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Suze Rotolo and Enzo Bartoccioli

Enzo Bartoccioli and Suze Rotolo were married for 41 years before Suze Rotolo died, leaving behind her partner and 1 child.

They had a son named Luca age 44.

Enzo Bartoccioli is an Italian Artist.

American Artist Suze Rotolo was born Susan Elizabeth Rotolo on 20th November, 1943 in Queens, New York, USA and passed away on 24th Feb 2011 New York City, New York, USA aged 67. She is most remembered for Bob Dylan's early girlfriend. Her zodiac sign is Scorpio.

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(1970 - 25 February 2011) (her death) (1 child)
Rotolo married Italian Enzo Bartoccioli, a film editor who works for the United Nations, in 1967. Together they had one son, Luca, who is a guitarist in New York. In New York, Rotolo worked as an illustrator and painter, before concentrating on creating book art, making book-like objects which incorporated found art. Remaining politically active, Rotolo joined the street-theater group Billionaires for Bush and protested at the 2004 Republican National Convention in Manhattan.
Rotolo evaded discussing her relationship with Dylan for decades. In July 2004, she was interviewed in a documentary produced by New York PBS Channel 13 and The New York Daily News; in November 2004, she made an unannounced appearance at the Experience Music Project, on a panel discussing Dylan's early days in Greenwich Village. She and her husband also were involved in putting on a memorial event for Dave van Ronk after the singer's death in 2002. Rotolo made an appearance in Martin Scorsese's documentary film, No Direction Home: Bob Dylan, which focused on Dylan's early career from 1961 to 1966. This film was broadcast as part of the American Masters series on PBS public television in September 2005. Rotolo was also interviewed nationally in 2008 by Terry Gross on NPR's Fresh Air to promote her book, A Freewheelin' Time: A Memoir of Greenwich Village in the Sixties, which was published by Broadway Books on May 13, 2008. Rotolo recounted her attempts not to be overshadowed by her relationship with Dylan. She discussed her need to pursue her artistic creativity and to retain her political integrity, concluding

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