Djina lolobridjida biography of abraham
Gina Lollobrigida
Italian actress (–)
Luigia "Gina" Lollobrigida[a]OMRI[3] (4 July – 16 January ) was an Italian actress, model, and photojournalist. She was one of the highest-profile European actresses of the s and s, a period in which she was an international sex symbol.
Dubbed "the most beautiful woman in the world",[4] at the time of her death she was among the last surviving high-profile international actors from the Golden Age of Hollywood cinema.
As her film career slowed, Lollobrigida established a second career as a photojournalist. In the s she achieved a scoop by gaining access to Fidel Castro for an exclusive interview.
Lollobrigida continued as an active supporter of Italian and Italian-American causes, particularly the National Italian American Foundation (NIAF). In she received the NIAF Lifetime Achievement Award at the Foundation's Anniversary Gala.[5][6] In , she sold her jewellery collection and donated the nearly US$5 million from the sale to benefit stem-cell therapy research.[7] She won the Henrietta Award at the 18th Golden Globe Awards.
Youth
Luigia Lollobrigida was born in Subiaco, Lazio, about 64 kilometres (40mi) from Rome, the daughter of a furniture maker and his wife.[8] She had three sisters: Giuliana, Maria and Fernanda. After the end of World War II in , the family moved to Rome, where Lollobrigida took singing lessons, did some modelling, and participated in several beauty contests, placing third in the Miss Italy contest.
In , she began appearing in Italian films in minor roles.[9]
In at age 18, Lollobrigida played a part in the comedy Santarellina by Eduardo Scarpetta at the Teatro della Concordia of Monte Castello di Vibio,[9] the smallest theatre all'italiana in the world.[10]
Acting career
Film
In , Howard Hughes signed Lollobrigida on a preliminary seven-year contract to make three pictures a year.
She refused the final terms of the contract, preferring to remain in Europe, and Hughes suspended her.[11] Despite selling RKO Pictures in , Hughes retained Lollobrigida's contract. The dispute prevented her from working in American movies filmed in the U.S. until , but allowed for American productions shot in Europe, although Hughes often threatened legal action against the producers.[11]
Her performance in the Italian romantic comedy Bread, Love and Dreams (Pane, amore e fantasia, ) led to its becoming a box-office success[11] and her receiving a BAFTA nomination.
Furthermore, she won a Nastro d'Argento award from the Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists for her role in the picture. Lollobrigida appeared in The Wayward Wife () and in Woman of Rome (). These were three of her most renowned Italian films, but she worked also in the French industry on such films as Fearless Little Soldier (Fanfan la Tulipe, ), Beauties of the Night (Les Belles de nuit, ), and Le Grand Jeu ().[12][13]
Her first widely seen English-language film, Beat the Devil (), was shot in Italy, and directed by John Huston.[14] In this film she played the wife of Humphrey Bogart, with Jennifer Jones and Robert Morley as her costars.
She then took part in the Italian-American production Crossed Swords (), co-starring with Errol Flynn. Her performance in The World's Most Beautiful Woman (also known as Beautiful But Dangerous, ) led to her receiving the first David di Donatello for Best Actress award.[9] In this movie Lollobrigida played Italian soprano Lina Cavalieri and sang all the songs in the movie, including arias from Tosca, in her own voice.[15] She played the principal female lead in the circus drama Trapeze ()[8] directed by Carol Reed and co-starring with Burt Lancaster and Tony Curtis and in The Hunchback of Notre Dame () appeared as Esmeralda with Anthony Quinn as Quasimodo.[8] The film was directed by Jean Delannoy.[9]
She appeared in the French movie The Law (), alongside Yves Montand and Marcello Mastroianni; then, she co-starred with Frank Sinatra in Never So Few () and with Yul Brynner in Solomon and Sheba ().[8] The latter was the last film directed by King Vidor and features a dance routine which was supposed to depict an orgy scene.
Brynner had been chosen to substitute for Tyrone Power, who died before the shots were completed.[16]
In the romantic comedy Come September (), Lollobrigida had a leading role along with Rock Hudson, Sandra Dee, and Bobby Darin. It was a film for which she won a Golden Globe Award. She appeared, also in , with Ernest Borgnine and Anthony Franciosa in the drama Go Naked in the World.[13]
She attended the Academy Awards ceremony, hosted by Bob Hope, delivering the Academy Award for Best Director to Billy Wilder for the film The Apartment.[17]
Jean Delannoy then directed her again, this time in Venere Imperiale ().
She co-starred with Stephen Boyd and received Nastro d'Argento and David di Donatello awards. She co-starred with Sean Connery in the thriller Woman of Straw (), with Rock Hudson again in Strange Bedfellows (), and appeared with Alec Guinness in Hotel Paradiso ().[18]
Lollobrigida starred in Buona Sera, Mrs.
