Stanley Tucci Dines at a King's Restaurant | Tucci in Italy | National Geographic
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Ninety-two-year-old Tonino Bertoleoni is presented as the King of Tavolara and runs the island's famed restaurant.
Stanley Tucci visits Tavolara, the tiny island kingdom off Sardinia, and meets the 92-year-old King Tonino who runs a beloved seaside restaurant.
Summary
In National Geographic’s Tucci in Italy, Stanley Tucci travels to Tavolara, a miniature island off Sardinia claimed as the world’s smallest kingdom. He meets Tonino Bertoleoni, the 92-year-old self-proclaimed King of Tavolara, whose family tradition dates back to 1836. Tucci learns how Giuseppe Bertoleoni’s encounter with King Charles Albert of Savoy helped establish a royal title that persisted through Italian unification. Although Italy abolished monarchies in 1946, Tavolara maintained its legendary sovereignty in the public imagination. The centerpiece of the island is the Da Tonino restaurant, a seafront eatery where the royal family gathers for seafood and stories. Appetizers of spaghetti with clams and bottarga set the tone, as Tucci captures the intimate, almost fairy-tale atmosphere of this tiny realm. A historic portrait – a photo of Queen Victoria with the inscription “The smallest kingdom in the world, Tavolara Island” – underscores the island’s enduring mystique. By the end, Tonino remains the beloved ruler of paradise, while Tucci reflects on how isolation has preserved traditions that feel magical, if not perfectly sovereign.
Key Takeaways
- Tonino Bertoleoni, aged 92, is presented as the living King of Tavolara, a title rooted in family legend since 1836.
- The island’s claimed sovereignty persisted through the Italian unification era, even after Sardinia joined the Kingdom of Italy.
- Da Tonino, the royal family restaurant, specializes in seafood and showcases how local supply drives the menu (seafood-focused, bottarga featured).
- A famous photo and inscription in Buckingham Palace tie Tavolara’s royal narrative to global recognition in the past.
- Italy’s 1946 abolition of monarchy ended official sovereignty, but Tavolara’s myth remains a powerful cultural symbol.
- The narrative blends history with personal moments, illustrating how a tiny community maintains identity through hospitality and storytelling.
- The line “The smallest kingdom in the world, Tavolara Island” serves as a recurring reminder of the island’s fairy-tale status.
Who Is This For?
Essential viewing for curious travelers and history buffs who love offbeat micronations, Sardinia insiders, and fans of Stanley Tucci’s gourmet travel style. It offers a vivid snapshot of how legend and cuisine intersect in a tiny, living micro-nation.
Notable Quotes
"You are the king of Piedmont and Sardinia, but I am the king of Tavolara."
—The pivotal joke that supposedly founded Tavolara’s royal title.
"The smallest kingdom in the world, Tavolara Island."
—Captioned inscription connected to a central royal claim.
"King of Tavolara for real."
—Official acknowledgment of the island’s legendary sovereignty.
Questions This Video Answers
- How did Tavolara become known as the smallest kingdom in the world?
- What is bottarga and how is it traditionally prepared in Sardinia?
- Why did Italy abolish monarchies in 1946 and how did that affect Tavolara?
- Who was Charles Albert of Savoy and what was his connection to Tavolara?
- Can you visit Da Tonino and dine like royalty on Tavolara?
Tucci in ItalyTavolara IslandTonino BertoleoniDa Tonino restaurantbottargaSpaghetti alle vongoleGiuseppe BertoleoniCharles Albert of SavoyItalian Unificationsmall kingdoms
Full Transcript
I’m headed towards Tavolara, off the coast of Sardinia, a little island that supposedly is the smallest kingdom in the world. I’m going to meet the king... who has a restaurant. Named for its distinctive table-shaped mountain, Tavolara is only a quarter of a mile wide, and less than three miles from the coast. Today, it’s home to only eleven residents. And a seafront restaurant run by its most illustrious inhabitant. Tonino. [in Italian] - Hi. - Hello. So... Ninety-two-year-old Tonino Bertoleoni is the King of Tavolara. Beautiful day. Yes! Today is perfect. Yes, yes, yes. - Luckily. - Yes.
His family have laid claim to this tiny island since his great-great-grandfather took the reins in 1836. So, it was Giuseppe Bertoleoni, my ancestor of Genoese origin. And one day he decided to come to Sardinia with his boat. He saw this mountain here - Yes. and settled in the island of Tavolara. Though no official records exist of Giuseppe’s arrival on the island, his storied reign began after an improbable encounter with the King of Sardinia, Charles Albert of Savoy. The Savoys heard about this Bertoleoni who had taken these islands, and wanted to get to know this Giuseppe Bertoleoni.
Giuseppe Bertoleoni told King Charles Albert, he told him, "You are the king of Piedmont and Sardinia, but I am the king of Tavolara." This joke. And King Charles Albert, when he heard this, that he said this joke, he said, "Well, I will name him King of Tavolara for real." He took pen and paper and wrote, “Giuseppe Bertoleoni, born" — and so on — "King of Tavolara.” In the 1860s, during the Italian Unification, Sardinia was absorbed into the Kingdom of Italy. But Tavolara maintained its independence, producing another five kings, and two queens. Today, Tonino is the living legacy of this two hundred-year-old fairytale.
But to find out how this kingdom has managed to stay sovereign, I’m going to meet the rest of the family at a royal banquet... of sorts. The crown jewel of the kingdom is the family restaurant, Da Tonino. They serve whatever they can get their hands on, meaning seafood. Giuseppe and I join the rest of the royals for appetizers and formal introductions. -Cheers. We’re starting with spaghetti with clams and bottarga, which is dried Sardinian mullet roe. Delicious. I love bottarga. Oh, yes. Mmmm. This is really good. This is my grandfather. Grandfather. Brothers, wife, and grandchildren. This photograph… Queen Victoria had it in Buckingham Palace.
And it has written on it: "The smallest kingdom in the world, Tavolara Island." This black and white portrait is the family’s most prized possession. Amazing. I love that. Proof that their royal lineage was once respected around the world. Oh, my! Gorgeous. Oh my god. Thank you. Dad. - Just a bit. - What can I give you? Okay, that is enough. Okay. - Anyway, it is good, isn't it? - Delicious. In 1946, Italy voted to abolish its monarchy and depose the King of Savoy, rendering Tavolara’s royal recognition meaningless. Which put an end to the island’s independence.
To me, this is a kingdom. - Of course. - Yes, yes, yes. Yeah. - Thank you. King! Kingdom or no Kingdom, Tonino is still the beloved ruler of this little paradise. Just ask his royal subjects. A Sardinian writer once said, ‘if Sardinia is an island, then every Sardinian is an island unto themselves.’ Its isolation has given traditions both weird and wonderful. And some might say, it’s even made fairy tales come true.
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