Club Random with Bill Maher - Listen Now: Pack One Bag featuring Stanley Tucci
Episode Date: June 14, 2024We are dropping in your feed today to share a new series that we know you will enjoy. Pack One Bag is an epic true story of an Italian family, split apart by love, fascism and war. Through shocking d...iscoveries - and Stanley Tucci’s artistry - an enthralling personal history comes to life. When documentarian David Modigliani was a kid, his grandfather, Franco, won the Nobel Prize. But, David’s always been more fascinated by the love story that made it possible -- his grandparents' romance on the run from Fascist Italy. When he digs into their story, he uncovers a darker side to their fairytale escape: a brother left behind to face the Nazi occupation - and startling personal connections between his family and Benito Mussolini. In the Tribeca-winning podcast, PACK ONE BAG, he returns to Italy to investigate his family's past, carrying a pressing question: if Fascism takes over your country, do you stay, or do you try to flee? And what happens if you can’t? You’re about to hear a preview of the first episode of Pack One Bag. After you listen, head to https://lemonada.lnk.to/packonebagfd to hear more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Hey, I'm David Modigliani, popping in here to let you know about a new limited series
from Lemanada we think you're going to enjoy.
It's a show I made with Stanley Tucci called Pack One Bag, and the best way to tell you
about it is just to share the trailer with you right now.
When Benito Mussolini led a violent insurrection to take over government buildings across Italy,
he was on his way to becoming the dictator.
And eventually his fascist regime went after people like my family, who'd been living
there for centuries.
I mean, all of a sudden, we were not safe in our own country.
It was very clear to me it was time to leave.
But my only way out would be to leave my whole family behind.
I mean, do you stay or do you flee?
Stay or flee?
My name is David Modigliani, and that's the question
at the heart of my new limited series podcast, Pack One Bag.
The show centers on my grandfather, my Nonna Franco.
One day he'd win the Nobel Prize,
but back in 1938, he was just a 20 year old kid in Rome.
And when Mussolini passed racial laws against Jews like him,
he didn't know what to do.
But I was in love with this girl from Bologna.
Franco, I have a name, Serena, that's me.
And her parents had been moving money outside the country.
In case we had to flee.
But escaping with them would mean leaving his whole family
to face the nightmare that was coming.
It was the biggest decision of my life.
We each packed one bag and we left.
In Pack One Bag, I dig into my grandparents' romance on the run.
We made it onto the last boat out of Europe.
And the hidden side of their escape from fascism.
Some of these boxes I literally had not opened ever.
What I find takes me back to Italy to uncover the story of the family they left behind.
Ciao Enrico, hey!
Look at you, Ben, they're each other's guys.
This is how beautiful you are.
The woman from the neighborhood says to me,
they are looking for you.
You go out, go out, it's too dangerous.
Now I bring the whole story to life
with the help of Signore Stanley Tucci.
Of course it's crazy.
This is what war does.
Pac-One Bag drops on June 5th,
so follow Pac-One Bag today to catch every twist and turn.
It's signed directly Benito Mussolini.
It says vostro.
Yours.
This is a letter from Benito Mussolini.
If you're ready to check out the show, just search for Pack One Bag in your podcast app and dive right in.
Or, if you'd like to hear a little more, we're excited to share a clip from the beginning
of episode one right here in this feed.
After you listen, just search for Pack One Bag to hear the rest of the episode.
You can also find a link in the show notes
that will take you right there.
Here's the opening of Pack One Bag.
["Pack One Bag"]
Could I look at it?
I think so. I mean, I got to dig it out.
I think it's in the safe. I hope it's in the safe.
That's my dad, Sergio.
He's opening this safe in my parents' home.
Well, it got opened.
We're looking for something that belonged to my dad's father,
my nonno Franco.
This looks promising.
Yes, this definitely is his medallion.
It's heavy circular gold with the face of Alfred Nobel on it.
I was only five when my white-haired grandfather,
the nice guy with the accent who would get down on the rug
and play with me sometimes, won the Nobel Prize.
The 1985 prize for economics went to the hot favorite,
the Italian-born, naturalized American Franco Modigliani.
