Antonio Monda


Antonio Monda is an Italian writer, film director, essayist, and professor at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts. He is a promoter of the arts, in particular film and literature.

Family and early life

Monda was born in Velletri into a family of liberal Catholic politicians, and currently remains a practicing Catholic himself. His father, who died of a heart attack when Monda was 15, was mayor of Cisterna di Latina, a city south to Rome, and helped finance films, including some by the Taviani brothers, who employed the young Monda in 1981. His brother Andrea, is also a writer, and has published several books on Tolkien, C. S. Lewis and Chesterton. His daughter, Marilù, published the fantasy saga "La profezia del lupo".
Monda earned a law degree at the University of Rome La Sapienza. In 1994, he moved to New York City where, in exchange for an apartment on the Upper East Side, he worked as a superintendent, and began writing for La Repubblica as well as teaching at NYU. Susan Sontag, whom he interviewed, wrote a letter of support to help him gain tenure. From 1999 on, he also worked for various Italian government cultural institutions.
In an interview with The New York Times, Monda stated "I was the worst super in the world".

Books

Antonio Monda started as an essayist and film critic. His first book on American cinema, La Magnifica Illusione, won the Efebo d'Oro as the best film book of 2003. His book Do You Believe? was translated into several languages. His debut in fiction was Assoluzione, which was originally published in Italy in 2008. With L'America non esiste, winner of Cortina D'Ampezzo Prize, he started a ten-novel project, with recurring characters, on New York in the twentieth century. The second volume was La casa sulla roccia, followed by Ota Benga, L'indegno, L'evidenza delle cose non viste, Io sono il fuoco and Nel territorio del Diavolo. Among his other books are the collection of short stories and photos Nella città nuda, the anthology The Hidden God, Lontano dai Sogni, a long interview with Ennio Morricone, and Il Paradiso dei lettori innamorati, a collection of interviews with great writers about their favourite films.
On the occasion of the American publication of Unworthy several novelists enthusiastically praised the book: Daniel Mandelsohn, Cathleen Schine, Mary Karr, Colum McCann and Philip Roth who wrote “With storytelling finesse, Monda has written a compact and forceful book that might be a morbid erotic tale out of Boccaccio, exposing the tormented lust of the clergy.”

Films

Monda has directed documentaries, commercials, and a feature film, Dicembre, presented at the Venice Film Festival, and the winner of such prizes as the Carro d'Oro, Premio Cinema Giovane, Icaro d'Oro, and Premio Navicella. In 2012 he co-produced Enzo Avitabile Music Life directed by Jonathan Demme.

Criticism and journalism

He was a film critic for both the New York Review of Books and La Rivista dei Libri. After eight years with the daily newspaper Il Mattino, he became the US cultural correspondent for La Repubblica. At the beginning of 2019 he moved to La Stampa. He has a video column on RaiNews 24 called Central Park West. His essays have appeared on the Paris Review and he collaborates regularly also with Vanity Fair, Uomo Vogue and the Italian TV channel La7.

Interviews and cultural life

Monda's interviews for La Repubblica have gained a status all of their own; he is known for asking deeply profound questions in a very direct manner, such as "Comment on Dostoyevsky's assertion that 'If God doesn't exist, everything is permitted'."


The New York Times wrote, "Mr. Monda connected with New York viscerally, though his particular affinity was for the city's Jewish-American experience. It might seem curious, since Mr. Monda is a practicing Catholic, educated by Jesuits. Today he still seems surprised by the attraction. "All of a sudden I discovered everything I like – music-wise, novel-wise – is either written, composed, or directed by a Jew", he said. He immersed himself in the writing of Singer, Saul Bellow, Norman Mailer and Mr. Roth, as well as in Mr. Allen's films, in Arthur Miller's plays and in George Gershwin and Bob Dylan. Next, he had an idea, to make a documentary for Italian audiences on Jewish-American authors. He interviewed as many of them as he could and in each case began with a blunt question: “Why do I like you?”


This style caught the attention of director Wes Anderson, who cast Monda as himself in the film The Life Aquatic and included a parody—a DVD extra called "Mondo Monda" in which Monda asks such questions of Anderson and his associate, co-screenwriter Noah Baumbach, to befuddled reactions. Monda often manages to use his interview connections for book topics, classroom speaker series, or social gatherings.
Amongst those he has interviewed are: Saul Bellow, Jonathan Franzen, Nathan Englander, Toni Morrison, Philip Roth, Martin Amis, Zadie Smith, Don DeLillo, EL Doctorow, Annie Proulx and Elie Wiesel appear in his books Do You Believe? and Il Paradiso dei lettori innamorati.

Festivals

A promoter of Italian-American cultural relations, he is a champion of anglophone writers in Italy and, according to The New York Times, a "one-man Italian cultural institute".
Monda is also famous for his writers' and artists' salons in his Upper West Side, Manhattan apartment, where Meryl Streep, Al Pacino, Don DeLillo, Bernardo Bertolucci, Derek Walcott, Paul Auster, Martin Scorsese, Philip Roth, Jonathan Lethem and Arthur Miller have mingled.

The New York Times wrote "Mr. Monda reigns as the host of the city's liveliest, some say only remaining, cultural salon". However, the word "salon" makes him wince. He prefers "laboratory of ideas." "Mr. Monda's history, in all its facets, has molded him into more than a genial host and more than a champion of cultural networking. Having abandoned much of his own past, he has embraced the task of preserving Manhattan's cultural memory of itself through what he calls "my two great passions, American literature and films. Mr. Monda, the Italian expatriate, has become a custodian of New York glories".



In 2006, he founded with Davide Azzolini Le Conversazioni, a global literary festival that takes place in Capri, New York and Rome. David Foster Wallace made his last public appearance there in July 2006.
He is the founder and co-host, with Mario Sesti, of Viaggio nel Cinema Americano a series of public interviews at the Rome Auditorium with major film personalities such as Tim Burton, Spike Lee, Joel and Ethan Coen, David Lynch, Francis Ford Coppola, Sean Connery, Jane Fonda, Susan Sarandon and Sydney Pollack. Terrence Malick made his first and only public appearance here in October 2007.
He has curated shows for the Guggenheim Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, Lincoln Center, the American Museum of the Moving Image, and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
He is also the co-founder and the Artistic Director of "Open Roads: New Italian Cinema".
In February 2015 he was appointed Artistic Director of the Rome Film Festival.

Awards, Nominations and Decorations