
-
Global stocks mostly rise, shrugging off US tariff threats
-
Solar becomes Europe's main energy source in June: consultants
-
Last-gasp Xhemaili fires Swiss into Euro 2025 quarters
-
NBA champion Thunder agree contract extension with Jalen Williams
-
Gaza civil defence says Israeli strike kills children at clinic
-
Swiatek surprised by surge to Wimbledon final
-
Lyles back, ready to 'run fast', as Tebogo lurks
-
Anisimova proves doubters wrong with run to Wimbledon final
-
Spurs set to sign £60m Gibbs-White - reports
-
Booker agrees to record $145 mn extension with Suns: reports
-
Sabalenka criticises Anisimova behaviour after shock Wimbledon exit
-
Swiatek swats Bencic aside to reach Wimbledon final against Anisimova
-
Root's 99 not out keeps India at bay in third Test
-
Delta offers upbeat outlook on travel demand, lifting shares
-
Sara Netanyahu: the ever-present wife of Israel's prime minister
-
Italy can hurt rampant Spain, says coach Soncin
-
Djokovic faces Sinner in Wimbledon blockbuster as Alcaraz meets Fritz
-
Rebooted and 'vulnerable': Superman is back on screens
-
Sri Lanka steamroll Bangladesh to win first T20
-
Swiatek routs Bencic to reach first Wimbledon final
-
Anisimova shocks Sabalenka to reach Wimbledon final, Swiatek in action
-
Rami Al Ali becomes first Syrian in Paris fashion programme
-
London stocks hit record high on tariff optimism
-
Ireland's Healy pulls off solo win at Tour de France
-
French appeals court court clears two over first lady gender rumours
-
Barry Callebaut cuts outlook as chocolate sales volumes melt away
-
The $10 mn bag: Original Birkin smashes records at Paris auction
-
Anisimova stuns Sabalenka to reach Wimbledon final
-
Root leads England revival after Reddy's double strike for India
-
Snap, crackle and pay: Ferrero to buy WK Kellogg for $3.1 bn
-
Shein faces 150-mn-euro fine in France
-
Rubio says Asia might get 'better' tariffs than others
-
India wicketkeeper Pant leaves field injured in third Test
-
Russia says holds 'frank exchange' with US on Ukraine war
-
Tendulkar says 'life has come full circle' with Lord's portrait
-
Duplantis unfazed by late world champs in Tokyo
-
Europe court says S.African athlete's gender eligibility trial wasn't fair
-
Dzeko, 39, returns to Serie A with Fiorentina
-
Scrutiny over Texas flood response mounts as death toll tops 120
-
Iran threats in UK 'significantly increased': Intel watchdog
-
Volkswagen halts electric minivan exports to the United States
-
EU chief von der Leyen comfortably survives confidence vote
-
India's Reddy strikes twice to rock England
-
EU opens new probe into TikTok data transfer to China
-
Italy probes UK online bank Revolut for 'misleading' clients
-
Arsenal sign midfielder Norgaard from Brentford
-
Explosions, fires rock Kyiv in deadly Russian barrage
-
Fatigued Afghan taxi drivers take novel approach to AC
-
Rubio meets Russia's Lavrov at ASEAN talks
-
Stocks rise on tariff optimism, London hits record high

Italian film icon Monica Vitti dies aged 90
Italian actress Monica Vitti, an icon best known for her starring roles in films by Michelangelo Antonioni, has died aged 90, the culture ministry said Wednesday.
"Goodbye Monica Vitti, goodbye queen of Italian cinema. Today is a truly sad day, we have lost a great artist and a great Italian," Culture Minister Dario Franceschini said in a statement.
Vitti shot to international fame with the 1960 drama "L'Avventura" ("The Adventure") in which she plays a tormented woman who dallies with the lover of her missing friend.
Born in Rome on November 3, 1931, Vitti -- whose real name was Maria Luisa Ceciarelli -- discovered her passion for the theatre during World War Two, when she entertained her family with puppets to relieve boredom.
"As the bombs fell, when we had to take refuge in the shelters, my little brother and I would improvise little plays to entertain those around us," she would recount years later.
After graduating from Rome's National Academy of Dramatic Arts in 1953, she began her career in the theatre, where she stood out for her comic talent.
She was spotted by Antonioni, with whom she quickly developed an artistic and sentimental relationship.
"I was lucky enough to start my career with a man of great talent", but who was also "spiritual, full of life and enthusiasm", Vitti said in an interview on Italian television in 1982.
Former Italian culture minister Walter Veltroni broke the news of Vitti's death with a tweet. He said he had been asked to do so by Roberto Russo, Vitti's husband, and expressed his "pain, affection and regret".
The actress, who had been suffering from a degenerative disease, had withdrawn from public life in recent years.
E.Borba--PC