Prix Italia
The Prix Italia is an international television, radio-broadcasting and web award. It was established in 1948 by RAI – Radiotelevisione Italiana (in 1948, RAI had the denomination RAI – Radio Audizioni Italiane) in Capri and is honoured with the High Patronage of the President of the Italian Republic.[1] More than one hundred public and private radio and television organisations representing 57 countries from the five continents form and outline the community of the Prix Italia which is in continuous evolution. Unique in the world, among International festivals and prizes, is the organisational and decision-making body of the Prix. The delegates of broadcasting members decide and resolve the editorial outline and elect the President.
RAI is in charge and responsible for the organisation of the event, and the General Secretariat has its headquarters in Rome. Prix Italia is held in an Italian city of art and culture annually every September/October for a week, in collaboration with local authorities. The event is an authentic and unique moment of gathering and professional debate about the quality of the programmes in competition. It is the right venue where one can collaborate, define agreements and express points of view with fellow colleagues in the media sector.
The public participates in concerts, films, shows, previews, round tables, "all night out", master classes, radio and web events. Thanks to the "on demand" workstations, everyone can listen to and watch all the best worldwide programmes in competition.
The drive for quality and responsibility of the Prix Italia resulted in Signis (former Unda) (The International Catholic Organisation for Radio and Television) having its own jury for the first time in 1997 Prix Italia's edition held in Ravenna. The three-member jury consisted of Victor Sunderaj, Secretary General of Unda, John McDonald, producer for Scottish Television, and Rita Lefevere, producer for Belgian Radio and Television (BRTN). The goal of this jury was the rewarding of a television programme that supported human dignity. The first award of Unda was given to the producers of Child Molesters: On the Trail of Sex Offenders. "The producers achieved more than the mere promotion of human dignity: they fought for it", explained the Unda jury in its motivation. Since 2002, the Unda jury has been changed into the SIGNIS jury.
History
The Prix Italia was established in Capri in 1948.[2] Originally dedicated only to radio works, starting from 1957 it also included television works, and from 1998, the competition has also awarded multimedia projects created on web digital platforms. Over the years it has been hosted in many of the most famous Italian cities of art.[3]
The idea of an international radio award was proposed in 1948 by the director general of Rai, Salvino Sernesi, the director of programmes Giulio Razzi and the director of the drama and revue sector, the playwright Sergio Pugliese. On 13 September of the same year in Capri, the delegations of fourteen radio organisations representing Austria, the Vatican State, Egypt, France, Great Britain, Italy, the Principality of Monaco, The Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Sweden, Switzerland, Czechoslovakia and Trieste (which was then a free territory). On that same occasion, the regulations were drawn up and the international prize was officially established.[4]
Festival Editions
2024 - Torino (1 - 4 October) "Loud and Clear" |
2023 - Bari (1 - 6 October) "Engage Me" |
2022 - Bari (3 - 8 October) "Sustainable Me" |
2021 - Milan - "Rebuilding Culture and Entertainment. Media’s Role for a New Start[5]" |
2020 - Rome - “Public Service and the Virtual Newsroom: Back to the Future?” |
2019 - Rome - "Celebrating Cultural Diversity in a Global Media World" |
2018 - Capri - "The Memory of the Future" |
2017 - Milan - “Back to Facts” |
2016 - Lampedusa - "Historytelling, now"[6] |
2015 - Turin - “The Power of Storytelling” |
2014 - Turin - “The Innovation Laboratory[7]” |
2013 - Turin - “The Tree of Ideas“ |
2012 - Turin - “The World in the Mirror” |
2011 - Turin |
2010 - Turin |
2009 - Turin |
2008 - Cagliari |
2007 - Verona |
2006 - Venice |
2005 - Milan |
2004 - Catania - Taormina |
2003 - Catania - Siracusa |
2002 - Palermo - Agrigento |
2001 - Bologna - Reggio Emilia |
2000 - Bologna - Rimini |
1999 - Florence - Siena |
1998 - Assisi |
1997 - Ravenna |
1996 - Naples |
1995 - Bologna |
1994 - Turin |
1993 - Rome |
1992 - Parma |
1991 - Urbino - Pesaro |
1990 - Palermo |
1989 - Perugia |
1988 - Capri |
1987 - Vicenza |
1986 - Lucca |
1985 - Cagliari |
1984 - Trieste |
1983 - Capri |
1982 - Venice |
1981 - Siena |
1980 - Riva del Garda |
1979 - Lecce |
1978 - Milan |
1977 - Venice |
1976 - Bologna |
1975 - Florence |
1974 - Florence |
1973 - Venice |
1972 - Torin |
1971 - Venice |
1970 - Florence |
1969 - Mantua |
1968 - Rome |
1967 - Ravenna |
1966 - Palermo |
1965 - Florence |
1964 - Genoa |
1963 - Naples |
1962 - Verona |
1961 - Pisa |
1960 - Trieste |
1959 - Sorrento |
1958 - Venice |
1957 - Taormina |
1956 - Rimini |
1955 - Perugia |
1954 - Florence |
1953 - Palermo |
1952 - Milan |
1951 - Naples |
1950 - Turin |
1949 - Venice |
1948 - Capri |
List of laureates
- 1955: Claude Aveline
- 1956: Tony Schwartz
- 1959: George Selwyn English
- 1965: Raymond Raikes
- 1966: Nigel Butterley
- 1967: Krzysztof Penderecki
- 1970: Bent Lorentzen
- 1978: Roland Joffé
- 1980: Marian Finucane
- 1981: Tony Palmer
- 1982: Luciano Berio
- 1984: Peter Brook[8]
- 1989 Leslie Megahey
- 1995: Jean-Louis Agobet (composer) – Special Prize
- 1999: Stephen Poliakoff
- 2001: Hannes Råstam
- 2002: Filip Šovagović[9]
- 2003: Colin Black
- 2005: Jonathan Mills
- 2009: Jovanka Trbojević
- 2010: Benjamin Dupé
- 2013: Paolo Pietropaolo
- 2016: Erik van Empel[10]
References
- ^ "73rd Prix Italia Catalogue" (PDF).
- ^ "Rai's Prix Italia Celebrates 70th Anniversary". 12 April 2018.
- ^ "Hosting Cities".
- ^ Belloni Sonzogni, Amelia (2018). Cultura e qualità di rete. Storia del Prix Italia 1948 - 2008. ISBN 978-88-6178-214-3.
- ^ "73rd Prix Italia" (PDF).
- ^ "Prix Italia a Lampedusa". 29 September 2016.
- ^ "Il Prix Italia a Torino".
- ^ "Music – Music News, New Songs, Videos, Music Shows and Playlists from MTV". www.mtv.com. Retrieved 23 April 2018.[dead link ]
- ^ Radio Drama Awards - Prix Italia (2002 - Filip Šovagović, in Croatian)
- ^ "Prix Italia voor 'Paolo Ventura, de verdwijnende man". www.villamedia.nl. Archived from the original on 23 April 2018. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
Bibliography
- Amelia Belloni Sonzogni, Cultura e qualità di rete. Storia del Prix Italia 1948 - 2008, UNI Service, 2008, ISBN 978-88-6178-214-3.