For a man who seeks to imitate a noble personage, he could play worse than a Pope.
In Rome, however, it is a predilection fraught with potential problems.
A performer from Slovakia — so far unidentified — was arrested in Rome
on Friday on a misdemeanor charge for pretending to be the late John
Paul II.
For the past several weeks, according to Britain’s Telegraph,
the papal lookalike, dressed in a white cassock and decorated with a
skull cap and a crucifix on a necklace, has been entertaining tourists
near the Via dei Fori Imperiali, the broad avenue that leads up to the
Colosseum and a lucrative spot for attracting passers-by. ... Some would
drop a few euro coins into his silver tray.
"John Paul was a great Pope. Lots of people ask to have their
photograph taken with me," he told the paper, as he sat on a chair and
smiled broadly as he held a Bible.
Police who detained him told him he will be hit with a fine of between
about $200 to more than $1,200, depending on a court's decision.
"The problem was that he looked a lot like Karol Wojtyla. He was
detained for usurpation of title which is a misdemeanour," a police
spokeswoman told AFP.
"The cassock he was wearing has been confiscated," she said, adding
that the action had been taken after an anonymous complaint.
The Slovak was one of several buskers and street artists who try their
luck along the street, from bands of Peruvian pipers to fake centurions
and legionaries and performers who stand stock still dressed as the
Statue of Liberty.
"If he had been dressed like Tutankhamen nothing would have happened," another police officer said.
Local media had joked that the fake Pope had brought the number of
pontiffs in Rome to three, along with Pope Francis and his predecessor
Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, who is living out his retirement in a former
convent in the Vatican.