The full-feature documentary is here.
Tag Archives: Chicago
Palla 21 at the Art of Play – rationale
Motivations – and what happened
(Note: the full Italian text has not yet been translated for this page, but you can look up the Italian version here). See also the two-minute documentary trailer:
The initiative originated when we learned about a call for proposals to submit events for the Art of Play, organised by the City of Chicago.
We decided to submit two different events.
- Palla 21
- Traditional Italian card games
Why Palla 21 ?
- the game has a strong “local” character, as it it clearly related to a specific area of Italy, while maintaining relationships with similar games in other parts of Italy and Europe.
- in addition to being a sport, the game also has a strong social component, as it leads people of different ages to collaborate
- it has interesting implications in relation to sustainable development: the game has in fact an almost null environmental impact, as it is played in the squares of villages, with no need for additional infrastructure, and since the ball is built with mostly with recycled material.
- it is a way of establishing and/or consolidating relationships with people and organisations beyond the area of Maremma
Why traditional Italian card games ?
Why not ? …these are nice games!
Cronaca Vera magazine

Palla 21 from Tuscany to Chicago and back / The documentary
52 minutes – edited between the return from Chicago (July 21, 2007) and the dinner at the Palla 21 tournament in Torniella (the second or third Sunday of August 2007), to be screened as a backdrop on that occasion. Watching it some years after, we could cut if by 15 minutes…but, ok…for now no “director’s cut”. We do have a three-minute trailer, however.
If you like rock-blues, you will love the soundtrack, kindly provide by Lubriphonics (unfortunately no longer active in this formation). For more information: info@pibinko.org
Jul. 19, 2007. From Chicago, IL, for Tre Uomini in Barca (Radio Popolare Milano)
July, 2007: Comcast Sports News covers Palla a 21 in Chicago
During our “palla a 21 from Tuscany to Chicago” mission, Comcast Sports News covered the story. They promised that they would send us a DVD copy of the report, but this never happened.
However, during an evening chill-out session in a Chicago bar, we actually saw the report being broadcast, and having a camcorder at hand we managed to record most of it from the screen. You can see it at 22’47” of our documentary.
For more information
- See the palla a 21/palla eh! section on pibinko.org
- contact micalosapevo@pibinko.org or whatsapp +393317539228
From July 16 to July 21: Palla a 21 goes to Chicago / The official schedule
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On the afternoon of July 21:
Special feature! Italian Card Games –
in the Playing card week for Come in and Play at the Chicago Tourism Center,
72 E. Randolph Street

Flyer used during the “Palla 21 in Chicago” mission
To learn more about this ancient game, please see the “palla a 21/palla eh!” section on pibinko.org.
To learn more about the story of the palla a 21 game in Chicago, search for Chicago on pibinko.org o write to info@pibinko.org.

