, "centering
around a promontory with a view of Etna and the sea. Toy Sardinian
donkeys attached to delicately carved carts, go prancing past,
their bells jingling, their carts filled with bananas and oranges".
When playwright Tennessee Williams came to stay, Wunderbar
was where the two often went drinking. What stories those tables
could tell!
My arrival in Taormina was late in the evening after several
frantic weeks on the Italian mainland. Perhaps it was the
wine-dark night and my depleted energy reserves that conspired
to hide the full extent of the steep uphill taxi trip from
the train station at sea level to my hotel. Midnight check
in at the Pensione Svizzera (reservation completed online
months earlier) went as smooth as the cognac nightcap I consumed.
Sleep was never so sweet.
On sliding the curtains back next morning however, a line
from Capote quickly came to mind: “it was like living in
a ship trembling on the peak of a tidal wave”. The sea,
far below, was all I could see.
While he could easily have been describing the view from
my room, Truman was actually referring to the 17th century
villa, Fontana Vecchia (old fountain), he and his lover,
Jack Dunphy, rented during their 18-month stay in Taormina.
The isolated rustic abode, set amid
almond and orange groves, was a 15-minute walk from town
(and my pensione) along a winding rocky road.
It was April 1950, with spring in full swing, when the American
men took up residence in the villa. “There is a momentous
feeling each time one ... steps onto the terrace, a feeling
of being suspended, like the white reeling doves, between the
mountains and above the sea," wrote Capote.
Coincidentally, the English writer, D.H. Lawrence and his
wife Frieda occupied the very same house some 30 years earlier.
What stories those walls could tell! Lawrence finalised The
Lost Girl during his two-year stint there.
The privately owned villa is not as isolated today as it
was in Capote or Lawrence’s day. To visit, take the winding
via Cappuccini as it leaves the eastern entrance to the old
town. This road becomes via Fontana Vecchia, which on more
recent maps, is listed by its official name, via David Herbert
Lawrence. Capote has yet to trouble the cartographer.
It’s the oldest
house on the street. And looks it, in a rustic-chic kind
of way. Keep an eye out for its distinguished but fading
pinkish exterior, Spanish-tiled roof (without eaves) and
dizzyingly steep outlook. “David Herbert Lawrence
lived here 1920-1922,” proclaims a plaque on
the wall.
But our Fontana Vecchia villa residents were not the
first writers of renown to visit Taormina. The town’s literary
pedigree probably began with Goethe. The German poet and dramatist
waxed lyrical of this "patch of paradise" in his
1787 Italian Journey. And the writers have been arriving ever
since: Dumas, de Maupassant, Dahl, Steinbeck and Wilde. So
too musicians, Wagner and Brahms. So too artists, Klee and
Klimt.
“The town, not large, is contained between two gates.
Near the first of these, the Porto Messina” writes Capote, “there
is a small, tree-shaded square with a fountain and a stone
wall along which village idlers are arranged like birds on
a telephone wire.” In some ways, little has changed in
the ensuing 50 or so years.
Perhaps that’s part of the allure? Sure, there are plenty
of quaint and majestic towns teetering on cliffs all around
the Mediterranean. You only have to glance across the Straits
of Messina to the Amalfi Coast for the nearest example. But
what sets Taormina apart are arguably its unique natural geography
and extraordinary architectural, cultural and culinary legacy
left by centuries of various invaders.
Strategically located on major maritime trade
and warfaring routes, Sicily, and in particular,
Taormina, have been occupied by just about every
civilisation in the ancient and modern worlds.
The Greeks began the procession and in turn the
Romans, Byzantines (who made Taormina their capital
in the 9th century), Saracens, Normans and Spaniards,
even the French, have all left their mark.
And without question the greatest mark, the jewel in Taormina's
aesthetic crown, is the dramatically situated Teatro
Greco. Begun by the Greeks but finished by the Romans, the 5,500-seat
arena adorns a naturally curving cliff-top plateau
with Mt Etna's fuming plume and the glistening sea forming an imposing
backdrop.
