{{Short description|Italian journalist (born 1954)}} {{One source|date=March 2024}} {{BLP sources|date=May 2011}} {{Infobox person |name = Michele Serra |image = Michele Serra - IJF 2010 03.jpg |birth_date = {{birth date and age|1954|7|10|df=y}} |birth_place = Rome, Italy |death_date = |death_place = |party = |years_active = 1980–present }}
'''Michele Serra''' (born 10 July 1954) is an Italian journalist,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.independent.ie/sport/soccer/extra-special-derby-2028490.html|title=extra special derby|last=Dunne|first=Frank|author2=Glenn Moore|date=January 23, 2010|work=Irish Independent|accessdate=1 June 2011}}</ref> writer, and satirist.
==Biography== Serra was born in Rome, but moved to Milan in 1959. In 1975 he started working for ''L'Unità'', then the official newspaper of the Italian Communist Party (PCI). Serra is a long-time left-wing supporter, although he abandoned PCI's successor, the Partito Democratico della Sinistra, in 1991, because of dissent against the party's directions.
In 1986, he began to write satire for ''L'Unità'' satiric supplement ''Tango'', winning the Satire Prize Forte dei Marmi the same year. In 1987 he also started collaborating for Mondadori's weekly ''Epoca'', but abandoned it in 1990, when the publisher house was acquired by right-winged tycoon Silvio Berlusconi.
In 1989, ''Tango'' was replaced by ''Cuore'' as ''L'Unità'''s satirical supplement, and Serra was appointed by Massimo D'Alema as its director. ''Cuore'' was published weekly independently starting from 1991. In the same period Serra also began to write for Beppe Grillo's TV appearances and stage shows. In 1989, he published his first book, a short story collection entitled ''Il nuovo che avanza'' ("''The advancing new''").
On 7 June 1992, Serra began a popular satire column for ''L'Unità'', entitled "Che tempo fa" accompanied by Ellekappa's comics. In 1994 he abandoned the direction of ''Cuore'' and, in 1996, began to collaborate for the newspaper ''La Repubblica'' and for the weekly ''L'Espresso'', for which he continues to write as of 2008. Serra's first novel, ''Il ragazzo mucca'', was published in September 1997.
In the following years, Serra wrote for numerous TV and theatre shows, including Fabio Fazio's ''Che tempo che fa''. He is an atheist and has been a communist.<ref>{{Cite web|author=Brunetto Salvarani|url=https://www.avvenire.it/agora/pagine/intervista-serra-ateo-don-camillo_201008110915284170000|title=Serra: l'ateo che sta con Don Camillo|language=IT}}</ref>
In 2025 he promoted the demonstration "Una Piazza per l'Europa-A square for Europe" on March 15 in Rome.<ref>{{cite web|author=Nicola Barone|url=https://www.ilsole24ore.com/art/partita-manifestazione-pro-europa-serra-piazza-idee-diverse-e-scandalo-ma-si-chiama-democrazia-AGV0WAYD|title=La manifestazione pro Europa a Roma, Serra: piazza con idee diverse è scandalo ma si chiama democrazia|date=15 March 2025 |language=IT}}</ref>
==Works== *''Giorgio Gaber. La canzone a teatro'' (1982) *''Tutti al mare'' (1986) *''Visti da lontano'' (1987) *''Ridateci la Potemkin'' (1988) *''Il nuovo che avanza'' (1989) *''44 falsi'' (1991) *''Poetastro. Poesie per incartare l'insalata'' (1993) *''Il ragazzo mucca'' (1997) *''Maledetti giornalisti ''(with Goffredo Fofi and Gad Lerner, 1997) *''Che tempo fa'' (1999) *''Giù al Nord'' (with Antonio Albanese and Enzo Santin, 1999) *''Canzoni politiche'' (2000) *''Pinocchio Novecento'' (comments on Carlo Collodi text, 2001) *''Cerimonie'' (2002) *''De André il corsaro ''(with Fernanda Pivano and Cesare G. Romana, 2002) *''I bambini sono di sinistra'' (with Claudio Bisio, Giorgio Terruzzi, Giorgio Gallione and Gigio Alberti, 2005) *''Tutti i santi giorni'' (2006) *''Psicoparty'' (with Antonio Albanese, 2007) *''Breviario comico. A perpetua memoria'' (2008) *''L'assassino'' (2013) *[http://www.feltrinellieditore.it/opera/opera/gli-sdraiati/ ''Gli sdraiati''] (2013) *[http://www.feltrinellieditore.it/opera/opera/ognuno-potrebbe-1/ ''Ognuno potrebbe''] (2015) *''Il grande libro delle amache'' (2017) *''La sinistra e altre parole strane'' (2017) *''Le code che bruciano'' (2019) *''Osso. Anche i cani sognano'' (2021) *''Ballate. Dei tempi che corrono'' (2023)
== Gallery == <gallery> Image:Massimo Gramellini, Michele Serra e Vittorio Zucconi.jpg|Left: Michele Serra, Vittorio Zucconi and Massimo Gramellini at the International Journalism Festival, Perugia, 2010 </gallery>
==References== {{commons category}} {{Reflist}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Serra, Michele}} Category:1954 births Category:Living people Category:Italian atheists Category:Writers from Rome Category:Italian male journalists Category:Italian male writers Category:Italian television personalities Category:Italian magazine editors Category:La Repubblica people