Campbell () with Shelley Winters, Phil Silvers, Peter Lawford, and Telly Savalas.[19] For this role, she was nominated for a Golden Globe Award and won a third David di Donatello award. Lollobrigida co-starred with Bob Hope in the comedy The Private Navy of Sgt. O'Farrell () and also accompanied Hope on his visits to military troops overseas.[19]
During this stage of her career, she rejected roles in many films, including Lady L () with Tony Curtis, directed by George Cukor, due to conflicts with Cukor (the leading role then went to Sophia Loren);[citation needed]Five Branded Women (), directed by Martin Ritt (the leading role went to Silvana Mangano);[citation needed] and The Lady Without Camelias (), directed by Michelangelo Antonioni (the leading role went to Lucia Bosè).[20] She later revealed regret for having refused a supporting role in La Dolce Vita ().
The film's director, Federico Fellini, wanted to cast her in the film but, she explained, proposed projects were arriving too often at the time and her husband accidentally misplaced the script.[citation needed]
By the s, her film career had slowed down. She appeared in King, Queen, Knave (), co-starring with David Niven,[21] and in a few other poorly received productions in the early part of the decade.[citation needed] In , she was a member of the jury at the 8th Moscow International Film Festival.[22]
Television
In the mids, she guest starred in a multi-episode arc on the television series Falcon Crest as Francesca Gioberti, a role originally written for Sophia Loren, who had turned it down.
For the role, she received a third Golden Globe nomination.[citation needed] She also had a supporting role in the television miniseries Deceptions, co-starring with Stefanie Powers.[citation needed] The following year, she appeared as a guest star in the TV series The Love Boat.[23]
Judging
In , she was invited to head the jury at the 36th Berlin International Film Festival, which awarded the Golden Bear to Reinhard Hauff's film Stammheim.
She said the majority decision was "prefabricated", and opposed it.[24] In she was in the jury at Film Fest Gent and similarly distanced herself from the Grand Prix winner The Witman Boys, which she deemed 'immoral'.[25][26]
Photojournalism
By the end of the s, Lollobrigida had embarked on what she developed into a successful second career as a photographic journalist.
She photographed, among others, Paul Newman, Salvador Dalí, Henry Kissinger, David Cassidy, Audrey Hepburn, Ella Fitzgerald, and the Germany national football team. In she managed to obtain an exclusive interview with Cuban leader Fidel Castro.[27][28] Between and she published six collections of her photographs, including the title Italia Mia.[29]
Politics
In , Lollobrigida unsuccessfully ran for election to the European Parliament as a candidate for The Democrats, a party led by Romano Prodi.[30] In , she publicly endorsed Pope Francis' view on LGBT rights.[31] In the Italian general election, Lollobrigida, at the age of 95, attempted to win a seat in the Senate of the Republic,[32] by standing for election as candidate for the Sovereign and Popular Italy (ISP), a newly founded Eurosceptic alliance opposed to Mario Draghi, in Latina, Lazio.[30][33] She was unsuccessful, as the party garnered only 1% of the constituency vote, below the 3% electoral threshold.[33] In an interview with Corriere della Sera prior to the election, Lollobrigida said she was inspired by Mahatma Gandhi's "way of doing things".
She also claimed to have been close to Indira Gandhi.[30]
Personal life
In Lollobrigida married a Slovenian physician, Milko Škofič. Their only child, Andrea Milko (Milko Škofič Jr.), was born on 28 July [34][35] Škofič gave up the practice of medicine to become her manager.[36] In , Lollobrigida moved from her native Italy to Toronto, with Škofič and their son.[37] The couple meant to solve the legal situation of their son who was considered stateless by the Italian bureaucracy.[38] The couple divorced in [39]
In October , at age 79, she announced to Spain's ¡Hola! magazine her engagement to a year-old Spanish businessman, Javier Rigau y Rafols[40][1][2] (Catalan: Javier Rigau i Ràfols).[41][42]
They had met at a party in Monte Carlo in and had since become companions.[43] The engagement was called off on 6 December , reportedly because of the strain of intense media interest.[44]
In Lollobrigida and Rigau signed a prenuptial agreement and married in Spain.[1][45]
In January , she started legal action against Rigau, claiming that her ex-boyfriend had staged a secret ceremony in which he "married" an imposter pretending to be her at a registry office in Barcelona.
She said he intended to lay claim to her estate after her death. Lollobrigida accused Rigau of fraud, saying that he had earlier obtained the legal right to act on her behalf with a power of attorney, and carried out the plot to get extra power. "A while ago he convinced me to give him my power of attorney.
