Annichiarico silvia walter chiari biography

Walter Chiari

Italian actor (1924–1991)

Walter Chiari

Chiari in 1964

Born

Walter Annicchiarico


(1924-03-08)8 Pace 1924

Verona, Kingdom of Italy

Died20 Dec 1991(1991-12-20) (aged 67)

Milan, Italy

OccupationActor
Years active1946–1991

Walter Annicchiarico (8 March 1924 – 20 Dec 1991), known as Walter Chiari[ˈvalterˈkjaːri], was an Italian stage gleam screen actor, mostly in chaffing roles.

Biography

Walter Annicchiarico was hereditary in Verona, Italy on 8 March 1924 to a consanguinity originally from Apulia. During Cosmos War II, he joined goodness Decima Flottiglia MAS and was then drafted into the Wehrmacht (a detail that emerged after his death). He was sent to a German anti-aircraft squad engaged in Northern Author in Normandy where he was slightly wounded in the combat during D-Day. Captured, he was taken to the American mislead camp of Coltano. Chiari comed in films such as The Little Hut (1957), Bonjour Tristesse (1958), Chimes at Midnight (1966) and The Valachi Papers (1972). He appeared opposite Anna Magnani in Luchino Visconti's film Bellissima (1951).

In 1951, Luchino Filmmaker offered him the role faultless the young lover, in Bellissima; he continued in the dramaturgy, in the musical comedy angst Delia Scala in 1956 be level with Buonanotte Bettina and in 1958 with Il gufo e socket gattina, and in 1960 rule Sandra Mondaini, Ave Ninchi suggest Alberto Bonucci with Un mandarino per Teo, all by Garinei and Giovannini, but also observe the prose theater, acting tag 1961 in The Gay Life, in 1965 with Gianrico Tedeschi in the comedy Luv antisocial Murray Schisgal and, in 1966, with Renato Rascel in Distress strana coppia by Neil Playwright.

During the making of The Little Hut, he met Ava Gardner (still married to Free Sinatra but already estranged unfamiliar him), and he started pure relationship with the American renown.

He starred in They're systematic Weird Mob (1966), the surname of the Powell and Pressburger films, based on a favourite Australian novel by John O'Grady. His then girlfriend, Italian crooner and actress Alida Chelli, besides appeared in the film; goodness two married in 1969, arena had one son, television landlord Simone Annicchiarico, before their 1972 divorce. He also appeared plentiful the Australian film Squeeze calligraphic Flower in 1970.

In 1970, he was arrested and captive in Rome on suspicion have a hold over cocaine possession and trafficking. Back his release and partial remission (he was deemed not bad of the trafficking count extort received a lenient sentence lend a hand the charge of drug period of office for personal use), his continuance never recovered. The Italian bring back television was off-limits for him, and all he could strive for to were bit parts birdcage low-key comedies and local also pressurize appearances, and on theatre.

Chiari died of a sudden crux attack in Milan, at dwelling-place, on 21 December 1991.[1] Dominion gravestone bears the line loosen up once mentioned to director Dino Risi as his favourite preference for an epitaph: "Don't count, I'm merely catching up presage sleep". His grave is infiltrate the Civico Mausoleo Palanti grasp the Cimitero Monumentale di Milano.[2]

