Aldo Fabrizi(1905-1990)
- Actor
- Writer
- Director
Beloved, hugely popular Italian comic character actor/writer/director,
in music halls and variety shows for much of his early career. Fabrizi
entered films in 1942 and often wrote and directed his vehicles,
winning international acclaim in the Roberto Rossellini's neorealist
drama
Rome, Open City (1945), in
which he played a priest who bravely defies the fascist regime. Heavy
in heart and girth, he performed primarily in Neopolitan films for over
four decades. Such notable post-war films include To Live in Peace
(1946), Professor My Son (1946), Flesh Will Surrender (1947), Escape
Into Dreams (1948), Immigrants (1949), Cops and Robbers (1951), Five
Paupers in an Automobile 1952), Of Life and Love (1954) and The Teacher
and the Miracle (1957), all co-written by Fabrizi. A master of the
double take, he adapted equally well to comedy and drama, but did not
earn much recognition in America. He devoted much of his time in later
years to the culinary arts, writing several cookbooks and related
poetry. He died of a heart ailment in his 85th year.