He needed it for some legal affairs. But instead, I fear that he took advantage of the fact that I don't understand Spanish Who knows what he had me sign."[46] In March , she lost her court action, but subsequently said that she would appeal.[1][47]
Lollobrigida had a habit of referring to herself in the third person.[48][49][50][51]
Lollobrigida retired from filming in She told PARADE in April "I studied painting and sculpting at school and became an actress by mistake I've had many lovers and still have romances.
I am very spoiled. All my life, I've had too many admirers." After retirement she divided her time between her house on Via Appia Antica in Rome and a villa in Monte Carlo. After , she refused visitors to her home.[46]
In , Lollobrigida sold her jewelry collection through Sotheby's. She donated nearly $5 million to benefit stem-cell therapy.[7]
In , the Roman Rota, with the consent of Pope Francis, issued a declaration of nullity for her marriage with Rigau after a two-year review.[52][53][54]
At the end of the s, Andrea Piazzolla became Lollobrigida's main collaborator,[55][56][57] general director and trustee of some Monegasque real estate and financial societies.
In July he was charged for circumvention of an incapable person.[58][59]
In , the Italian Supreme Court of Cassation, at the request of her son, ruled that Lollobrigida should have a legal guardian appointed to manage her affairs and prevent predation. Although the court determined she was mentally capable, medical evidence had indicated that there was "a weakening in her correct perception of reality" and that she was in a state of "vulnerability".[60]
Lollobrigida died at a clinic in Rome on 16 January , at the age of She is buried in her birthplace, Subiaco, Lazio.[61][62]
The lawyer and politician, and current Minister of Agriculture of Italy, Francesco Lollobrigida, is her great-nephew.[63][64]
In , sports media noted that Olympic speed skating silver medalist Francesca Lollobrigida is her great-niece, though the two had never met.[65][66]
In November , Andrea Piazzolla was convicted of embezzling Lollobrigida's millions.[67]
Awards and nominations
Lollobrigida won three David di Donatello, two Nastro d'Argento, and six Bambi awards.
She was nominated three times for the Golden Globe and won once in as World Film Favorite– Female.[68] She was nominated once for a BAFTA award.
In , she was nominated as an officer of France's Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by Jack Lang, for her achievements in photography and sculpture.
Lollobrigida was awarded the Légion d'honneur by François Mitterrand.[69]
On 16 October , Lollobrigida was nominated as a Goodwill Ambassador of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization.[70]
On 1 February , Lollobrigida received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[71]
Books
- Italia mia () – a collection of photographs across Italy[72]
- The Philippines () – a collection of photographs across the Philippines[73]
- Wonder of Innocence () – a book of photographs[74]
- Sculptures ()[75]
- Gina Lollobrigida Photographer () – a book of her photography
- Gina Lollobrigida "Vissi D'Arte" () – a book of her sculptures and some of her drawings and paintings
Filmography
Film
Year | Film | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Lucia di Lammermoor | |||
This Wine of Love | |||
Black Eagle | Girl at party | ||
When Love Calls | |||
Pagliacci | Nedda | ||
Flesh Will Surrender | Dancer | ||
A Man About the House | Young girl | ||
Mad About Opera | Dora | ||
Alarm Bells | Agostina | ||
The Bride Can't Wait | Donata Venturi | ||
The White Line | Donata Sebastian | ||
A Dog's Life | Rita Buton | ||
My Beautiful Daughter | Lisetta Minneci | ||
Alina | Alina | ||
A Tale of Five Cities | Maria Severini | ||
The Young Caruso | Stella | ||
Four Ways Out | Daniela | ||
Love I Haven't But But | Gina | ||
Attention!
