A true tragedy told by Tina Cipollari, the vamp from Men and Women who was the show’s protagonist for many years
For many years, the Men and Women program has been enriched by the certainly not futile presence of Tina Cipollari. The columnist of Maria De Filippi’s dating show is always talked about for her volcanic and exaggerated character.
Tina Cipollari (Mediaset screen)
The curtains with his armchair colleague, the former dancer Gianni Sperti, are now historical, as well as the digs between Cipollari and his historical rival Gemma Galgani, protagonist of the Throne Over.
But Tina also hides a more intimate side of herself in this ironic and lively facade. An interiority scarred by the dramas of the past, which the woman wanted to tell for the first time in a very passionate interview with Chi.
Tina Cipollari tells her 360-degree story: the death of her mother and her childhood in poverty
Many implications revealed by Tina Cipollari in the aforementioned interview. First, the family drama that hit her during the Covid-19 pandemic. It is the death of his mother Gina, precisely because of the very dreaded and deadly virus.
“I always thought my mother was unhappy. She was a resigned woman, she said: “I have had nothing in life”. I lost my mother during Covid, I didn’t even see her and it was a tragedy within a tragedy. At that time I too had been bad for the Covid: mom died alone and I can’t forget that dull look”. Men and Women, commentators Gianni Sperti and Tina Cipollari (photo © Mediaset)
A tragic story that will certainly move fans of Tina Cipollari. A woman who today also appears as a stain, but who found it difficult to impose herself in life, given the difficulties of her family when she was young.
However, Tina does not regret anything about her childhood in Castel di Guido, in the Roman countryside, where she lived the hard life of the countryside: “Even when I tell the episode of washing wool to raise the mattresses for the winter, which was a very tiring operation, with scratched hands… Or when I say that on Sundays we went to the woods, very early, to make firewood. And then there was the olive harvest, the grape harvest… Even now I get up too early, at five o’clock and I feel the countryside in my heart, I miss it”.