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Valentina Zilocchi, 19, of Piacenza in northern Italy, attended the ceremony with her boyfriend. Like the other winners, she decided to write to Juliet after seeing the film, to see what would happen. "I write to you as a friend," Zilocchi said in her letter, "to tell you that true happy love, big like yours, really exists." Winners received a sculpture of an old-fashioned ink well, with a colored quill stuck inside, and the weekend trip to Verona to receive the prize. Verona is increasingly capitalizing on its status as the home to Juliet, the tragic heroine of Shakespeare fame who took her own life after she discovers Romeo dead, having killed himself in grief believing she had died. The city celebrates its status as "the city of love," with events centered around Valentine's Day. Tourists on Sunday packed the small courtyard beneath Juliet's balcony, lining up for tours of a house that historically belongs to the period in which Shakespeare set "Romeo and Juliet" and may have belonged to the real-life Capulet family. Besides snapping photos of the balcony, they pose alongside a bronze statue of Juliet, rubbing the right breast in what has become a gesture of good luck.
[Associated
Press;
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