After his interview with Bruno Vespa, Vittorio Sgarbi returns to television. The art critic and politician was a guest of Mara Venier on Domenica In to present his new book, "The Closest Sky. The Mountain in Art," published by La Nave di Teseo.

But the interview focused mainly on health and family issues, from his hospitalization for depression to the issue of the guardianship requested by his daughter Evelina for her father, on which the Rome court's decision is pending.

"She could have easily come to see me, but she didn't come and decided to do so," Sgarbi attacked his daughter. Sgarbi then announced that he will marry his partner, Sabrina Colle, in Venice, in the church of Santa Maria dell'Orto: "I'm getting married to give, as is right, a part of my sensitivity and my existence to those who have been close to me and to those who have given me strength in the difficulties of daily life." "My choice is a form of desire to demonstrate my conviction and my gratitude to Sabrina," says the art critic: "Her irony and her amusement at my jokes are a form of intelligence, which today has found consolation and reassurance compared to provocation. The amazement ends and love remains."

Meanwhile, this afternoon, Evelina Sgarbi's interview with Silvia Toffanin aired on Verissimo: "On Cinque Minuti, she wasn't looking at the other person," the 25-year-old said. "She was struggling to speak. I don't want attention on our relationship, but on her health. I found it scandalous, perhaps, or perhaps not, to publicize the book. I find it incredible that it was allowed. The images speak for themselves; I think she's not well. She didn't contact me."

"He's been reduced to this state in a year," he continues. " I think he's completely brainwashed, he's no longer himself. You can see it in his attitude, in his appearance. I'm concerned that he continues to be completely blinded by the people he's with. We can't get his true health status from the doctors. I want to see the medical records. The judge has expressed his willingness to continue, we should know something in a few days."

"My father seemed a bit drugged out, he looked dirty, his appearance was unkempt, he had never had a clean-shaven beard: he was in a fragile state, perhaps influenced by those close to him," the conclusion was. " It was a pitiful spectacle to have him exposed in this manner to promote a book ."

(Unioneonline/D)

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