Ylenia Carrisi
Ylenia Carrisi | |
---|---|
Born |
Ylenia Maria Sole Carrisi November 29, 1970 Rome, Italy |
Disappeared |
January 6, 1994 (aged 23) New Orleans |
Status | Missing for 21 years, 3 months and 20 days |
Height | 5'9" (178 cm) |
Parent(s) | Albano Carrisi and Romina Power |
Ylenia Maria Sole Carrisi (born November 29, 1970-missing since January 6, 1994) is the eldest daughter of Italian singers and actors Albano Carrisi and Romina Power. She disappeared under mysterious circumstances while visiting New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, in January 1994. Carrisi, upon her father's request, was presumed dead in January 2013. [1]
Family
Carrisi was born in Rome on November 29, 1970, the eldest daughter of Albano Carrisi and Romina Power. Her maternal grandparents are American actor Tyrone Power and Mexican actress Linda Christian.
Life
In 1983, she appeared alongside her parents in the Italian film Champagne in paradiso. Later on, she was the letter-turner on La Ruota Della Fortuna, the Italian version of Wheel of Fortune. She envisaged for herself a career as a novelist, studying literature at King's College London, where she received the highest marks in her year.
Disappearance
During her studies, she began to entertain the idea of traveling the world solo with nothing but a backpack and her journal. She decided to take a break from studying and returned to Italy where she sold all her belongings in order to pay for the voyage. She began in South America. After having spent a few months in Belize, she decided to leave the day after Christmas 1993 by bus to New Orleans, Louisiana. Her brother Yari, also an experienced traveler, had decided to surprise his sister by visiting her that Christmas. He arrived on a rainy 27 December in the village of Hopkins, going door to door in search for her, only to find that the day before, she had hopped on a bus heading to Mexico. Unfortunately, he arrived 24 hours too late for she was already heading to New Orleans, where she disappeared on January 6, 1994.
Carrisi was last seen in the French Quarter area sometime during the month. Police efforts to find her did not yield any result. At the time of her disappearance, Carrisi was staying in the LeDale Hotel with African-American street musician Alexander Masakela, twenty years her senior. Masakela was arrested on January 31 on an unrelated charge[2] but eventually released for lack of evidence to connect him to Carrisi's disappearance.
In relation to her disappearance, a security guard testified that he saw a woman vaguely matching her description jump into the Mississippi River saying the words "I belong into water". A Coast Guard search turned up no sign of the young woman's body, which may have been washed out to sea. In any case, it has never been established that the person was Carrisi. In 1996, two years after her disappearance, an unspecified caller assured emphatically that Carrisi was still alive but her whereabouts were unknown.[3]
Carrisi's parents last heard from their daughter on New Year's Eve. They reported her missing on January 18.[4] Her mother believes she's still alive. In November 2006, Albano stated for the first time that he believed the security guard's story. In January 2013 he requested the declaration of the presumed death of his daughter.
She was reportedly discovered in June 2011 in a monastery in the United States. Her father dismissed the report as "shameful speculation containing not a bit of truth."[5]
References
- ↑ Albano Carrisi asks for the official declaration of death of his daughter Ylenia Sud Italia News. 21 January 2013. Retrieved 23 October 2013.
- ↑ Andrei Codrescu (19 June 1999). Hail Babylon!: NPR's Road Scholar Goes in Search of the American City. Picador. p. 28. ISBN 978-0-312-20653-6.
- ↑ YLENIA CARRISI: UN LIBRO INCHIESTA RIAPRE IL CASO Adnkronos.(Italian) 5 November 1996. Retrieved 21 August 2013.
- ↑ Ylenia Maria Sole Carrisi The Charley Project. Retrieved 21 August 2013.
- ↑ "US: Missing since '94, Tyrone Powers' granddaughter is 'living in Arizona convent'". Adnkronos. 8 June 2011. Retrieved 20 April 2013.