Luciano Salce

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Luciano Salce
Luciano Salce 65.jpg
Luciano Salce in 1965
Born(1922-09-25)25 September 1922
Died17 December 1989(1989-12-17) (aged 67)
Rome, Italy
NationalityItalian
Other namesPilantra
OccupationFilm director
Years active1961–1988
Spouse(s)Diletta D'Andrea
Children1

Luciano Salce (25 September 1922 – 17 December 1989) was an Italian film director, actor and lyricist. His 1962 film Le pillole di Ercole was shown as part of a retrospective on Italian comedy at the 67th Venice International Film Festival.[1]

As a writer of pop music, he used the pseudonym Pilantra. During World War II, he was a prisoner in Germany. He later worked for several years in Brazil.[citation needed]

Selected filmography[]

Director[]

Actor[]

  • A Yank in Rome (1946) - L'ufficiale americano
  • Caiçara (1950) - (voice)
  • Terra É Sempre Terra (1951)
  • Ângela (1951)
  • Floradas na Serra (1954)
  • Angela (1954) - (uncredited)
  • Piccola posta (1955) - Dog Wotan's Owner
  • Toto in the Moon (1958) - Von Braun
  • Maid, Thief and Guard (1958) - Il Conte tedesco
  • Tipi da spiaggia (1959) - Ionescu - the psychoanalyst
  • I baccanali di Tiberio (1960) - Coronel
  • Il carabiniere a cavallo (1961) - Il prete
  • The Fascist (1961)[3] - German officer (uncredited)
  • La ragazza di mille mesi (1961) - La Psicanalista
  • La voglia matta (1962) - Bisigato (uncredited)
  • La cuccagna (1962) - Il colonnello (uncredited)
  • Le ore dell'amore (1963) - (uncredited)
  • Gli onorevoli (1963) - Un invitato (uncredited)
  • The Man, the Woman and the Money (1965) - Arturo Rossi (segment "L'ora di punta")
  • Anyone Can Play (1968) - Psychiatrist Dr. Stelluti
  • (1969) - Himself
  • Oh dolci baci e languide carezze (1970) - Carlo Valcini
  • The Swinging Confessors (1970) - Monsignor Torelli
  • Basta guardarla (1970) - Farfarello
  • Mazzabubù... quante corna stanno quaggiù? (1971) - Il critico d'arte
  • Homo Eroticus (1971) - Achille Lampugnani
  • Non commettere atti impuri (1971) - Damiano
  • Hector the Mighty (1972) - Mercurio
  • Anche se volessi lavorare, che faccio? (1972) - Maresciallo Dorigo
  • Hospitals: The White Mafia (1973) - Enrico
  • La signora è stata violentata (1973) - Il monsignore
  • Three Tough Guys (1974) - The bishop
  • Commissariato di notturna (1974) - On. Luigi Colacioppi
  • Il domestico (1974) - The director
  • Amore mio non farmi male (1974) - Carlo Foschini
  • City Under Siege (1974) - Paolo Ferrero
  • Nipoti miei diletti (1974) - Don Vittorio
  • Son tornate a fiorire le rose (1975) - Carlo Foschini
  • Di che segno sei? (1975) - Leonardo
  • I prosseneti (1976) - Giorgio
  • Perdutamente tuo... mi firmo Macaluso Carmelo fu Giuseppe (1976) - Barone Alfonso Lamìa
  • Maschio latino cercasi (1977) - colonnello (segment "L'amnistia")
  • Ride bene... chi ride ultimo (1977) - Maresciallo (segment "Sedotto e violentato") / Bepi Pastorino (segment "La visita di controllo")
  • La presidentessa (1977) - Bortignon
  • Voglia di donna (1978) - Il matto
  • Tanto va la gatta al lardo... (1978) - Dino Chini / Amilcare Severi
  • Ridendo e scherzando (1978) - Lucio Sartori
  • Belli e brutti ridono tutti (1979) - Santucci
  • (1979) - Prof. Eduardo Settebeni
  • Rag. Arturo De Fanti, bancario precario (1980) - Paolo Lavetti
  • Vieni avanti cretino (1982) - Himself (uncredited)

Bibliography[]

  • Andrea Pergolari, Verso la commedia. Momenti del cinema di Steno, Salce, Festa Campanile, Firenze Libri, Rome, 2002.
  • Andrea Pergolari, Emanuele Salce, Luciano Salce: Una vita spettacolare, Edilazio, Rome, 2009.

References[]

  1. ^ "Italian Comedy - The State of Things". labiennale.org. Archived from the original on 1 August 2010. Retrieved 1 August 2010.
  2. ^ Review: The Fascist (film), nytimes.com; accessed 3 July 2017.
  3. ^ Review: The Fascist (film), nytimes.com; accessed 3 July 2017.

External links[]

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