The End of Miss Muretto Beauty Pageant

| Mon, 07/28/2014 - 07:05

'Meno Miss. Più Muretto!' (Literally: 'Less Miss. More Muretto!) this is the latest tweet by the organizers of Miss Muretto beauty pageant in Alassio, Liguria, to explain why they decided to put an end to the pageant after 60 years. 

 
To understand more about the history of both the 'muretto' and its related beauty contest, we need to travel back to the hot summer of 1948, when an American man sporting a bowtie haphazardly strung around his neck walked into Caffè Roma in Alassio. This man was the famous writer Ernest Hemingway. One evening, as he sipped his favorite brand of whiskey, the cafè's owner, Mario Berrino, proudly showed him the album of autographs of famous people who had come into his bar. 
 
In the early 1950's, Alassio had become a haven for international jet setters and the Berrino family’s Caffè Roma had turned into a meeting point for the rich and famous while holidaying on the Ligurian Riviera. The guestbook quickly filled up with autographs and it was a shame to keep them hidden away, Berrino thought. When Hemingway signed the book that night, Berrino told him about his new idea. He wanted to put the signatures onto ceramic tiles and decorate the wall partition with them: “I don’t know, Mario,” Hemingway replied, “that might look like a collection of epitaphs!” Then he said:  “Unless...each one is different from the other.” That is how Ernest Hemingway and Berrino came up with the idea of the Wall, the famous Muretto d’Alassio. 
 
At dawn, and with no official permit to actually do it, Mario with the help of some friends secretly put up the first few tiles signed by Hemingway,  singing quartet Quartetto Cetra and the guitarist-composer, Cosimo di Ceglie. The next day there were no complaints and more tiles were added. The mayor, Mr Torre, and everybody else in the city, understood how great that idea was and just turned a blind eye. Today around 800 tiles can be found on Alassio 'Muretto' (literally: small wall).  
But they thought that something was still missing. An event was needed to provide some energy to shake up Alassio's summer season, so they came up with the idea of a special beauty pageant. The name Muretto was soon linked to one of the most famous beauty pageants in Italy with the winning girl receiving the title of Miss Muretto. The first edition was organized by Lucio Flauto in 1953, during the time of the economic boom. This went on to become a fixture of the Ligurian Riviera in August and one of the most prestigious Italian beauty contests for aspiring models. Over the years, it launched the career of countless Italian presenters and showgirls such as Simona Ventura, Maria Teresa Ruta and Melissa Satta.

The news about the end of this annual event in Liguria was received with mixed reactions, Simona Ventura recently tweeted:  “So sad for the closing of missmuretto. A beautiful moment of my life”!  

According to Francesco Di Biase, one of Mario Berrino's grandchildren, they decided that after 60 years it was finally time to bring the attention back to Il Muretto itself and its interesting history, therefore putting an end to this iconic beauty pageant.

This decision follows months of controversies around Italy's number one beauty contest Miss Italia which is judged by many as a 'thing of the past.' 

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