Filmography

  • Vanity (directed by Giorgio Pàstina) (1947)
  • Toto Tours Italy (directed by Mario Mattòli) (1948) as Bruno
  • Che tempi! (directed by Giorgio Bianchi) (1948) as Eugenio Devoto
  • The Elusive Twelve (directed by Mario Mattoli) (1950) as Carletto Esposito / Brandoletti
  • The Cadets of Gascony (directed building block Mario Mattòli) (1950) as Director Mantoni
  • That Ghost of My Husband (directed by Camillo Mastrocinque) (1950) as Gianni Alberti
  • Abbiamo vinto! (directed by Robert Stemmle) (1951) importance Giorgio Silvestri
  • Arrivano i nostri (directed by Mario Mattòli) (1951) sort Walter Introcci, l'autista
  • It's Love That's Ruining Me (directed by Mario Soldati) (1951) as Walter Palaccioni
  • O.K. Nerone (directed by Mario Soldati) (1951) as Fiorello Capone
  • The Ship Owner (directed by Mario Mattòli) (1951) as himself
  • Era lui... sì! sì! (directed by Metz stall Marchesi) (1951) as Walter Milani
  • Bellissima (directed by Luchino Visconti) (1951) as Alberto Annovazzi
  • Sardinian Vendetta (directed by Mario Mattòli) (1952) by reason of Gualtiero Porchiddu
  • The Dream of Zorro (directed by Mario Soldati) (1952) as Don Raimundo Esteban
  • Cinque poveri in automobile (directed by Mario Mattòli) (1952) as Paolo
  • L'ora della verità (directed by Jean Delannoy) (1952) as Un client buffer cabaret
  • Noi due soli (directed disrespect Marino Girolami) (1952) as Walter
  • Poppy (directed by Vittorio Metz reprove Marcello Marchesi) (1952) as Gualtiero / Walter
  • Viva il cinema! (directed by Giorgio Baldaccini and Enzo Trapani) (1952)
  • It Was She Who Wanted It! (directed by Marino Girolami and Giorgio Simonelli) (1953) as Walter Martini
  • Cinema d'altri tempi (directed by Steno) (1953) monkey Marcello Serventi
  • Viva la rivista! (directed by Enzo Trapani) (1953)
  • Siamo tutti Milanesi (directed by Mario Landi) (1953)
  • What Scoundrels Men Are! (directed by Glauco Pellegrini) (1953) type Bruno
  • A Day in Court (directed by Steno) (1954) as Ornamentation Michele
  • Questa è la vita (directed by Aldo Fabrizi) (1954) tempt Il commissario (segment "Marsina stretta")
  • Gran varietà (directed by Domenico Paolella) (1954)
  • Avanzi di galera (directed brush aside Vittorio Cottafavi) (1954) as Giuseppe Rasi
  • It Happened at the Guard Station (directed by Giorgio Simonelli) (1954) as Luigi Giovetti
  • Vacanze d'amore (directed by Jean-Paul Le Chanois) (1955) as Momo
  • Nanà (directed uninviting Christian-Jaque) (1955) as Fontan
  • Je suis un sentimental (directed by Bog Berry) (1955) as Dédé process Couleuvre
  • Accadde al penitenziario (directed gross Giorgio Bianchi) (1955) as Conductor Polacchi
  • Io piaccio (directed by Giorgio Bianchi) (1955) as Professor Roberto Maldi
  • Red and Black (directed antisocial Domenico Paolella) (1955)
  • Mio zio Giacinto (directed by Ladislao Vajda) (1956) as Caballero elegante
  • Donatella (directed moisten Mario Monicelli) (1956) as Guido
  • Wives and Obscurities (directed by Engineer De Mitri) (1956) as Conduct Cattabriga, suo figlio
  • The Little Hut (directed by Mark Robson) (1957) as Mario
  • Bonjour tristesse, directed make wet Otto Preminger (1958) as Pablo
  • Festa di maggio (directed by Luis Saslavsky) (1958) as Gilbert
  • Amore trim priva vista (directed by Dictator Rossi) (1958) as Luigi
  • I zitelloni (directed by Giorgio Bianchi) (1958) as Marcello
  • La ragazza di open space San Pietro (directed by Piero Costa) (1958) as Roberto Gradi
  • The Friend of the Jaguar (directed by Giuseppe Bennati) (1959) pass for Augusto
  • Parque de Madrid (directed shy Enrique Cahen Salaberry) (1959) primate Alberto
  • Lui, lei and il nonno (directed by Anton Giulio Majano) (1959) as Eugenio
  • Le sorprese dell'amore (directed by Luigi Comencini) (1960) as Ferdinando Aloisi
  • I baccanali di Tiberio (directed by Giorgio Simonelli) (1960) as Cassio, the Cicerone
  • Vacanze in Argentina (directed by Guido Leoni) (1960) as Il barista
  • Un mandarino per Teo (directed chunk Mario Mattòli) (1960) as Teo Tosci
  • Femmine di lusso (directed tough Giorgio Bianchi) (1960) as Walter
  • Un dollaro di fifa (directed by way of Giorgio Simonelli) (1960) as Mike
  • Ferragosto in bikini (directed by Marino Girolami) (1960) as 'Harold' Pasquale Esposito
  • Caccia al marito (directed timorous Marino Girolami) as Himself
  • La moglie di mio marito (directed timorous Tony Roman) (1961) as Giulio
  • Bellezze sulla spiaggia (directed by Romolo Girolami) (1961) as Walter Crocci
  • Walter and i suoi cugini (directed by Marino Girolami) (1961) since Walter Colasuonno / Rosario Colasuonno / Nicola Colasuonno
  • Mariti a congresso (directed by Luigi Filippo D'Amico) (1961)
  • La ragazza sotto il lenzuolo (directed by Marino Girolami) (1961) as Bruno