Franco was front-page news across the world.
Stacks of foreign papers featuring Nonno Franco's victory
came in faster than my grandmother could clip them out.
But Nonno was most tickled by the coverage from Italy.
I just got an Italian very popular newspaper
with the front page, the price of dynamite,
to the refugee from fascism.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.
The refugee from fascism, the papers called him.
They said he'd fled Italy.
One Italian put it this way.
He said, today Modigliani's our great pride,
but he's also our great shame
because of what we did here to turn him into an American.
Despite what his mother country put him through,
Nonno Franco held Italy close to him,
even at the Nobel Prize ceremony.
In the group photos with all the winners decked out
in matching white tie and tails,
he's the only one who's added some extra flair.
Across his chest, he's wearing the green sash of Italian knighthood.
At that pinnacle moment, he wanted the whole world
to know where he came from.
He wanted to tell a story.
And that story is what brings me to my parents' house
in Boston to open up this safe
and hold his medallion in my hands.
Yeah, just take a picture of it.
Okay.
To most folks, this prize is an emblem of academic success.
To me, it's really an emblem of survival.
I grew up hearing about how Nonno Franco was just a 20-year-old kid
when Benito Mussolini passed racial laws against Jews like him,
about how lucky he was to have fallen in love with this girl, Serena,
and about her family taking him along when they fled the country.
As a kid, I was fascinated by my grandparents' romance on the run,
all this turmoil they escaped just in the nick of time.
And as I became a documentary filmmaker,
I kept telling myself that I'd captured their story.
I told myself I'd spend a solid week together with them, recording in one place all the anecdotes
they'd shared over the years.
I thought, I have time, I'll get around to it.
But I didn't prioritize it.
And then my nonna died.
First Nonna Franco, then my nonna Serena.
I will never get those tapes of my grandparents
that I promised myself I'd make.
But when they died, my Noni left behind a parting gift for their grandchildren.
A trove of their love letters, full of their stories.
And when I read those letters, I can hear their voices so distinctly.
I always did these little impersonations of them for my sister and my cousins.
Serena, please don't treat me like a child.
Franco, this morning you drove away with your briefcase on the roof of the car.
They always sounded to me like those old couples in When Harry Met Sally,
the ones being interviewed about their love stories.
So sometimes I imagine the interview I would have done with my nunny if I'd acted sooner.
Okay.
In my mind, it sounds something like this.
Now I keep talking?
Okay, see, my name is Serena Calabi Modigliani, and yes, I'm agreeing to these interviews
and to showing you these letters your Nonna Franco and I wrote to each other while we were running from Mussolini
but David on the condition you promised me that you won't share these letters until I die.
But what about me?
Okay until both of us die then Franco and I.
Well hopefully me first.
Why you?
Because I couldn't bear life without you Serena.
And so you want me to bear it without you instead always to bear everything for both of us?
Mama Serena hopefully we die at the same time okay at the exact same time bear it without you instead? Always to bear everything for both of us? Mama, Serena, hopefully we die at the same time, okay?
At the exact same time.
Does that make you happy?
I gotta say, I get why my grandmother
was reluctant to share those letters.
Franco, you were a literary pornographer at times,
so that I...
All very tasteful.
I wouldn't be able to look my grandchildren in the eye.
Like the nudes in the Sistine Chapel.
But the dead don't...
How do you say it in Italian?
Blush.
Blush.
The dead don't blush.
And I do want my grandchildren to know this history, your history.
That's why I'm sharing these letters with you, to show you how love got us through the
horror of it all.
Love yes, but also luck, Serena.
Because there is another side to the story here.
I mean, everything we escaped and everyone we left behind.
The problem is constant.
The woman from the neighborhood says to me,
they are looking for you.
You go out, go out, go out, it's too dangerous. You resist as long as you can,
as best as you can, and when you can't resist no more, you flee.
My name is David Modigliani and this is Pack One Bag, the story of my Italian Jewish family
split apart by war. And my quest to to understand if fascism takes over your country
Do you stay or do you try to flee?
What happens if you can't?
This is episode one the fairy tale escape