'Banga' is Pontius Pilate's dog in Mikhail Bulgakov's 1937 novel 'The Master And Margarita'. Not published until 1967, the novel is a fierce anti-Soviet satire in which the Devil visits Moscow, and is considered one of the great literary works of the 20th Century.
Patti explains, "That dog was loyal for 2,000 years on the edge of heaven while Pilate was waiting for Jesus Christ to speak to him. The dog didn't run around heaven looking for bones. He sat at his master's feet. I thought that is true loyalty and used it as a fun metaphor for all the loyalty I've experienced."
'Banga' is Pontius Pilate's dog in Mikhail Bulgakov's 1937 novel 'The Master And Margarita'. Not published until 1967, the novel is a fierce anti-Soviet satire in which the Devil visits Moscow, and is considered one of the great literary works of the 20th Century.
Patti explains, "That dog was loyal for 2,000 years on the edge of heaven while Pilate was waiting for Jesus Christ to speak to him. The dog didn't run around heaven looking for bones. He sat at his master's feet. I thought that is true loyalty and used it as a fun metaphor for all the loyalty I've experienced."