Wanja, 63, who describes Fabrizio, 68, as the love of her life, believes they have the perfect arrangement.
"Living 1,100 miles apart for the last decade is the secret to our incredible marriage," she says.
Wanja has always been independent and up for adventure. In 1980s New York she was a 20-something aspiring actress, waitressing while looking for parts, when she auditioned for the lead role in a movie called The Immigrant. She got the job and clicked with the Italian director.
"Shooting was such fun," she says. "Fabrizio and I began dating and fell in love. When he needed to go back to Rome for work and asked me to come, I instantly agreed. I was young, in love and wasn't going to turn down an Italian adventure."
image [https://cdn.magzter.com/1583506613/1740460799/articles/WWZlzZU3g1740470256055/4162260061.jpg]
Busy careers meant spending weeks or even months apart - but their love thrived nonetheless. "We were doing things our own way," Wanja says. "That meant respecting each other's passions and independence."
They got married in March 1985. "One quick trip to the town hall and, at 23, I was a wife," Wanja says. "For two years we were in the opposite of a newlywed bubble, dashing off to exciting projects and being apart as much as we were together. It was never a hardship."
Their son was born in 1991 and two daughters in 1996 and 2002 - and even then Wanja kept her independence.
"Whether we were based in Rome, LA or New York, the children had two parents who loved each other, without losing their sense of self," she says. "We jokingly called it our 'together-not-together' dynamic."
image [https://cdn.magzter.com/1583506613/1740460799/articles/WWZlzZU3g1740470256055/7066000114.jpg]
LONDON CALLING
In 2014, after 19 years of marriage, Wanja no longer wanted to live in Rome and decided to move to London, where her eldest daughter was studying.
"As soon as I suggested the idea, Fabrizio agreed I should go for it," she says. "It might sound strange for a wife to move 1,100 miles away from the husband she loves, especially as I'd be taking our youngest daughter, then 13, with me. But to us the cities seemed close and there were lots of flights.
"Our relationship was rock solid, built on love, trust and knowing that being fulfilled and independent made our marriage stronger. We didn't draw up a schedule of who would travel when, or how often we'd call or text. After years of going with the flow we didn't need to."
image [https://cdn.magzter.com/1583506613/1740460799/articles/WWZlzZU3g1740470256055/0007626161.jpg]
In the first year, the couple made trips back and forth often and this worked so well that they carried on living far apart.
"We'd always had different personalities," she says. "I'm spontaneous, love to party into the night with friends and sleep in late. He's an intellectual who enjoys long discussions with friends and getting up early. He loves to cook and eat amazing food – I'll gobble something straight from a can. Having our own homes in our own cities meant we could be ourselves completely, bringing those happy selves together when we met. We could both work, me as an actress and him as a film director, as much as we wished and quickly settled into a happy rhythm.
The pair always spend the summer together, which is when they celebrate their wedding anniversary and Christmas too. Aside from that, they see how the mood takes them.
image [htt...