The magazine raised several controversies, particularly with "Nattango", a cartoon depicting the then Communist secretary Alessandro Natta naked and dancing;[2][4] originally a polemical response to the Corriere della Sera editorial cartoonist Giorgio Forattini, who had accused the magazine of Communist propaganda and challenged it to publish a cartoon on Natta, it became a political case, with, among others, the Italian Socialist Party leader Bettino Craxi describing it as "inconceivable" and "cretinous and questionable humour".[4]
The magazine's original four pages doubled into eight in the early 1988.[3][4] Following the death of Pazienza and the major involvement of Staino in the film Cavalli si nasce, Tango ended its publications on 3 October 1988.[4] It was replaced three months later by Cuore.[2][4]
^Aloi, Dino; Mellana, Claudio (1991). Un Lavoro da ridere: antologia della satira del movimento operaio dall'Ottocento a oggi (in Italian). Feltrinelli. p. 31. ISBN978-88-07-81188-3.
^ abcdefAbruzzese, Alberto (1994). "Tango, Natta, Staino e le polemiche col Pci". La stampa italiana nell'età della TV: 1975-1994. Laterza. pp. 429–32. ISBN978-88-420-4509-0.
^Bono, Gianni (2003). "Tango". Guida al fumetto italiano. Epierre. p. 2006.
Bibliography
Chiesa, Adolfo (1988). Di male in tango (in Italian). Epoca.
Franchi, Stefania (2000). Tango e il PCI: comunisti e satira nell'Italia del dopoguerra (in Italian). Rubbettino. ISBN978-88-7284-949-1.