On the roof of Italy with baseball and boxing, the beginning of the champion Alessandra Sensini. Everything then linked to a cultural boom. These are the eighties who lived in Grosseto who will be reigned with the ‘visible city’ scheduled from tomorrow to Sunday 28 September. Everything will start with the inauguration of tomorrow at 6 pm at the Clarisse with the inauguration of the event and the exhibition “Anni eighties/Grosseto. Between ebb and postmodern”, in the presence of the Italian 1986 champions of baseball. At 9 pm in the courtyard of the Clarisse with ‘Pop Life’ and with ‘Dance Floor’. The program will continue on Wednesday 24 at 18 at the Polo Le Clarisse with ‘Grosseto dei readers’. Thursday 25 at 17 in Piazza Baccarini, in collaboration with the Archaeological Museum will it be staged ‘I pass the box?’, A musical show designed for children aged 11 to 16 and from 18.30 to 21.30, at the Proloco ‘Girls Just Want to have … upcycling!’. On Friday 26, at 5.30 pm, the Clarisse ‘Dal hole’, monologue/podcast live by Masiar Pasquali based on the podcast ‘The hole – pioneers of the heroine’, which tells the advent of the drug between Grosseto and Follonica at the beginning of the eighties, at 7 pm in Piazza San Francesco with ‘The Wall’, at 9.30 pm, at the Proloco, space for the dj set ‘eighth in vinyl. On Saturday 27 the ‘visible night of culture’ returns from 17 to 24: from Cavallerizza (where at 5 pm the Batting Cage will be inaugurated with a 5 baseball tournament for boys) to Piazza Baccarini, where the ‘night’ will be inaugurated from 18.30 with the distribution of art passports. At the same time, to celebrate the Sports Bridge between 1980 and 2025, on September 27 there will be the ‘Fit Festival’, now in its third edition, from the final stages of the Crossfit Demantur 2025, which will bring fifty athletes from all over Italy to Grosseto, up to the regional sparring of ‘Mma’, at the Battle of Break Dance, the ‘Moda Sport’ fashion show sponsored by Blor Company and the Talk Show ‘women and sport’.
“The 80s marked the history of the city – says Carlo Vellutini, CR Firenze – perhaps we should return to that dialogue and participation that was there”.
Mary Gecipar