22 February. Announcement of the sentence in the Catanzaro trial, for the
Piazza Fontana bombing. The hearings have been, for the first time, integrally shoot by the
RAI cameras. From 25 September, a selection in five episodes of the proceedings is aired, showing to the public the embarrassed and reticent depositions of politicians, such as
Giulio Andreotti and
Mariano Rumor.[2]
26 April. The documentary Trial for rape, realized by a feminist collective, shocks the public opinion, showing the victim of a ravishment humiliated and criminalized by the defense attorneys.[3]
3 December: the impersonator
Alighiero Noschese, long time a star of Italian television, shots himself in the chapel of the Roman clinic where he was hospitalized; he suffered for years from depression, because the divorce and some professional fails.[4]
15 December. The adolescent actress
Fabiana Udenio announces the beginning of
RETE 3 broadcasting. This is the schedule of the first day.
Rete 3 is, in the intents, focused on the local realities, with programs and news realized by the RAI regional offices; however, for years it will be a “ghost channel”, lacking of means and ignored by the public.[5]
Private channels
In 1979, the Italian private televisions have a breakthrough: the most active buy massively films and American telefilms, hire RAI stars as
Mike Bongiorno and
Pippo Baudo and begin to broadcast in National scope (the rule forcing them to operate only locally is bypassed, airing on several local stations the same show, prerecorded on videotape). Particularly dynamic is the
Silvio Berlusconi’s
Telemilano 58.
New televisions (with the date of the first airing)
4 March: TV Port, syndication of 90 local channels, specialized in American film and telefilm.[6]
19 June: Antenna Sicilia, owned by the newspaper editor Mario Cancio Sanfilippo, art director Pippo Baudo
July: Rete televisiva Italiana, owned by
Il Messaggero's editor Carlo Perrone.[7]
2 July : Compagnia televisioni Associate; syndication of 20 local channels.[8]
30 January: Silvio Berlusconi founds Rete Italia, society for the marketing of TV shows. The newborn society gets right away a big deal, buoying 325 movies from
Titanus for 2 billion liras.
13 September : Birth of Publitalia, the Berlusconi's advertising media agency.
December. Telemilano 58, till then visible only in Milan, extends its signal to the whole Lombardy.[7]
5 December. Mike Bongiorno debuts on Silvio Berlusconi's Telemilano 58 with the game show The dreams in the weaver; he's the first TV star who leaves RAI to work full-time for a private network. The collaboration between Bongiorno and the public company, lasted 27 years, has got into crisis few months before with an unsuccessful remake of Lascia o raddoppia?
Debuts
RAI
3,2,1... contatto – show for children, inspired by the homonymous
PBS program; 2 season. It sees the debut of
Paolo Bonolis.
Fantastico (Fantastic) – show of the Saturday evening, aired in autumn and bound to the Lotteria Italia. In the Eighties, as Canzonissima in the Sixties, is the most viewed RAI show and causes also political controversies. The first edition, directed by
Enzo Trapani and hosted by
Beppe Grillo,
Loretta Goggi and
Heather Parisi, gets an audience of 23, 600 million viewers.[10]
Storia di un italiano (History of an Italian) – history of the modern Italy through an anthology of the
Alberto Sordi’s movies – 4 seasons.
TG3 settimanale (Weekly TG3) - magazine
Private channels
Ciao ciao (Hello hello) –cartoon show; started on the Mondadori's Telenord, it becomes later one of the most popular show for children of the
Fininvest network, lasted for 32 seasons.
I sogni nel cassetto (Dreams in the drawer) – game show, hosted by
Mike Bongiorno (
Telemilano 58) – 2 seasons.
Rocco Scotellaro – by
Maurizio Scaparro, with
Bruno Cirino; the true story of Rocco Scotellaro, poet, socialist militant and major of his village.[11]
Profumo di classe (Classy perfume) - by
Giorgio Capitani, with
Ombretta Colli and
Aldo Maccione; musical inspired by Pygmalion, but with inverted gender roles (here, it's a female teacher to educate a tramp).
Cinema! – by
Pupi Avati, with
Lino Capolicchio, in 5 episodes; follow-up of Jazz Band, it fictionalizes the adventurous Avati's debut as movie director.[13]
Ma che cos’è questo amore? (This love, what is it?) – by
Ugo Gregoretti, in 2 episodes, with
Stefano Satta Flores and
Roberto Benigni, from the
Achille Campanile’s humoristic novel; the slap of a woman to an intrusive suitor has the most unpredictable and absurd consequences.
Among the foreign productions, the hit of the year is the American Holocaust, with 20.2 million viewiers.[1]
Il delitto Notarbatolo (The
Notarbartolo affair) – by
Alberto Negrin, in 3 episodes, with
Ivo Garrani; reconstruction of the first clamorous
Mafia crime, happened 1n 1893.
La commediante veneziana (The venetian actress) – by
Savatore Nocita, in 5 episodes, from the Raffaello Calzini's novel; the life of the actress Teodora Ricci, lover of
Carlo Gozzi.
I vecchi e I giovani (The old and the young ones) – by
Marco Leto, with
Gabriele Ferzetti and
Alain Cuny, in 5 episodes; from the
Luigi Pirandello’s novel. In the Sicilia of the late Nineteenth century, the “old generation” (the
Risorgimento men, by now corrupted or disillusioned) face the “young people” (the socialists of the
Fasci Siciliani).[15]
Racconti di fantascienza (SF tales) – by
Alessandro Blasetti (in the last direction of a fifty years career), in 3 episodes, with
Arnoldo Foà as the teller.
I racconti fantastici di Edgar Allan Poe (
Edgar Allan Poe’s fantastic tales) – by
Daniele D’Anza, in 4 episodes, with
Philippe Leroy as
Roderick Usher. The classical horror stories of the American writer are transferred in the USA of the Twentieth Century.[17]
3 November:
Paolo Carlini, 57, actor, star of the early Italian television.
5 November:Amedeo Nazzari, 72, actor, star of the black-and white Italian cinema, in the Sixties active in television as player in fiction and TV-dramas.