
He’s been referred to as the “mustachioed matinee idol,” but a newfound interest in 1950s melodramas has made him an international art house legend. Amedeo Nazzari was born Salvatore Amedeo Buffa on Dec. 10, 1907, in Sardinia. Assuming his maternal grandfather’s last name and moving to Rome during the 1930s to pursue a career in acting, he found an immediate place in theater but had a tough time breaking into film because of his towering height and slim build.
Nazzari landed small film parts during the mid-’30s before scoring the title role in Goffredo Alessandrini’s 1938 “Luciano Serra, pilota” (Luciano Serra, Pilot), about an American pilot attacked by Ethiopian soldiers. The film was awarded the Mussolini Cup for Best Italian Film at the 6th Venice International Film Festival and launched Nazzari’s silver screen career.
SOURCE: http://italiancinemaarttoday.blogspot.com
Dear Friends, New York Italians in collaboration with Fordham University, Department...
Actress and director Penny Marshall, whose love of sports made her a regular in the Los An...
The Russo Brothers were a pair of the Marvel Cinematic Universe's best directors even prio...
Recently, actor Vincent Piazza, who plays up-and-coming gangster Lucky Luciano on the show...
With films like Two Family House and City Island, director Raymond De Felitta found easy c...
'Buongiorno papà' di Edoardo Leo, film sui quarantenni single in Italia, interpretato da R...
Parts of Western New York have transformed into movie sets as crews filming "Cabrini" take...
The Los Angeles Film Critics Assn. had lots of love for Luca Guadagnino’s “Call Me by Your...