Cencio la Parolaccia
41°53′26″N 12°28′08″E / 41.8905°N 12.4689°E
Cencio la Parolaccia | |
---|---|
Restaurant information | |
Established | 1941 |
Owner(s) | Alice Waters |
Food type | Roman cuisine |
Street address | Vicolo del Cinque, 3 |
City | Rome |
County | Metropolitan City of Rome Capital |
State | Lazio |
Postal/ZIP Code | 00153 |
Country | Italy |
Website | cenciolaparolaccia |
Cencio la Parolaccia (Cencio's Profanities) is a restaurant in the Trastevere rione of Rome. It is mostly famous for the behaviour of its waiters, who curse at or otherwise verbally abuse the diners, including tourists.[1] The restaurant mainly serves Roman cuisine.
History
The restaurant, initially called Osteria da Cencio (Cencio's Eatery), was opened in 1941 by the couple Vincenzo "Cencio" and Renata de Santis who decided, following an episode involving the actor Massimo Serato, to combine traditional food with a form of entertainment based on folk songs often seasoned with risque jokes and profanities in the Romanesco dialect.
The establishment became popular with the public and so in 1951, it officially took the name "La Parolaccia" and became a place for special dinners for actors and people in the show business.[2]
Film references
Thanks to its peculiarity, La Parolaccia has inspired the mention of fictitious restaurants in various comedy films such as Made in Italy (1965), Simpatici & antipatici (1998), and in 1981, Fracchia la belva umana (where it is renamed "Da Sergio e Bruno - Gli Incivili")[3] as well as in the 1977 poliziottesco La banda del trucido with Tomas Milian (here the restaurant is called "La Pernacchia" - The Raspberry). La Parolaccia itself is mentioned and used in some scenes of the 1971 movie Trastevere, in which it is managed by the salacious Nanda, played by Ottavia Piccolo.[1]
See also
References
- ^ a b "Insultez le serveur, c'est la tournée du patron!" [Insult the server, it's the patron's turn!]. 20min.ch (in French). 18 June 2009. Retrieved 16 December 2019.
- ^ Jaffe, Murray (1 January 1965). The Romans' Guide to Rome. Citadel Press. ISBN 9780806503295.
- ^ Corea, Achille (2010). Roma senza vie di mezzo. Pendragon. ISBN 978-8883428722.