Mastroianni



Mastroianni

Marcello Mastroianni

Marcello Mastroianni in 1958
BornMarcello Vincenzo Domenico Mastroianni
September 28, 1924(1924-09-28)
Fontana Liri, Italy
DiedDecember 19, 1996 (aged 72)
Paris, France
Years active1947–1996
Spouse(s)Flora Carabella (1926-1996)
Awards won
BAFTA Awards
Best Actor in a Leading Role
1963 Divorce, Italian Style
1964 Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow
César Awards
Honorary César
1993 Lifetime Achievement
Golden Globe Awards
Best Actor - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
1963 Divorce, Italian Style
Other Awards
Best Actor Award (Cannes Film Festival)
1970 The Pizza Triangle
1987 Dark Eyes
Volpi Cup for Best Actor
1989 What Time Is It?
Volpi Cup for Best Supporting Actor
1993 Un, deux, trois, soleil
NBR Award for Best Cast
1994 Prêt-à-Porter

Marcello Vincenzo Domenico Mastroianni (September 28, 1924 – December 19, 1996) was a two-time Best Actor, two-time Volpi Coppa, two-time BAFTA, six-time David di Donatello, eight-time Silver Ribbon, two-time Sant Jordi Award, two-time Golden Globe and three-time Academy Award nominated Italian film actor, considered by many the best Italian actor of all time.

Born in Fontana Liri, a small village in the Apennines, Mastroianni grew up in Turin and Rome. During World War II, he was interned in a Nazi prison, but he escaped and hid in Venice.

In 1945, he started working for a film company and began taking acting lessons. His film debut was in I Miserabili (1947).

He soon became a major international star, starring in Big Deal on Madonna Street; and in Federico Fellini's La dolce vita with Anita Ekberg in 1960, where he played a disillusioned and self-loathing tabloid columnist who spends his days and nights exploring Rome's high society.

Mastroianni followed La dolce vita with another signature role, that of a film director who, amidst self-doubt and troubled love affairs, finds himself in a creative block while making a movie in Fellini's .

Mastroianni was married to Italian actress Flora Carabella (1926 - 1999) from 1948 until his death. They had one child together, Barbara. His brother Ruggero Mastroianni (1929 - 1996) was a highly regarded film editor who not only edited a number of his brother's films, but appeared alongside Marcello in Scipione detto anche l'Africano, a sword and sandals film released in 1971.

He also had a daughter, Chiara Mastroianni, with the actress Catherine Deneuve, his longtime lover during the seventies. Both Flora and Catherine were at his bedside when he died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 72, as was his partner at the time, author and filmmaker Anna Maria Tato.

According to Christopher Wiegand and Paul Duncan in their book Federico Fellini, when Mastroianni died in 1996, the Trevi Fountain, which is so famously associated with him due to his role in Fellini's La dolce vita, was symbolically turned off and draped in black as a tribute.

With Jack Lemmon, Mastroianni is the only actor to have won twice Best Actor at the Cannes Film Festival: in 1970 for Dramma della gelosia - tutti i particolari in cronaca and in 1987 for Dark Eyes.

Academy Award Nominations

  • 1963 – Best Actor – Divorce, Italian Style
  • 1978 – Best Actor – A Special Day
  • 1988 – Best Actor – Dark Eyes

