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Pippo Baudo
Italian television presenter (1936–2025) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Giuseppe Raimondo Vittorio "Pippo" Baudo (7 June 1936 – 16 August 2025) was an Italian television presenter. One of the most notable in his native country, he had a career spanning six decades, which included 13 editions of the Sanremo Music Festival – the highest number for a single presenter.
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Baudo was often nicknamed "Superpippo" (referencing the Italian name of Super Goof). Baudo was also the artistic director and president of the Teatro Stabile di Catania from 2000 to 2007.
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Career
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Baudo was born in Militello in Val di Catania, Sicily, the son of a lawyer and a housewife.[1] While studying law at the University of Catania, he started performing as an actor and presenter, becoming the sidekick of comedian Tuccio Musumeci.[1] He graduated with a degree in law, despite his interest in entertainment, and never practiced as a lawyer.[2] At the end of the 1950s, he became a singer and pianist for Orchestra Moonlight.[2] In 1959, for the first time, Pippo appeared on Italian TV during an episode of the Enzo Tortora's show La conchiglia d'oro.[2] He had his breakout in 1966, as the presenter of the musical show Settevoci.[2][3]
In 1968, Baudo hosted the Sanremo Music Festival for the first time; he eventually hosted the festival 13 times, the last one in 2008, also serving as artistic director in numerous editions.[2][4][5] On the opening night of the Sanremo Music Festival 1995, shortly after the beginning of the show a man, Pino Pagano, climbed onto of the gallery of the Teatro Ariston threatening to commit suicide by jumping; he was persuaded to step back by Baudo himself amid the applause of the audience.[4][6] He also hosted two editions of Canzonissima, six editions of Un disco per l'estate, as well as numerous editions of Domenica in and Fantastico.[2]
Beyond his main activity as a television presenter, Baudo served as artistic director of the Teatro Stabile di Catania from 1989 al 1997, and as its president from 2000 to 2007.[7][8] He was also a songwriter; among his best known compositions were Nino Ferrer's "Donna Rosa", Gianni Morandi's "Una domenica così", Nino Manfredi's "W le donne", and Sacha Distel's "La quadriglia".[3][9]
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Personal life and death

Baudo had two children: Alessandro, born in 1962, from Mirella Adinolfi, and Tiziana, born in 1970, from his first wife Angela Lippi. After relationships with the actresses Alida Chelli and Adriana Russo, between 1986 and 2007 Baudo was married to Italian soprano Katia Ricciarelli (from whom he separated in 2004 before their divorce was finalized).[7][10] In the 1990s, because of his anti-mafia activism, he suffered three bombings by the Sicilian mafia, one of which destroyed his villa in Santa Tecla.[11][12]
Baudo died at the Campus Bio-Medico in Rome on 16 August 2025, at the age of 89.[13][14] His funeral was held in his Sicilian hometown of Militello on 20 August, overseen by the Bishop of Caltagirone.[14]
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Acting credits
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