Ferrante is the co-screenwriter of the joint HBO and Italian RAI
television eight episode series of "My Brilliant Friend," about
the volatile friendship between two girls from Naples in the
1950s.
"My Brilliant Friend" is the first of the four so-called
Neapolitan novels that have become best-sellers in the United
States and much of Europe, fueling intense speculation about the
writer, who uses Ferrante as a pseudonym.
Director Saverio Costanzo said he and the producers had been
emailing Ferrante through her publishers for about two and a
half years on the TV project.
Costanzo said that in a sense it was like "working with a
ghost," although he added that he was not concerned about
knowing Ferrante's true identity.
"I don’t know who she is... I am not curious to know, actually,"
Costanzo said.
Co-executive producer Lorenzo Mieli agreed, calling Ferrante's
identity "one of the most well-kept secrets in Italy history."
"At the end of the day, nobody cares, because this protection of
identity is very important to her," Mieli added.
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The producers said they auditioned about 1,000 young actresses to
play the parts of bookish Elena Greco and her enigmatic friend Lila
at various ages, choosing four. The task was exacerbated by the need
to have young actresses who can speak genuine Neapolitian dialect.
The TV show will be dubbed or subtitled, not just for
English-speaking and international audiences but also for Italians.
"This show is going to be subtitled in Italy, too, because we don’t
understand the Neapolitan dialect," Mieli said. "We come from Rome,
so we don’t understand at least 70 percent of the dialogue."
"My Brilliant Friend" will make its debut on HBO and RAI later this
year, and the producers said they also plan to adapt the other three
novels about the lifelong friendship between Elena and Lila.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Michael Perry)
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