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The Many Meanings of Mina: Popular Music Stardom in Post-war Italy by Rachel Haworth, Bristol, Intellect Press, 2022, xix + 240 pp., £80.00 (hardback), ISBN 978-1-789-38560-1

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The Many Meanings of Mina: Popular Music Stardom in Post-war Italy by Rachel Haworth, Bristol, Intellect Press, 2022, xix + 240 pp., £80.00 (hardback), ISBN 978-1-789-38560-1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2023

Catherine O'Rawe*
Affiliation:
University of Bristol
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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Association for the Study of Modern Italy

At the 2022 Sanremo Festival, there were at least two notable Mina-related events: the third night was opened by the host Amadeus paying tribute to Italian president Sergio Mattarella, sworn in for his second term that day. Amadeus recalled that Mattarella had attended the singer's legendary last concert in 1978. The tribute ended with the orchestra striking up Mina's 1962 hit, ‘Grande, grande, grande’. This nod to the deep roots of Mina in Italian postwar history, through the fandom of the country's now-octogenarian president, was supplemented the next night when, among the artists performing covers, emerged the eventual winners Mahmood and Blanco. The young pair (Blanco was only 18) chose to perform Gino Paoli's ‘Il cielo in una stanza’, a huge hit for Mina in 1960. The emotional cover showed the enduring relevance of Mina, summed up by the spectacle of Gen Z icon Mahmood wearing a Fendi skirt and knee socks, singing one of the great songs of the Italian postwar songbook, at the nation's biggest national-popular event.

Rachel Haworth's monograph is the first substantial analysis of Mina's career, and builds on her longstanding work on the singer. It considers the multiple facets of Mina's star persona and the mechanisms of its construction over time, from her emergence in the late 1950s to the present. As such it addresses Christine Gledhill's classic 1991 division of the star's representation into ‘persona’, or the modes of projection of an authentic self, and ‘image’, or the construction of a star identity out of critical and fan discourse. As Haworth cogently argues, the Mina persona/image is the product of a series of conjunctures: the various mediums that made her famous (music recording, TV, film); discourses (press, gossip, scandal and fan discussions); and the conjuncture of history itself. Mina, to follow Richard Dyer's foundational articulation of the cultural power of the star, negotiates, and sometimes resolves, the ideological contradictions of her times. Mina's stardom both reflected and anticipated social and cultural changes, showing what was emerging in culture, but also modelling new types of youth and femininity.

The book is divided into chapters which, while broadly chronological, focus on a different key medium that shaped Mina's star persona, thus foregrounding the changing technologies of representation and media platforms that have constructed her as a transmedial star, in Haworth's reading. The first chapter outlines the context in which Mina emerged as a pop star in the late 1950s; as well as the familiar narrative of the economic boom which drove new kinds of consumerism and a nascent youth culture, it emphasises the ‘musicalisation’ of postwar Italy and how new technologies like the jukebox, alongside radio and cinema, formed a sonic backdrop and site where cultural change was felt and transmitted. In Haworth's meticulous account, Mina's rise to fame at this time is no accident, but the product of this historical, cultural and technological conjuncture.

Chapter Two addresses Mina's early pop career through a discussion of her engagement with two different musical styles of the late 1950s – urlo and canzone all'italiana. It shows how the threat of Mina as an urlatrice – a genre borrowing from US rock n’ roll and the source of moral panic in Italy – was ultimately defused by her presentation as a girl-next-door and by her participation in Sanremo. Chapter Three extends this analysis by focusing on the musicarelli films she made between 1959 and 1963. Analysis of her performances in these ten films addressed to a new youth audience, and how they are constructed visually and sonically, shows both how she often featured as herself in order to authenticate the films’ diegetic world, and how she was used as a character to blur the lines between character and star. Haworth suggests that these appearances align with the function of Mina's star persona in the 1960s, to reconcile tradition and modernity, innovation and familiarity.

Chapter Four examines the press scandal of 1963 when Mina became pregnant out of wedlock to her still-married boyfriend Corrado Pani. While the scandal was an element out of her control and diffused her image as transgressive, to the extent that RAI banned her, Haworth shows how ultimately Mina wrested back this out-of-control star image: she was presented as redeemed via motherhood, a narrative she helped shape by releasing carefully selected photographs. To scandal was added tragedy when her brother died, but Haworth demonstrates how this private tragedy also showed off the new kind of Italian family she had built. Both events brought to the fore both her vulnerability and her resilience, arguably the keys to her image.

Chapters Five and Six focus on her television appearances in the 1960s and 1970s: television was a powerful ideological and pedagogical tool in shaping her star status and Mina was nationally diffused as an avatar of both new and traditional values. While Haworth always pays close attention to the framing techniques and costumes as ways of positioning Mina for the audience, it is particularly interesting to read about her use of famous male co-stars on Studio Uno as a way of rehabilitating her image post-scandal; about her promotion of Italian brands such as Barilla pasta on Carosello; and about her own status as part of Italian cultural heritage as she celebrated RAI's past on Milleluci in 1974.

The final two chapters look at her iconicity in different ways: Chapter Seven discusses her album covers through the years until now, and concludes that since her retirement in 1978, her shape-shifting yet recognisable image, carefully controlled by Mina and her team, has become a site onto which fans project memories and desires. Her physical absence allows for fan involvement: the section of the final chapter on the Mina fan group on Facebook argues that a collective, prosthetic memory of the star is constantly being constructed through the images and memories shared on social media, alongside the tributes by RAI in 2020 which drew on the institutional weight of the RAI televisual archives. As Haworth argues, Mina is ‘everywhere yet nowhere’. Her curated image still has the emotional power of a deeply felt memory, even for younger generations, sometimes felt as a nostalgia for former media forms like early television.

In the conclusion Haworth briefly addresses another aspect of Mina: that of camp, reading her through the Sontagian lens of excess, artifice and theatricality. Mention of drag performances as Mina might allow us to open up an aspect that Haworth has not been able to analyse, which is that of Mina as gay icon. More audience research is needed here, but the camp aspects of Mina and her diva vulnerability have made her perfect for appropriation by the queer star Mahmood, or by Italian-American drag queen Aquaria, who was photographed as Mina for Vogue Italia in 2018. Ultimately Haworth's excellent book points forward to many more meanings of Mina, yet to be explored.