Costa Brava: captivating and inspiring artists from around the world
Between the 1940s and the 1970s, when the Franco regime finally ended, the Costa Brava became a popular holiday destination for Hollywood stars such as Kirk Douglas, Elizabeth Taylor, Craig Hill and Rock Hudson. Many of them first got to know the area when they went there to make a film. Such is the case of Ava Gardner, who in 1948 turned Tossa de Mar upside-down when she made 'Pandora and the Flying Dutchman' in the coastal town. During the filming, Tossa became the focus of Hollywood gossip, which was intrigued by the nature of the friendship between Gardner and one of the film’s male protagonists, Mario Cabré. Rumours of their relationship carried over the Atlantic, and Frank Sinatra, at the time married to the actress, raced to his wife’s side in a fit of jealousy. Tossa has since immortalised those special times with a statue of Gardner, unveiled in 1998. Other celebrities got to know about the Costa Brava thanks to the letters of Truman Capote, who lived in Palamós for three summer seasons from 1960 to 1962. The writer needed to disconnect from his hectic social life in New York to be able to concentrate on what was to become one of his best-sellers, 'In Cold Blood'. Those Palamós residents who still remember him talk about his love of strolling about the town and buying from local famers, they say that he loved 'sardanes' (a traditional Catalan dance), and that one of his favourite pastimes was going to watch the fishermen as they returned from a day at sea. And he was