Rooms & Suites

A Charming View

Each of our rooms and suites overlooks the sea and bears the name of one of the Neapolitan women who made history. Their hand-painted portraits invite you to discover their romantic and wonderful lives. With simple and refined details, they feature percale sheets with hemstitch finish, cotton honeycomb towels, piqué blankets, and linen throws,  delightful cocoons in which to rest after long days at the sea, excursions, and spa treatments.

Our Suites

Sofia

Panoramic Sea View with Independent Entrance

An undisputed icon of Italian cinema, with her beautiful almond-shaped eyes and generous curves, Sofia Loren is recognized worldwide as the symbol of Italian feminine beauty.

Pupella

Outdoor Patio with Partial Sea View

Nicknamed this way because at just two years old she made her stage debut, sitting in a box and playing a rag doll, Pupella Maggio born into a family of actors became a legend of Neapolitan theatre. A pupil of Eduardo De Filippo, she performed in the most beautiful Neapolitan comedies.

Titina

Panoramic Sea View and Outdoor Patio

The most celebrated actress of Neapolitan theatre, Titina De Filippo sister of the equally legendary Eduardo and Peppino De Filippo. She starred in masterpieces such as Napoli milionaria, Questi fantasmi and Filumena Martorano, which was written for her.

Double Rooms

Matilde

Small Balcony with Sea View

An avant-garde writer and author of wonderful books such as Il ventre di Napoli, Matilde Serao was the first and perhaps the only  woman to found and direct a daily newspaper, Il Mattino, which is still today the newspaper of Naples.

Catarì

Sea View Terrace

One of the most beautiful and romantic Neapolitan songs was dedicated to her: composed by Salvatore Cardillo in 1911 and first performed by Enrico Caruso, later sung by Tino Rossi in the film Naples au baiser du feu, and even offered as a tribute to Greta Garbo in a beautiful interpretation by the tenor Marino Van Wakeren.

Elenuccia

Sea View Terrace

She always told us she was born in the 1800s, and to us it felt almost surreal. Like everything about her, because Elenuccia could go up and down from the fourth floor a thousand times a day and sit there to “guardar isse che duorm” watching him sleep when Luigino took his afternoon nap. Nonna, this room is dedicated to you.

Vittoria

Sea View Balcony

An influencer of the 1500s and a poetess Vittoria Colonna adored Ischia. Thanks to her friendships with figures such as Ariosto, Tasso, Michelangelo and Aretino, she turned the island, during the years she lived here, into Italy’s cultural salon.

Maddalena

Sea View Balcony

A rebellious and revolutionary worker of modern times, Maddalena Cerasuolo together with her sister and her children organized, during the “Four Days of Naples”, the defense of the Materdei neighborhood and later of the Sanità district, considered the gateway to the heart of Naples.

Luisa

Sea View Terrace

Noble and aristocratic, Luisa Sanfelice together with her lover became an activist of the short-lived Parthenopean Republic, and for this she was arrested and imprisoned. Gioacchino Toma dedicated a beautiful painting to her time in jail; Alexandre Dumas wrote a novel about her life; and the Taviani brothers later made a film based on that novel.

Single Rooms

Ria Rosa

Small Balcony with Sea View

Perhaps the most acclaimed “sciantosa”, the star of the Caffè Chantant at Sala Umberto in Naples feminist, ironic, and brilliantly talented Ria Rosa moved to New York and became known as the “Singer of the Emigrants”. Thanks to her, Neapolitan music is today famous all over the world.

Fanny

Sea View Terrace

A star of dance could not be missing, because dance is my great passion. Fanny Cerrito was one of the greatest ballerinas of the Romantic era. Her debut and triumph at the Teatro San Carlo in Naples opened the doors for her to perform on the most important stages in Europe.

Maruzzella

Sea View Terrace

She is the heroine of one of the most beautiful Neapolitan love songs, performed by Renato Carosone and by countless other great Neapolitan artists. Renato wrote the music for his wife Marisa, affectionately nicknamed “Maruzzella”.

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