Corrado Olmi
Corrado Olmi | |
---|---|
Born | 24 October 1926 Jesi, Kingdom of Italy |
Died | 29 December 2020 (aged 94) Rome, Italy |
Occupation | Actor |
Corrado Olmi (24 October 1926 – 29 December 2020)[1] was an Italian actor and comedian.
Life and career
Born in Jesi, Ancona, Olmi at very young age attended local amateur dramatic companies in his hometown.[2] He later moved to Rome, where he graduated in law and during his studies attended the Peter Sharoff Theatre Academy.[2] He was a very prolific stage actor, with hundreds of credits in works of prose, avanspettacolo, cabaret, operetta.[2] He was also very active in television (in television movies, TV-series and variety shows) and in films, where he was one of the most requested character actors.[2] Olmi is also the author of two autobiographical books, Oltre la scena and Oltre lo schermo.[2]
He died from COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy.[1]
Selected filmography
- Peccato di castità (1956)
- Chiamate 22-22 tenente Sheridan (1960) – Pat – journalist
- Un mandarino per Teo (1960) – Il signore in bianco
- A Girl... and a Million (1962) – Visonà's Friend
- L'amore difficile (1962) – Carabiniere (segment "Il serpente")
- Adultero lui, adultera lei (1963) – L'avvocato dell'accusa
- Shivers in Summer (1964) – Furricchio
- I maniaci (1964) – The husband (segment "Il week-end")
- Clémentine chérie (1964)
- I due pericoli pubblici (1964) – Vigile (segment "Una domenica d'agosto")
- Slalom (1965) – Italian Embassy Official
- Wake Up and Die (1966) – Bobino, riccetatore
- I nostri mariti (1966) – Monsignor Petrarca (segment "Il marito di Olga")
- Sex Quartet (1966) – Aldini's Friend (segment "Fata Armenia")
- The Devil in Love (1966) – Innkeeper
- A Stranger in Paso Bravo (1968) – Jonathan
- The Vatican Affair (1968) – Lentini
- Ace High (1968)
- Bandits in Rome (1968)
- Colpo di sole (1968)
- Satyricon (1969) – Seleuco
- 12 + 1 (1969) – Waiter (uncredited)
- The Archangel (1969) – Commissario Monteforte
- The Cat o' Nine Tails (1971) – Morsella
- Joe Dakota (1957)
- Armiamoci e partite! (1971) – German soldier
- Il merlo maschio (1971) – Violin teacher
- Four Flies on Grey Velvet (1971) – Porter
- A Girl in Australia (1971) – Don Anselmo
- Il provinciale (1971)
- Decameroticus (1972) – Ciacco
- My Darling Slave (1973) – A passenger
- Anno uno (1974) – Di Vittorio
- Professore venga accompagnato dai suoi genitori (1974) – Mr. Novelli
- L'uomo della strada fa giustizia (1975) – (uncredited)
- Scandal in the Family (1975) – don Erminio
- Apache Woman (1976) – Jeremy
- The Cricket (1980)
- Madly in Love (1981) – Sindaco
- Bollenti spiriti (1981) – Doctor
- Teste di quoio (1981) – Agente di viaggi
- Porca vacca (1982)
- Rich and Poor (1983) – S.O.F.R.A.M. Manager
- Il petomane (1983)
- Sfrattato cerca casa equo canone (1983) – Commissario
- Due strani papà (1984)
- Bonnie and Clyde Italian Style (1984) – Bonetti – negoziante di giocattoli
- Il ragazzo del Pony Express (1986) – Father of Agostino
- Missione eroica – I pompieri 2 (1987)
- Il coraggio di parlare (1987) – Milan worker
- Rimini Rimini – Un anno dopo (1988) – Flaminia's Husband ("La scelta")
- Don Bosco (1988)
- Italian Restaurant (1994, TV Mini-Series)
- The Dinner (1998) – Arturo
- Si fa presto a dire amore (2000) – Padre Enrico
References
- ^ a b Cinema. E' morto l'attore Corrado Olmi, una vita tra grande schermo, palcoscenico e tv (in Italian)
- ^ a b c d e Enrico Lancia. Dizionario del cinema italiano. Gli attori. Gremese Editore, 2003. ISBN 8884402131.
External links
- Corrado Olmi at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
- Gino Cervi (1946)
- Massimo Serato (1947)
- Nando Bruno (1948)
- Saro Urzì (1949)
- Umberto Spadaro (1951)
- Gabriele Ferzetti (1953)
- Alberto Sordi (1954)
- Paolo Stoppa (1955)
- Memmo Carotenuto (1956)
- Peppino De Filippo (1957)
- Andrea Checchi (1958)
- Nino Vingelli (1959)
- Claudio Gora (1960)
- Enrico Maria Salerno (1961)
- Salvo Randone (1962)
- Romolo Valli (1963)
- Folco Lulli (1964)
- Leopoldo Trieste (1965)
- Ugo Tognazzi (1966)
- Gastone Moschin (1967)
- Gabriele Ferzetti (1968)
- Ettore G. Mattia (1969)
- Fanfulla / Umberto Orsini (1970)
- Romolo Valli (1971)
- Salvo Randone (1972)
- Mario Carotenuto (1973)
- Turi Ferro (1974)
- Aldo Fabrizi (1975)
- Ciccio Ingrassia (1976)
- Romolo Valli (1977)
- Carlo Bagno (1978)
- Vittorio Mezzogiorno (1979)
- Tomas Milian (1980)
- Massimo Girotti (1981)
- Paolo Stoppa (1982)
- Tino Schirinzi (1983)
- Leo Gullotta (1984)
- Leopoldo Trieste (1985)
- Gastone Moschin (1986)
- Diego Abatantuono (1987)
- Enzo Cannavale (1988)
- Fabio Bussotti (1989)
- Alessandro Haber (1990)
- Ennio Fantastichini (1991)
- Paolo Bonacelli (1992)
- Renato Carpentieri (1993)
- Alessandro Haber (1994)
- Marco Messeri (1995)
- Leopoldo Trieste (1996)
- Gianni Cavina (1997)
- Giustino Durano (1998)
- Stefano Antonucci / Andrea Cambi / Antonio Catania / Giorgio Colangeli / Giuseppe Gandini / Riccardo Garrone / Vittorio Gassman / Giancarlo Giannini / Valter Lupo / Adalberto Maria Merli / Paolo Merloni / Carlo Molfese / Sergio Nicolai / Corrado Olmi / Eros Pagni / Mario Patanè / Pierfrancesco Poggi / Francesco Siciliano / Giorgio Tirabassi / Venantino Venantini (1999)
- Felice Andreasi (2000)
- Giancarlo Giannini (2001)
- Leo Gullotta (2002)
- Diego Abatantuono (2003)
- Arnoldo Foà (2004)
- Raffaele Pisu (2005)
- Carlo Verdone (2006)
- Alessandro Haber (2007)
- Alessandro Gassmann (2008)
- Ezio Greggio (2009)
- Ennio Fantastichini / Luca Zingaretti (2010)
- Giuseppe Battiston (2011)
- Marco Giallini (2012)
- Carlo Verdone (2013)
- Carlo Buccirosso / Paolo Sassanelli (2014)
- Claudio Amendola (2015)
- Luca Marinelli (2016)
- Alessandro Borghi (2017)
- Riccardo Scamarcio (2018)
- Luigi Lo Cascio / Fabrizio Ferracane (2019)
- Roberto Benigni (2020)
- Massimo Popolizio (2021)
- Francesco Di Leva / Tommaso Ragno (2022)