Amedeo Nazzari
Amedeo Nazzari | |
---|---|
Amedeo Nazzari (left) and Edy Vessel in 1959 | |
Born |
Amedeo Carlo Leone Buffa 10 December 1907 Cagliari, Italy |
Died |
5 November 1979 71) Rome, Italy | (aged
Years active | 1936–76 |
Spouse(s) | Irene Genna (1957–79; his death) |
Amedeo Nazzari (10 December 1907, in Cagliari – 5 November 1979) was an Italian actor. Nazzari was one of the leading figures of Italian classic cinema, often considered a local variant of the Australian-American star Errol Flynn. Although he emerged as a star during the Fascist era, Nazzari's popularity continued well into the post-war years.
Early career
Amedeo Nazzari was born as Amedeo Carlo Leone Buffa in Cagliari, Sardinia in 1907 and he later adopted as his professional name the name of his maternal grandfather, Amedeo Nazzari, a person who had been the President of the Court of Appeal of Vicenza in Venetia and later took the same position in Cagliari. Although Salvatore Amedeo eventually moved to Rome, he always retained a slight trace of his native Sardinian accent.[1] While Nazzari was keen on gaining film contracts much of his early experience was in the theatre. He entered a contest organised by Twentieth Century Fox to find an Italian actor to fill the boots of the recently deceased screen star Rudolph Valentino, but lost out to Alberto Rabagliati.[2] He was rejected after screen tests by Italian professionals, who found him too tall, thin and thought he had a too gloomy expression.[3]
Nazzari made his debut in Ginevra degli Almieri (1935), following a recommendation from Elsa Merlini.[4] His first read role came with the 1936 film Cavalry, and he followed it up with The Castiglioni Brothers (1937). His breakthrough came with the 1938 film Luciano Serra, Pilot (1938) where he played a First World War veteran who returns to fight for Italy during the Abyssinian War. Nazzari was transformed into a matinee idol, the most bankable star of Italian cinema.[5] Following the film, Nazzari was invited to join the Fascist Party by Benito Mussolini, but declined saying "Thank You Duce! I would prefer not to concern myself with politics, occupied as I am with more pressing artistic commitments".[6]
Stardom
Despite declining to join the party Nazzari, along with a handful of other actor such as Fosco Giachetti, was considered the model of a Male Hero. Most of his film roles from this point present him as a masculine (often military) figure. His emergence as a star coincided with a major drive by the Italian government to rebuild the country's film industry which had declined since its heyday in the silent era.
This policy involved large-scale government funding of films and the construction of the massive Cinecittà studio complex in Rome. The number of films produced each year climbed rapidly, with Nazarri a particularly prolific actor (making six films in 1939 and eight in 1941).[7] During the era he appeared opposite most of the leading Italian actresses including Alida Valli, Lilia Silvi, Luisa Ferida, Mariella Lotti, Assia Noris, Vera Carmi and Clara Calamai, often more than once.
Nazzari was almost always cast as a straightforward hero, and he closely protected his public persona to avoid any negative roles. An exception was the historical comedy-drama film The Jester's Supper (1942) in which he plays a loutish figure. Nazzari made four films with Alida Valli, including Unjustified Absence (1939).
Following Italy's entry into the Second World War in 1940, he combined romances and comedies, with occasional more propagandistic productions. Amongst the more political was Bengasi (1942), an anti-British war film set in Libya. Nazzari portrays an Italian patriot who masquerades as a collaborator with the British occupiers of Bengazi in order to steal their battle plans. It was the only time he featured alongside the other great male star of the era, Fosco Giachetti.
Later career
Star of Italian cinema during the 40's and 50's. He made several melodramas with Raffaello Matarazzo, such as Catene in 1949. Nazzari acts himself in Federico Fellini's Nights of Cabiria.
Awards
- David di Donatello Special David, For a life dedicated to cinema with passionate professionality and extraordinary success.
