Names like (known as "La De Luca"), Mascia Ferri , and Marisa Da Re became household names. They were famous for having no fame at all—they were famous for being naked (or almost naked). The show turned anonymity into erotic capital.
This "pineapple censorship" became the show’s trademark. Viewers didn’t see nipples; they saw a spinning pineapple. This infuriated parents and politicians but hypnotized teenagers. The show was, paradoxically, the most censored program on television and the most sexually charged. You couldn’t have such a radioactive show without a master of ceremonies who could walk the tightrope between sleaze and slapstick. Enter Umberto Smaila . Italian strip tv show tutti frutti
The choreography was intentionally amateurish. The girls were not supposed to be perfect; they were supposed to be real . In an era of silicone and airbrushing, Tutti Frutti offered a sweaty, awkward, gloriously human form of eroticism. The dancers bit their lips, tripped over heels, and smiled nervously—which only made the audience love them more. Of course, the Catholic Church was not amused. The Osservatore Romano (the Vatican’s newspaper) called it "vomit for the soul." The Italian Communist Party, ironically, joined forces with Christian Democrats to condemn the show. Morality campaigners argued that Tutti Frutti was turning living rooms into brothels. Names like (known as "La De Luca"), Mascia
The legal climax came in 1988. The show was broadcast at 6:00 PM—the "family hour" when children were doing homework. After a particularly risque episode featuring a banana as a prop (the symbolism was not subtle), the public prosecutor in Rome seized the tapes. This "pineapple censorship" became the show’s trademark
Tutti Frutti was a rebellion against Italian hypocrisy. It was a show where the censorship (the pineapple) was the star. It laughed at the idea that a naked body could destroy society while a political scandal could not. It was lowbrow, yes. It was sexist by today’s standards, absolutely. But it was also a mirror: it showed Italy that it wanted to look, even when it pretended to close its eyes.
The concept was simple: Tutti Frutti was a "musical strip tease" show. It first aired in 1987 on Italia 1 (a Fininvest network) during the afternoon striscia (strip) time slot—hence the term "strip show," referring to the daily time slot, not just the clothing. However, the double entendre was intentional.
Unlike modern hosts who feign shock, Smaila treated the stripping as a purely bureaucratic activity. "And now, signore e signori, we will count the buttons," he would say with deadpan seriousness. His genius lay in making the obscene seem ordinary. Tutti Frutti launched the careers of several iconic showgirls, known in Italian TV jargon as veline (little candles) or letterine . These were not professional porn actresses; they were aspiring dancers, models, and actresses looking for a break.