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Reuters
Reuters
Entertainment
Carmelo Camilli

Italy tiptoes towards post-COVID normality

Italians sit at a bar as much of the country becomes a 'yellow zone', easing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions allowing bars and restaurants to open for food and drinks at outdoor tables, in Venice, Italy, April 26, 2021. REUTERS/Manuel Silvestri

Italian coffee bars, restaurants, cinemas and theatres partially reopened in most regions on Monday as part of a phased springtime relaxation of COVID-19 lockdowns.

"Finally!" said Lorenzo Campania, an elderly man from a small village near Rome, as he had breakfast seated at an outdoor table near the capital's central Piazza Venezia.

Italians sit at a bar as much of the country becomes a 'yellow zone', easing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions allowing bars and restaurants to open for sit-down food and drinks at outdoor tables, in Venice, Italy, April 26, 2021. REUTERS/Manuel Silvestri

Fourteen of the country's 20 regions have been designated yellow zones, meaning there is a relatively low risk from COVID-19. Five are classified orange and one, Sardinia, red.

In the yellow zones, coffee bars and restaurants are now allowed to serve customers outdoors after a near-total shutdown of about six weeks.

However, having a quick espresso and cornetto, the equivalent of the French croissant, standing at the bar - a morning ritual for millions - will still be prohibited for another six weeks.

Italians sit at a bar as much of the country becomes a 'yellow zone', easing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions allowing bars and restaurants to open for sit-down food and drinks at outdoor tables, in Venice, Italy, April 26, 2021. REUTERS/Manuel Silvestri

"People really want to come and have their breakfast standing up at the bar," said Loredana Pompeii, the owner of a bar in central Rome.

Outdoor amateur team contact sports were also allowed again. The re-opening of pools and gyms will be phased in over the next few weeks, with strict social distancing rules in force.

Theatres, cinemas, museums and cultural heritage sites reopened, albeit with limited capacity of no more than 50 percent for those indoors. Many also required online reservations in order to control the flow.

People wait outside the Colosseum on the day of its reopening, as much of the country becomes a 'yellow zone', easing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions, in Rome, Italy, April 26, 2021. REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane

In Milan, about 100 movie lovers celebrated by lining up before dawn outside the Beltrade Cinema for a 6 a.m. showing of director Nanni Moretti's 1993 cult film "Caro Diaro" (Dear Diary).

The Colosseum re-opened for individuals but not for tour groups.

"I hope this will really be a reopening and not a kind of hiccup like last summer," said Elisabetta Marchi, visiting from Florence.

People have breakfast at the terrace of a bar at Santa Maria Maggiore's Square, as much of the country becomes a 'yellow zone', easing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions and allowing bars and restaurants to open for sit-down food and drinks at outdoor tables, in Rome, Italy, April 26, 2021. REUTERS/Yara Nardi

Italy was the first Western country to be hit hard by COVID-19 in early 2020, and health officials have stressed that people should still be careful, wear masks and maintain social distancing.

    "It is also our responsibility," said Elisabetta Pronti, 57, a civil servant in Rome. "I hope that now that places have re-opened it doesn't mean everybody is free to do what they want."

Some restaurants with outdoor space said they would wait to reopen until June 1, when indoor dining will be allowed.

"It's risky for us to buy produce, cook, call in staff and have everything ready to eat outdoors and then not be able to go inside if it starts raining," said Massimmiliano Benedetti, 44, whose family owns Il Ruscello (The Creek), a restaurant in the Umbrian village of Ceselli.

In the yellow zone, many schools which had been operating a system where students alternated between days in the classroom and days of distance-learning in order to reduce the numbers on site, allowed more students to return.

Like many, Leandro Paparusso, who studies at Rome's Isaac Newton science high school, was glad to be back behind a desk and he had one wish.

"I hope this virtual learning isn't used post-COVID. I hope it was born because of COVID and then dies," he said.

(Additional reporting by Antonio Denti, Emily Roe and Elly Biles, writing by Philip Pullella, editing by Estelle Shirbon)

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