Roberto Rossellini's film The Miracle
- Artist/Author/Producer: Roberto Rossellini, Italian film Director
- Confronting Bodies: New York Board of Regents
- Dates of action: 1951
- Location: New York City
- Description of the Art Work
- The 40 minute film, "The Miracle," featured Anna Magnani as a peasant woman
who believed that she was the Virgin Mary. The film was imported into the
United states in 1949 by a Polish-Jewish immigrant Joseph Burstyn.
- Description of incident
- "The Miracle" was released in Italy in 1948 despite of the views of
the Catholic Church. Although the film made it through
U.S. customs without trouble from the official censors, the Board of
Regents came under heavy pressure from the Roman Catholic Archdiocese to
revoke the films license on the ground that the work was "sacrilegious."
"The Miracle" lost its license and the films distributor, Joseph Burstyn,
appealed the decision. The New York Appeals Court backed the Board of
Regents decision.
- Results of incident
- The U.S. Supreme Court overturned the decision in 1952, pointing out that
it was unconstitutional for government bodies to impose religious
orthodoxies on film or any other art and that "a state may not ban a
film on the basis of a censor's conclusion that it is sacrilegious"
furthermore, "It is not the business of government... to suppress real or
imagined attacks upon a religious doctrine, whether they appear in
publications, speeches or motion pictures."
Source: New York Public Library, New York City