Alberto Manzi

Alberto Manzi
Manzi in the 1960s
Mayor of Pitigliano
In office
23 April 1995 – 29 October 1997
Personal details
Born(1924-11-03)3 November 1924
Died4 December 1997(1997-12-04) (aged 73)
PartyDemocratic Party of the Left
Occupation
Known forNon è mai troppo tardi

Alberto Manzi (Italian pronunciation: [alˈbɛrto ˈmandzi]; 3 November 1924 – 4 December 1997) was an Italian mayor, school teacher, writer and television host, best known for his popular television show Non è mai troppo tardi (Italian for It's never too late), an educational TV program broadcast in Italy between 1959 and 1968.

Biography

Manzi was born 3 November 1924 in Rome.

He attended navy studies before ending his primary training high school degree and followed a peculiar path of studies, achieving three academic degrees: in biology, pedagogy and philosophy.

He worked as porter and an educator in a teenage prison in Rome before a full-time job as a primary school teacher.[1]

He was chosen to host the TV programme Non è mai troppo tardi, which made him a celebrity, conceived as an auxiliary help in the social struggle against illiteracy; the show was broadcasting real-life primary school classroom lessons, with revolutionary concepts in didactic methods for those times. It started broadcasting in 1960.[2]

He also published several novels the most famous of which is Orzowei (1955), from which a serial was adapted for the Tv dei ragazzi (a now-defunct Italian "Children TV").

From 23 April 1995 to 29 October 1997 he was mayor of Pitigliano, in the province of Grosseto, Tuscany.

He died 4 December 1997 in Pitigliano.

Legacy

An open-air archeology museum in Pitigliano is named in his honor.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ Renzi, Barbara Gabriella (2009). Alberto Manzi, in Friends and Foes Volume II: Friendship and Conflict from Social and Political Perspectives. Cambridge Scholars. pp. 101–109. ISBN 9781443819930. Retrieved 1 November 2025.
  2. ^ The Penguin Book of Italian Short Stories. 2019. ISBN 9780141985626. Retrieved 1 November 2025.
  3. ^ Bonetto, Cristian (2018). Lonely Planet Italy. Lonely Planet. ISBN 9781787012011. Retrieved 1 November 2025.