Bandits! | Anna | ||
Wife For a Night (Moglie per una notte) | Ottavia | ||
Times Gone By | Mariantonia Desiderio | ||
Fanfan la Tulipe | Adeline La Franchise | ||
Beauties of the Night | Leila, Cashier | ||
The Wayward Wife | Gemma Vagnuzzi | ||
Bread, Love and Dreams | Maria De Ritis | Nominated – BAFTA Award for Best Foreign Actress Nastro d'Argento for Best Actress | |
The Unfaithfuls | Lulla Possenti | ||
Beat the Devil | Maria Dannreuther | USA-UK-Italy | |
Boum sur Paris | Herself | ||
Woman of Rome | Adriana | ||
Bread, Love and Jealousy | Maria De Ritis | ||
Crossed Swords | Francesca | ||
Le Grand Jeu | Sylvia Sorrego, Helena Ricci | ||
Beautiful but Dangerous | Lina Cavalieri | David di Donatello for Best Actress | |
Trapeze | Lola | ||
The Hunchback of Notre Dame | Esmeralda | ||
Anna of Brooklyn | Anna | ||
The Law | Marietta | ||
Never So Few | Carla Vesari | ||
Solomon and Sheba | Queen of Sheba | ||
Go Naked in the World | Giulietta Cameron | ||
Come September | Lisa Helena Fellini | Golden Globe Henrietta Award, World Film Favorite – Female | |
Lykke og krone (documentary) | |||
La bellezza di Ippolita | Ippolita | ||
Imperial Venus | Paulette Bonaparte | David di Donatello for Best Actress Nastro d'Argento for Best Actress | |
Mad Sea | Margherita | ||
Woman of Straw | Maria Marcello | ||
Me, Me, Me and the Others | Titta | ||
Le Bambole (The Dolls) | Beatrice | ||
Strange Bedfellows | Toni Vincente | ||
The Love Goddesses (documentary) | |||
Pleasant Nights | Domicilla | ||
The Sultans | Liza Bortoli | ||
Hotel Paradiso | Marcelle Cotte | ||
Cervantes | Giulia Toffolo | ||
Stuntman | Evelyne Lake | ||
Death Laid an Egg | Anna | ||
The Private Navy of Sgt.
O'Farrell | Maria | ||
Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell | Carla Campbell | Nominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy David di Donatello for Best Actress | |
That Splendid November | Cettina | ||
Bad Man's River | Alicia King | ||
King, Queen, Knave | Martha Dreyer | [21] | |
The Lonely Woman | Netty | ||
Wandering Stars (documentary) | |||
One Hundred and One Nights | Professor Bébel's Wife | ||
XXL | Gaby | ||
Box Office 3D: The Filmest of Films | Herself | Cameo appearance |
Television
Year | Film | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Portrait of Gina (documentary) | Lost from until , when it turned up in a storage unit of the Ritz Hotel, Paris, where director Orson Welles had left the only copy.
Upon rediscovery, it was screened once at the Venice Film Festival, and once on German television, before Lollobrigida (who had seen the Venice screening) took legal action to have it banned, due to its unflattering portrayal of her as an ambitious young star.[78] | ||
The Adventures of Pinocchio | The Fairy with Turquoise Hair | ||
Falcon Crest | Francesca Gioberti | 5 episodes Nominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Series, Miniseries or Television Film | |
Deceptions | Princess Alessandra | Mini-series | |
The Love Boat | Carla Lucci | Season 9, "The Christmas Cruise"[23] | |
Woman of Rome | Adriana's mother | 3 episodes, television remake | |
Una donna in fuga | Eleonora Riboldi | TV movie |
Notes
References
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Djina lolobridjida biography of abraham maslow As her film career slowed, Lollobrigida established a second career as a photojournalist. I just don't have time for it all. In , Lollobrigida showcased different facets of her talent; she not only brilliantly acted in the film "The Most Beautiful Woman in the World," but also independently performed an aria from Puccini's opera "Tosca. Although the court determined she was mentally capable, medical evidence had indicated that there was "a weakening in her correct perception of reality" and that she was in a state of "vulnerability".p. Retrieved 7 July via
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Age of death, husband, child, where she was born, where she lived, career and biography]. Contro Copertina. 19 January Archived from the original on 20 January Retrieved 21 January
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- ^Butstrean, Raf (18 January ).Djina lolobridjida biography of abraham Learn more. A Dog's Life. According to the actress, a person ages if they have nothing to do. Ekaterina Kmit.
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"Everybody Picks on Lollobrigida". Archived 13 May at the Wayback Machine. The Miami News. "Off-stage, Gina's very natural, very human, and departs from this pattern only to speak about herself in the third person."
- ^Saltalamacchia, Stefania (3 May ). "Gina Lollobrigida e il matrimonio truffa con Francisco Javier Rigau a «Un giorno in Pretura" [Gina Lollobrigida and the fraudulent marriage with Francisco Javier Rigau in "A day in the District Court"].
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- ^"Gina Lollobrigida aneddoto mai svelato: "Una volta papà mi riportò a casa a forza di schiaffi!"" [Gina Lollobrigida anecdote never revealed: "Once dad brought me home by slapping!"].
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- ^Damiata, Roberta (14 September ). "Caso Lollobrigida, Andrea Piazzolla: "Mi stavo per impiccare per Gina"" [Lollobrigida case, Andrea Piazzolla: "I was about to hang myself for Gina"]. Il Giornale (in Italian).
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- ^Longo, Emanuela (17 January ). "Andrea Piazzolla assistente Gina Lollobrigida/ "Sono io a vederla piangere, per lei…"" [Andrea Piazzolla assistant Gina Lollobrigida: "It's me who sees her cry, for her"]. il Sussidiaro (in Italian). Archived
20 October