Filmography

  • I miserabili by Riccardo Freda (1948)
  • Domenica d'agosto by Luciano Emmer (1949)
  • Cuori sul mare by Giorgio Bianchi (1949)
  • Vita da cani by Steno and Mario Monicelli (1950)
  • Contro la legge by Flavio Calzavara (1950)
  • Atto d'accusa by Giacomo Gentilomo (1950)
  • Parigi è sempre Parigi by Luciano Emmer (1951)
  • Cinque mamme ed una culla - Passaporto per l'oriente by Montgomery Tully, Romolo Marcellini (1951)
  • Sensualità by Clemente Fracassi (1951)
  • L'eterna catena by Anton Giulio Majano (1951)
  • Viale della speranza by Dino Risi (1952)
  • Tragico ritorno by Pier Luigi Faraldo (1952)
  • Penne nere by Oreste Biancoli (1952)
  • Le ragazze di Piazza di Spagna by Luciano Emmer (1952)
  • Non è mai troppo tardi by Filippo Walter Ratti (1953)
  • Gli eroi della domenica by Mario Camerini (1953)
  • Lulù by Fernando Cerchio (1953)
  • Febbre di vivere by Claudio Gora (1953)
  • Giorni d'amore by Giuseppe De Santis (1954)
  • La principessa delle Canarie by Paolo Moffa (1954)
  • Cronache di poveri amanti by Carlo Lizzani (1954)
  • Schiava del peccato by Raffaello Matarazzo (1954)
  • Tempi nostri - Zibaldone N.2 by Alessandro Blasetti (1954)
  • Tam tam Mayumbe by Gian Gaspare Napolitano (1955)
  • Il bigamo by Luciano Emmer (1955)
  • La bella mugnaia by Mario Camerini (1955)
  • Peccato che sia una canaglia by Alessandro Blasetti (1955)
  • La fortuna di essere donna by Alessandro Blasetti (1956)
  • Il momento più bello by Glauco Pellegrini (1956)
  • Il medico e lo steegone by Mario Monicelli (1957)
  • Le notti bianche by Luchino Visconti (1957)
  • Padri e figli by Mario Monicelli (1957)
  • La ragazza della salina by Frantisek Cap (1957)
  • Un ettaro di cielo by Aglauco Casadio (1957)
  • Amore e guai by Angelo Dorigo(1958)
  • I soliti ignoti by Mario Monicelli (1958)
  • Tutti innamorati by Giuseppe Orlandini (1958)
  • Racconti d'estate by Gianni Franciolini (1958)
  • Ferdinando I, re di Napoli by Gianni Franciolini (1959)
  • Il nemico di mia moglie - Il marito bello by Gianni Puccini (1959)
  • La Legge by Jules Dassin (1959)
  • Adua e le compagne by Antonio Pietrangeli (1960)
  • La dolce vita by Federico Fellini (1960)
  • Il bell'Antonio by Mauro Bolognini (1960)
  • L'assassino by Elio Petri (1960)
  • La notte by Michelangelo Antonioni (1960)
  • Vita privata by Louis Malle (1961)
  • Fantasmi a Roma by Antonio Pietrangeli (1961)
  • by Federico Fellini (1962)
  • Divorzio all'italiana by Pietro Germi (1962)
  • Cronaca familiare by Valerio Zurlini (1962)
  • I compagni by Mario Monicelli (1963)
  • Ieri, oggi, domani by Vittorio De Sica (1963)
  • Matrimonio all'italiana by Vittorio De Sica (1964)
  • Oggi, domani e dopodomani by Luciano Salce, Marco Ferreri, Eduardo De Filippo (1965)
  • Io, io, io... e gli altri by Alessandro Blasetti (1965)
  • La decima vittima by Elio Petri (1965)
  • Casanova 70 by Mario Monicelli (1965)
  • Break-up by Marco Ferreri, re-cut from the episode of Oggi, domani e dopodomani (1965)
  • Spara forte, più forte... non capisco! by Eduardo De Filippo (1966)
  • Lo straniero by Luchino Visconti (1967)
  • Amanti by Vittorio De Sica (1968)
  • Diamanti a colazione by Christopher Morahan (1968)
  • I Girasoli by Vittorio De Sica (1969)
  • Scipione detto anche l'africano by Luigi Magni (1970)
  • Leo The Last by John Boorman (1970)
  • Dramma della gelosia - tutti i particolari in cronaca by Ettore Scola (1970)
  • Giochi particolari by Franco Indovina (1971)
  • Permette? Rocco Papaleo by Ettore Scola (1971)
  • La moglie del prete by Dino Risi (1971)
  • ...Correva l'anno di grazia 1870 by Alfredo Giannetti (1971)
  • La cagna by Marco Ferreri (1972)
  • What? by Roman Polanski (1972)
  • Tempo d'amore by Nadine Marquand Trintignant (1972)
  • Rappresaglia


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