June 3, 2007: RAI Radio Due, L’Altro Lato
(MP3) , 7’53”, 7 Mb
The Art of Play (2007 Summer event calendar for the City of Chicago, Illinois)
Please see also http://www.pibinko.org/palla-a-21-or-palla-eh/
Summer brings fun and games in Chicago
By Shawn Smith
on May 13, 2007 at 10:36 AM, updated May 14, 2007 at 10:43 AM
CHICAGO — It seems appropriate that Chicago, fresh from winning its bid to become the U.S. choice to host the 2016 Summer Olympics, plans a summertime promotion celebrating fun and games.
“The Art of Play: Summer in Chicago 2007” revolves around games, toys and the spirit of play. Exhibitions, hands-on activities and hotel packages are all part of the mix in the birthplace of the Ferris wheel, Lincoln Logs and Tinkertoys.
The centerpiece is a display of 30 monumental sculptures at the West Side’s Garfield Park Conservatory. Massive in scale, some as long as 25 feet, they are the works of the late artist Niki de Saint Phalle, who was born in France and raised in New York City.
AP PhotoSculptor Niki de Saint Phalle’s La Cabeza (The Head) sits in Chicago’s Garfield Park Conservatory Thursday, May 3, 2007.
Titled “Niki in the Garden,” the exhibit of these magical, joyful figures includes animals, sports heroes and Saint Phalle’s famous “Nanas” (French for “babes” or “chicks”), powerful, oversized women, often in dancing or athletic poses. Most of the pieces invite sitting, climbing or crawling through their secret passages.
Game on
At Come In and Play, the “Art of Play” headquarters downtown at the Chicago Tourism Center, visitors can drop in to play games and see two exhibits — one on game- and toy-inspired artwork, the other on the history of games invented in Chicago.
Each week features different games to play, from puzzles and trivia to board games and cartoons. The Chicago Office of Tourism and Chicago International Toy and Game Fair have partnered to create themed hotel packages that provide guests with games to check out.
Millennium Park, the new tourist magnet in the heart of downtown on Michigan Avenue, offers a summer-long Family Fun Festival, another celebration of play. From 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, kids can enjoy crafts and other hands-on projects at the activity tent.
“Bubble Mania” is the theme June 5-10, when youngsters can make a bubble big enough for two, form bubbles with unusual blowers and make a bubble blower to take home. A family entertainment stage lets kids get into the act.
Millennium Park Greeter Tours, free guided walks held daily at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., spotlight the park’s gardens, fountains and sculptures, including the shiny metal “Bean,” officially named “Cloud Gate.” New this year are five large-scale metal sculptures by abstract expressionist sculptor Mark di Suvero.
The park’s iconic Jay Pritzker Pavilion, framed by a jumble of twisted steel designed by famed architect Frank Gehry, showcases the June 1-3 Chicago Gospel Music Festival, first in a series of free lakefront fests.
The same stage presents the 73rd annual Grant Park Music Festival, a series of Wednesday, Friday and Saturday orchestra concerts that runs through Aug. 15. A state-of-the-art sound system serves the covered seating section and lawn area. The festival (named for its former home just to the south of Millennium Park) begins June 13 with a Beethoven and Brahms program.
Six stages in Grant Park set the scene for the June 7-10 Chicago Blues Festival, the world’s largest free-admission blues festival.
Taste of Chicago, the city’s biggest lakefront party, takes place June 29-July 7, turning Grant Park into a hotbed of food, fun and frivolity. More than 1 million people grab the chance to sample specialties from more than 70 Chicago restaurants.
Other choices range from the city’s signature deep-dish pizza to such ethnic delights such as Persian char-grilled chicken with pomegranate barbecue sauce.
Chicago SummerDance, an 11-week festival in Grant Park’s Spirit of Music Garden, gives folks a chance to kick up their heels on an open-air dance floor Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings. One-hour dance lessons (from salsa to ballroom) are followed by two hours of live music and dancing.
Cirque Shanghai, a talented troupe of Chinese acrobats, returns to Navy Pier’s Skyline Stage with a full summer of shows starting June 6. Last year’s stint, drawing 135,000 people, was the most successful event in the stage’s history. “Cirque Shanghai: Bai Xi” features aerial acrobatics, plate spinning, contortion and hoop diving.
Classic theater
Also at Navy Pier, William Shakespeare’s “Troilus and Cressida,” a love story rooted in the Trojan War, runs through June 24, concluding the Chicago Shakespeare Theater’s 20th anniversary season.
North on the lakefront at Fullerton Avenue, Theater on the Lake begins its 55th season June 13, each week offering a different production from a local theatrical company.
Bookworms look forward to the annual Chicago Tribune Printers Row Book Fair, June 9-10 in the historic South Loop neighborhood that once housed printing factories.
In tents on Dearborn and Polk streets, under the stately tower of an 1885 railroad station, 150 new, used and antiquarian booksellers will display their wares. Included are author readings and signings, panel discussions, cooking demonstrations and children’s activities.
— Randy Mink is a freelance writer based in the Chicago area.
Fonte: http://blog.mlive.com/michigan_travel/2007/05/summer_brings_fun_and_games_in.html