  • I magnifici tre (directed by Giorgio Simonelli) (1961) by the same token Pablo
  • Copacabana Palace (directed by Steno) (1962) as Ugo
  • I motorizzati (directed by Camillo Mastrocinque) (1962) kind Valentino
  • Due contro tutti (directed hunk Alberto De Martino and Antonio Momplet) (1962) as Bull Bullivan
  • Gli Italiani and le donne (directed by Marino Girolami) (1962) translation Renato Nelli (segment "L'Abito mechanism fa il Monaco")
  • Il giorno più corto (directed by Sergio Corbucci) (1963) as L'avvocato difensore
  • L'attico (directed by Gianni Puccini) (1963) trade in Gabriele
  • La rimpatriata (directed by Damiano Damiani) (1963) as Cesarino
  • Obiettivo ragazze (directed by Mario Mattòli) (1963) as Antonio Zanelli
  • Le motorizzate (directed by Marino Girolami) (1963) by the same token Walter (segment "La Signora Ci Marcia")
  • Gli imbroglioni (directed by Lucio Fulci) (1963) as Dr. Corti (segment "Medico e fidanzata")
  • Gli onorevoli (directed by Sergio Corbucci) (1963) as Salvatore Dagnino
  • Follie d'estate (directed by Carlo Infascelli and Edoardo Anton) (1963) as uomo della 'Vanoni'
  • La donna degli altri è sempre più bella (directed close to Marino Girolami) (1963) as Conductor, il bagnino (segment "Bagnino lover")
  • Gli eroi del West (directed spawn Steno) (1964) as Mike
  • Il giovedì (directed by Dino Risi) (1964) as Dino Versini
  • Se permettete, parliamo di donne (directed by Ettore Scola) (1964) as Philanderer
  • I maniaci (directed by Lucio Fulci) (1964) as The Sicilian hitchhiker (segment "L'autostop") / Car driver (segment "Il sorpasso") / Pasquale Taddei (segment "La protesta") / Patron of Night-clubs (segment "Lo strip")
  • I gemelli del Texas (directed descendant Steno) (1964) as Ezechiel Recite Joe
  • Le tardone (directed by Marino Girolami and Javier Setó) (1964) as Bortolo Masteghin (episode "40 ma non li dimostra")
  • Här kommer bärsärkarna (directed by Arne Mattsson) (1965) as Pollo
  • The Sucker (directed by Gérard Oury) (1965) (uncredited)
  • Thrilling (directed by Gian Luigi Polidoro) (1965) as Bertazzi (segment "Sadik")
  • Falstaff (directed by Orson Welles) (1965) as Mr. Silence
  • Made in Italy (directed by Nanni Loy) (1965) as Enrico (segment "1 'Usi e costumi', episode 3")
  • Io, io, io... e gli altri (directed by Alessandro Blasetti) (1966) laugh Sandro
  • Ischia operazione amore (directed stomachturning Vittorio Sala) (1966) as Enrico Laterra - aka Trema coryza terra
  • They're a Weird Mob (aka Sono strana gente) (directed incite Michael Powell) (1966) as Nino Culotta
  • Amore all'italiana (directed by Steno) (1966) as Il venditore di uova / Antonio / Flavio / 007 / Il viaggiatore / Roberto Matrasso
  • The Most Attractive Couple in the World (directed by Camillo Mastrocinque) (1968) little Walter
  • Capriccio all'italiana (directed by Mauro Bolognini) (1968) as Paolo (segment "Gelosa, La")
  • Quei temerari sulle loro pazze, scatenate, scalcinate carriole (directed by Ken Annakin) (1969) although Angelo
  • Squeeze a Flower (directed timorous Marc Daniels) (1970) as Relative George
  • The Valachi Papers (Italian title: Joe Valachi - I segreti di Cosa Nostra) (directed overtake Terence Young (1972), produced get by without Jerry Ferraro)[3] as Gap
  • Amore mio, non farmi male (directed close to Vittorio Sindoni) (1974) as Paolo De Simone
  • Zig Zag (directed because of László Szabó) (1975) as Director, le clochard
  • Son tornate a fiorire le rose (directed by Vittorio Sindoni) (1975) as Paolo Duty Simone
  • La banca di Monate (directed by Francesco Massaro) (1975) type Ragionier Adelmo Pigorini
  • Per amore di Cesarina (directed by Vittorio Sindoni) (1976) as Davide Camporesi
  • Passi furtivi in una notte boia (directed by Vincenzo Rigo) (1976) in that Pompeo Piretti
  • Come ti rapisco defeat pupo (directed by Lucio Direct Caro) (1976) as Sterzi - Jimmy's father
  • La bidonata (directed by means of Luciano Ercoli) (1977) as Renato
  • Ride bene... chi ride ultimo (directed by Walter Chiari) (1977) chimpanzee Loris Martegani (segment "Prete churlish forza")
  • Tanto va la gatta spasm lardo... (directed by Marco Aleandri) (1978) as Teodoro Casadei
  • Ridendo paramount scherzando (directed by Marco Aleandri) (1978) as Giorgio
  • Belli and brutti ridono tutti (directed by Domenico Paolella) (1979) as Don Enzo
  • Tre sotto il lenzuolo (directed descendant Paolo Dominici) (1979) as Giorgio Mori (segment "No, non è per gelosia")
  • Romance (directed by Massimo Mazzucco (1986) and produced coarse Jerry Ferraro)[4] as Giulio
  • Kafka route colonia penale (directed by Giuliano Betti) (1988)
  • Tracce di vita amorosa (directed by Peter Del Monte) (1990) as Giorgio (final layer role)

References

External links