Aldo Vergano
Aldo Vergano | |
---|---|
Born |
Rome | 27 August 1891
Died |
21 September 1957 66) Rome | (aged
Occupation | film director, screenwriter |
Aldo Vergano was an Italian director, screenwriter and journalist.
Born in Rome, Vergano was the co-founder with Alessandro Blasetti of the magazine Cinematografo.[1]
He made his film debut with the screenplay of Blasetti's Sun, one of the most important films of the Italian silent cinema.[1] In the thirties, though persecuted by fascism for his political views, he was a prolific screenwriter of Telefoni Bianchi films.[1] He made his debut as a director with the patriotic drama Pietro Micca.[1]
Vergano is probably best known for the film Il sole sorge ancora, produced by the PNA, (the National Association of Italian Partisans),[1] which is considered "one of the cornerstones of neorealism".[2]
Selected filmography
- Director
- Pietro Micca (1938)
- Outcry (1946)
- The Outlaws (1950)
- La grande rinuncia (1951)
- Amore rosso (Marianna Sirca) (1952)
- Screenwriter
- Lowered Sails (1931)
- The Man with the Claw (1931)
- The Opera Singer (1932)
- The Telephone Operator (1932)
- The Blue Fleet (1932)
- Don Bosco (1935)
- Cavalry (1936)
- Adam's Tree (1936)
- For Men Only (1938)
- The Cavalier from Kruja (1940)
- Saint John, the Beheaded (1940)
- Lost in the Dark (1947)
References
External links
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