Romina Power

Romina Francesca Power (born October 2, 1951) is an American actress and singer born in Los Angeles. She is best-known as one half of the successful music duo Al Bano and Romina Power, together with her ex-husband Albano Carrisi.

Romina Power
Romina Power in Las trompetas del apocalipsis (1969)
Born
Romina Francesca Power

(1951-10-02) October 2, 1951
OccupationActress, singer
Years active1964–present
Spouse(s)
(
m. 1970; div. 1999)
Children4, including Ylenia Carrisi
Parent(s)Tyrone Power
Linda Christian
RelativesTaryn Power
(sister)
Tyrone Power Jr.
(half-brother)
Ariadna Welter
(maternal aunt)
Tyrone Power Sr.
(grandfather)
Tyrone Power
(great-great-grandfather)
Websitewww.rominapower.guru

Biography

Born in Los Angeles, Romina Power is the elder daughter of American screen idol Tyrone Power and his second wife, Mexican actress Linda Christian. After her parents divorced in 1956, she and her younger sister Taryn lived with their mother in various places, mainly in Mexico and Italy where she and her sister spent much of their childhood, although Romina attended college in England.[1]

Her interest in music was evoked in her childhood by American musicals from the 1950s, Mexican Mariachi bands and Italian music from the 1960s. In her early teens, Power discovered The Beatles and Bob Dylan, which inspired her to compose music. After receiving a guitar as a birthday gift, she learned chords and wrote her first songs.

She appeared in several mainly Italian-language films from the age of 14, including the 1969 adaptation of the Marquis de Sade's novel Justine, directed by Jesus Franco.

She met her singer and actor husband Al Bano while acting in films in the 1960s. They married in 1970. In 1975 they formed a singing duo, which became well known in Italy, Germany, Austria, Spain, France, Poland, Greece, Latin America, Eastern Europe and the USSR, releasing multiple albums in different languages and achieving 7th place in both the 1976 and 1985 Eurovision Song Contest for Italy. Their biggest hits included "Felicità", "Sharazan", "Tu soltanto tu", "Ci sarà", "Sempre sempre", and "Libertà". The couple divorced in 1999. They have four children:

  • Ylenia Maria Sole (born November 29, 1970), who went missing in New Orleans, Louisiana in January 1994
  • Yari (born April 21, 1973), their only son[2]
  • Cristèl Chiara (born December 25, 1985), who appeared in Italian reality TV show La Fattoria 2 (The Farm)
  • Romina Jolanda (born June 1, 1987), who appeared in the 2005 edition of Italian reality TV show Isola dei Famosi (a version of Survivor) with her father

In 2005 Power was a judge in the Italian TV show Ballando con le Stelle (Dancing with the Stars). Between 2006 and 2007 she organized exhibitions of her paintings, mainly in Milan. At the same time she dedicated herself to directing her film Upaya (2006).

In spring 2007 Power bought a house in Sedona, Arizona and decided to leave Italy forever and move to the United States. The clamorous interview in which she revealed her plans was published in an Italian magazine Diva e donna. According to Romina, she was perceived by the Italian public merely as a performer of Il ballo del qua-qua (a song for children, from her and Al Bano's album Felicità, 1982), and for her it was difficult to establish herself in Italy as a painter and writer. Furthermore, she was disturbed by the intrusive attention of the local press, that published multiple articles with speculations about her private life and the disappearance of her daughter Ylenia.[3][4]

Shortly after her relocation, in 2008, her mother Linda Christian was diagnosed with colon cancer, so she went to live in her mother's house in Palm Springs where she remained for three years, until her mother's death on July 22, 2011. In a November 2009 interview she gave to Italian TV she stated she had considered, at least for some time, a possible return to Italy. At present Romina Power is permanently living and working in the United States where she resides full-time.[5]

In the fall of 2012 her album Da lontano was released, containing songs written in 1999. In the summer of 2013 Al Bano and Romina Power reunited, reportedly only on a professional basis and for one final time, for a concert performance in Moscow.[6][7] In 2015 Al Bano and Romina Power reunited again for a guest appearance in the Sanremo Festival.

Power is a polyglot who speaks five languages: English, Italian, Spanish, French and Dutch.[8]

Filmography

Al Bano and Romina Power in Greece in 1975

Discography

Solo

  • 12 canzoni e una poesia (1969)
  • Ascolta, ti racconto di un amore (1974)
  • Con un paio di Blue-Jeans (1974)
  • Da lontano (2012)

With Al Bano

  • Atto I (1975)
  • 1978 (1978)
  • Aria pura (1979)
  • Sharazan (1981) (Spanish)
  • Felicità (1982)
  • Felicidad (1982) (Spanish)
  • Che angelo sei (1982)
  • Que ángel será (1983) (Spanish)
  • The Golden Orpheus Festival 1984 (1984)
  • Effetto amore (1984)
  • Sempre sempre (1986)
  • Siempre siempre (1986) (Spanish)
  • Libertà! (1987)
  • Libertad (1987) (Spanish)
  • Fragile (1988)
  • Fragile (1988) (Spanish)
  • Fotografia di un momento (1990)
  • Fotografía de un momento (1990) (Spanish)
  • Weihnachten bei uns zu Hause (1990) (also known as Corriere di Natale)
  • Navidad ha llegado (1991) (Spanish)
  • Vincerai (1991)
  • Vencerás (1991) (Spanish)
  • Notte e giorno (1993)
  • El tiempo de amarse (1993) (Spanish)
  • Emozionale (1995)
  • Amor sagrado (1995) (Spanish)
  • Ancora... Zugabe (1996)
  • The Very Best – Live aus Verona (2015)

Bibliography

  • Al Bano & Romina Power: Autoritratto all A dalla R (Rizzoli 1989)
  • Cercando mio padre, (Gremese 1998)
  • Ho sognato don Chisciotte, (Bompiani 2000)
  • Kalifornia (It's Here Now), (Arcana 2004)
  • Ti prendo per mano, (Mondadori 2015)
  • Karma Express (Mondadori 2017 )
gollark: 10679 of 1959194959594, of course.
gollark: When it's any higher than that, I'd say.
gollark: 100M¢.
gollark: Because of quirks in it it actually is profitable though. I thought it wasn't but there's some weirdness.
gollark: I mean, it's very weird and not too similar to real stock markets.

References

  1. Biography of Romina Power at her official web site.
  2. "Yari.tv". Yari.tv. Retrieved October 14, 2013.
  3. Spettacoli.tiscali.it Archived September 11, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Romina Power: "Addio lascio l'Italia"
  4. Tgcom.ùrfozdry/oy, La Power: "Italia addio per sempre"
  5. "Romina Power- Interview". YouTube. November 10, 2009. Retrieved October 14, 2013.
  6. Bild.de: Al Bano and Romina Power: Reunion after 14 Years (German). Retrieved May 12, 2013.
  7. Express.de: Comeback: Al Bano and Romina Power Singing Together Once More (German). Retrieved May 12, 2013.
  8. Esctoday.com | We'll live it all again
  9. "Yari.tv". Yari.tv. Retrieved October 14, 2013.


Preceded by
Wess & Dori Ghezzi
Italy in the Eurovision Song Contest
1976
(with Al Bano)
Succeeded by
Mia Martini
Preceded by
Alice & Franco Battiato
Italy in the Eurovision Song Contest
1985
(with Al Bano)
Succeeded by
Umberto Tozzi & Raf
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.