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In the 2006 general election, Luxuria was elected to the Chamber of Deputies by the Lazio 1 constituency in Rome. She lost her seat in the 2008 election. After the retirement of Beyer and Luxuria, there were no transgender MPs reported in the world, until 2011, when Anna Grodzka was elected to the Polish parliament.[1]
Born in Foggia, Apulia, Luxuria moved to Rome in 1985 to study foreign languages and literature. She also began to act, notably in cabaret, and through this developed her gender ambiguity as a hallmark. Her assumed surname, Luxuria, means lust in Latin.[2] She earned her first acting credit in Cena alle nove by Paolo Breccia in 1991; and began organizing parties and gay pride events, becoming director of the Muccassassina, the self-financing party of the Circle of homosexual culture Mario Mieli. She graduated in foreign languages and literatures at University of Rome La Sapienza with a master thesis on Joseph Conrad.[3]
Although her Lazio 1 constituency was seen as a safe Communist seat, her election was not without difficulties, particularly after it was disclosed that she had been a sex worker for a time shortly after arriving in Rome due to the difficulty of finding a conventional job as a transgender individual. Clemente Mastella, the leader of the centrist UDEUR party (a fellow member of the coalition) called her \"a ridiculous Cicciolina.\" Alessandra Mussolini, said, referring to Luxuria, that it was \"better to be a fascist than a faggot\" (meglio fascista che frocio).[9] However, Luxuria's name was placed second on the list of Communist candidates for Lazio, after party leader Fausto Bertinotti, which increased her chances of being elected (Italy uses a system of proportional representation).[2]
In the 2008 election, the Refoundation Communist Party joined a coalition of left-wing parties known as the Rainbow Left. However this group gained only 3.2% of the vote and lost all of its seats in parliament. Silvio Berlusconi's centre-right coalition swept to victory. Luxuria was not re-elected. Paolo Ferrero, then leader of the Communist Refoundation Party, said that he would be open to the idea of her returning to politics as a nominee for the 2009 European Parliament election after her win on L'Isola dei Famosi, but Luxuria said that she had no plans to re-enter politics.[5]
Luxuria also campaigned prior to the elections for gays to have cohabitation rights, and had helped campaign by winning the support of Italy's left. Furthermore, Luxuria outlined her long-term support for full gay marriage rights, comparable with Spain's implementation of the law.[13] In September 2006, she stated that the Vatican's ongoing influence in politics, specifically in regards to gay marriage, contravened clauses of the Italian Constitution.[13] Luxuria reacted to Pope Benedict XVI's end-of-year speech in 2008, when he compared protecting the environment with saving humanity from a \"blurring of gender\" (homosexual or transsexual behaviour), by saying that such comments were \"hurtful\".[14]
Other productions included \"Anyone Can Whistle,\" which opened on April 4, 1964 and closed a week later; \"Do I Hear a Waltz\" with composer Richard Rodgers; \"Assassins,\" a revue telling the stories of successful or attempted presidential assassins; \"Passion\" a story of obsessive love adapted from an 1869 Italian novel; and \"Road Show\" (a.k.a. \"Bounce\"), which was workshopped beginning in 1999 but did not play in New York until an Off-Broadway production opened in 2008.
In the 1980s Belmondo returned to the stage, in a 1987 Paris production of Jean-Paul Sartre's \"Kean,\" and won a Cesar Award (the French Oscar) for \"Itinerary of a Spoiled Child.\" His final film role, several years after suffering a stroke, was in 2008's \"A Man and His Dog,\" a role he took on the condition that he be allowed to show his infirmity. \"It's me, without any special effects,\" he told The New York Times in 2009. \"I hope to be an example for all. I hope.\" 781b155fdc