- Venice Film Festival Best Actor in the Year of Count Volpi's Concession for Caravaggio, il pittore maledetto, 1941
- Nastro d'Argento Best Actor for Il bandito, 1947
Selected filmography
- Cavalry (1936) as Umberto Solaro
- Ginevra degli Almieri (1936) as Antonio Rondinelli
- La fossa degli angeli (1937) as Pietro
- The Castiglioni Brothers (1937) as Fulvio Castiglioni
- The Count of Brechard (1938) as Francesco di Bréchard
- Luciano Serra, Pilot (1938) as Luciano Serra
- Fuochi d'artificio (1938) as Gerardo di Jersay
- La casa del peccato (1938) as Giulio
- La grande luce (1939) as Rocco Moretti
- Unjustified Absence (1939) as Il dottore Carlo Cristiani
- Cose dell'altro mondo (1939) as Jack Morison / L'ispettore generale Garner
- La notte delle beffe (1939) as Capatosta
- È sbarcato un marinaio (1940) as Gianni / Hans
- Centomila dollari (1940) as Woods
- Oltre l'amore (1940) as Pietro Mirilli
- Dopo divorzieremo (1940) as Phil Gilder
- Scarpe grosse (1940) as Stefano Di Marco
- Yó soy mi rival (1940) as Pietro Lanfranchi
- L'uomo del romanzo (1940) as Pietro Lanfranchi
- Caravaggio (1941) as Michelangelo Merisi, il "Caravaggio"
- I mariti (1941) as Fabio Regoli
- Scampolo (1941) as Tito Sacchi
- Il cavaliere senza nome (1941) as Bernardino Visconti
- Villa da vendere (1941) as Franco Gádori
- L'ultimo ballo (1941) as Il professore Stefano Boronkay
- Sancta Maria (1942) as Paolo Wronski
- The Jester's Supper (1942) as Neri Chiaramontesi
- Bengasi (1942) as Filippo Colleoni
- Sleeping Beauty (1942) as Salvatore detto 'Il Nero della solfara'
- Fedora (1942) as Loris Ipanov / Ivan Petrovic
- La bisbetica domata (1942) as Petruccio
- Romanzo di un giovane povero (1942) as Massimo Doriot
- Giorni felici (1942) as Michele
- Quelli della montagna (1943) as Il tenente Andrea Fontana
- Harlem (1943) as Amedeo Rossi
- Apparizione (1943) as Amedeo Nazzari
- Grazia (1963)
- La donna della montagna (1944) as Rodolfo Morigi
- The Ten Commandments (1945) (segment "Non desiderare la donna d'altri")
- Un giorno nella vita (1946) as Captain De Palma
- Il bandito (1946) as Ernesto
- Malacarne (1946) as Zù Bastiano
- Il cavaliere del sogno (1947) as Gaetano Donizetti
- When the Angels Sleep (1947) as Blin
- Fatalità (1947) as Renato Salesi
- The Captain's Daughter (1947) as Pugaciov, il tsar Piotr III°
- Unexpected Conflict (1948) as Damian, the butler
- Legge di sangue (1948)
- Don Juan de Serrallonga (1949) as Don Juan de Serrallonga
- Romanticismo (1949) as Vitaliano Lamberti
- L'Invasore (1949) as Il conte Carlo di Valfreda
- The Wolf of the Sila (1949) as Rocco Barra
- Marmolada (1950)
- Torment (1950) as Carlo Guarnieri
- Chains (1950) as Guglielmo Aniello
- Il vedovo allegro (1950) as Il professore De Carlo
- Alina (1950) as Giovanni
- Barrier to the North (1950) as Major Mauri
- Donne e briganti (1950) as Michele Pezza detto 'Fra Diavolo'
- Il Brigante Musolino (1950) as Beppe Musolino
- Lebbra bianca (1951) as Francesco Leverrier, ispettore di polizia
- Double Cross (1951) as Pietro Vanzetti
- Last Meeting (1951) as Piero Castelli
- Nobody's Children (1951) as Guido Canali
- Volver a la vida (1951)
- Amori e veleni (1952) as Franco Santinelli
- We Are All Murderers (1952) as Docteur Detouche (version italienne)