Nothing prepares you for such jaw-dropping grandeur. "Sitting
at the spot where formerly sat the uppermost spectators, you
confess at once that never did an audience, in any theatre,
have before it such a spectacle as you there behold," observed
Goethe. Today, the Taormina Film (mid June) and Arte (July/August)
Festivals stage many outdoor events in this unrivalled arena.
Once done with the theatre, just wander.
Many meandering streets – while
they can be steep – are little more than perfectly preserved
cobblestone paths; hence no cars. If the way becomes too tiring
or the day too stifling, shade, a shop, a beverage or a pastry
and a revitalising view are never far away. Discover Dolce & Gabbana
alongside dolce and cassata.
The elegant Parco Duchi di Cesaro gardens,
just below the Greek theatre near via Roma,
offer a stunning and scented interlude. This
wonderfully spacious public space – its rows of
hedges have not a single leaf out of place - was bequeathed
to Taormina by English woman, Florence Trevelyan, at the end
of the 19th century.
Further along via Roma is the San Domenico
Palace, originally a 15th century monastery
but since its 19th century hotel conversion,
is now redefining the meaning of five-star
luxury. European aristocracy, wannabe glitterati
and Hollywood royalty clamber to fill its guest
register.
Depending on your mood, the mood
of the fuming mountain or that of the weather, consider a visit
to Mt Etna. Self-guided walking trails are available to a
certain elevation, but to better experience what the Romans
called the realm of Vulcan, God of Fire, organised trekking
and 4WD tours – easily
done in a day – could be
a more rewarding option.
Or if swimming is your
thing, numerous beaches dot the coast. A steep cable car
connects hilltop Taormina to Mazzaro Bay
below in a matter of minutes. But it was
a long and arduous walk down the mountain
from Fontana Vecchia to the water for Capote and
company. They ventured there often in the warmer
months, especially to the exquisite Isola Bella, “a guarded
cove with water clear as barrel
rain.”
These days, expect to pay for access
and a sun lounge in hot months if you're
not staying at one of the resorts right
on the beach. It’s a small price to pay because as Capote
warned, August can be warm, the
sun enlarges: “Figs split,
plums swelled, the almonds hardened … you
remember that Africa is only
eighty miles away”.
Sooner or later, the prospect
of food looms. It’s usually
simple but sublime. There's plenty
of seafood and regional specialties. They make tremendous local
wine. And forget about counting calories; Sicilian pastries,
like the highly prized cannoli, are flown to the Italian mainland,
such is their reputation.
Back on a Taormina side street
in a regular restaurant, a simple
pasta con sarde epitomises local
cuisine. In this particularly version
(sans anchovies), salty sardine
fillets are mashed and sautéed
with olive oil, onion, pine nuts,
wild fennel, fresh sweet basil,
along with the ubiquitous seasonings
into a chunky paste, and then tossed
with bucatini pasta (preferably
cooked in the same water used to
boil the fennel). My time in Sicily
was full of culinary highlights,
none more so than this classic
dish.
But as for cooking, Capote
couldn't. Nor could his partner.
Nor the female cook they employed
for the task. But the American
men survived, "as long as she [kept] to simple Sicilian
dishes, really simple and really Sicilian".
Capote completed most of
the Grass Harp novella while
ensconced in Taormina. Upon
publication it soon became
his most celebrated work
to that point, arguably cementing
his international reputation
as a distinguished author. Breakfast
at Tiffany's and In Cold Blood
came later.
Truman left Taormina
in September 1951, noting the town at that time suited him
the way it was; having “the
comforts of a tourist center (running
water, a shop with foreign newspapers, a bar where you
can buy a good martini) without the tourists."
Well, the running water, foreign
press and good martinis can still
be found; so too can the Fontana
Vecchia villa. But now the tourists
are in abundance. All year round.
Who can blame us? We're merely the
latest in a long line of foreign
and local visitors - dating back
to the ancient Greeks - who came,
saw and while some conquered, all
were thoroughly beguiled by Taormina's
imposing physicality and its intoxicating
beauty. Goethe got it right; "A patch of paradise," indeed.
_________________________
All excerpts, A
Capote Reader, Penguin Classics,
2002
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