- Sensualità (1952) as Riccardo Sartori
- Processo alla città (1952) as Prosecutor Antonio Spicacci
- The Bandit of Tacca Del Lupo (1952) as Capt. Giordani
- Altri tempi (1952) as Andrea Fabbri (segment "La morsa")
- The Flame (1952) as Colonel Felt
- Who is Without Sin (1952) as Stefano Brunot
- Il mondo le condanna (1953) as Paolo Martelli
- Un marito per Anna Zaccheo (1953) as Il dottor Illuminato
- I Always Loved You (1953) as Massimo
- Pietà per chi cade (1954) as Carlo Savelli
- Torna! (1954) - Roberto Varesi
- Les Révoltés de Lomanach (1954) as Jacques Barnaud
- Appassionatamente (1954) as Andrea Morandi
- Proibito (1954) as Costantino Corraine
- The White Angel (1955) as L'ingegnere Guido Carani
- L'ultimo amante (1955) as Cesare Monti
- The Intruder (1956) as Carlo Conti
- Nights of Cabiria (1957) as Alberto Lazzari
- Le notti di Cabiria (1957) as Alberto Lazzari
- La puerta abierta (1957) as Michel de Caroli
- Anna di Brooklyn (1958) as Ciccone
- Il cielo brucia (1958) as Carlo Casati
- Melancholic Autumn (1958) as Andrea, capitano del mercantile
- La Maja desnuda (1958) as Prime Minister Manuel Godoy
- Policarpo (1959) as The Carabiniere (uncredited)
- Il mondo dei miracoli (1959) as Il presentatore alla conferenza stampa
- Labyrinth (1959) as Professor De Lattre
- Carmen la de Ronda (1959) as Coronel
- Il raccomandato di ferro (1959) as The State Secretary
- Carthage in Flames (1959)
- La contessa azzurra (1960) as Salvatore Acierno
- Antinea, l'amante della città sepolta (1961) as Tamal
- Nefertiti, Queen of the Nile (1961) as Amenophis IV
- I due nemici (1961) as Maj. Fornari
- The Corsican Brothers (1961) as Orlandi
- Finden Sie, daß Constanze sich richtig verhält? (1962)
- Odio mortale (1962) as Ruiz / André Leboeuf
- La leggenda di Fra Diavolo (1962) as General Hugo
- Straße der Verheißung (1962) as Herr im seidenen Anzug
- The Shortest Day (1963) as Soldato strabico col pallottoliere
- Frenesia dell'estate (1964) as Count Marcello della Pietra
- Donde tú estés (1964) as Max Branzeri
- Il Gaucho (1964) as Marucchelli
- Le monachine (1965) as Livio Bertana
- Delitto d'amore (1966) as François Derroux
- The Poppy Is Also a Flower (1966) as Captain Di Nonno
- Spy Today, Die Tomorrow (1967) as Bardo Baretti
- The Column (1968) as imparatur Traian
- Le clan des siciliens (1969) as Tony Nicosia
- The Valachi Papers (1972) as Gaetano Reina
- A Matter of Time (1976) as Tewfik
- Derrick (season 3, episode 14: "Der Mann aus Portofino"; 1976) as Dr. Pinaldi
- Melodrammore (1977) as Himself
References
Bibliography
- Amedeo Nazzari written by Piero Pruzzo and Enrico Lancia. Collana "Le stelle filanti", Gremese Editore, Roma, 1983.
- Amedeo Nazzari. Il divo,l'uomo, l'attore by Simone Casavecchia, with an interview to Evelina Nazzari, Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia (Roma, 2007) in the 100 Anniversary of the birth of the actor (1907/2007). Sito ufficiale del C.S.C.
- Amedeo Buffa in arte Nazzari written by Maria Evelina Buffa. Collana "Cinema italiano", Edizioni Sabinae, Roma, 2008.
- Gundle, Stephen. Mussolini's Dream Factory: Film Stardom in Fascist Italy. Berghahn Books, 2013.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Amedeo Nazzari. |