Friday, April 3, 2026

Little Known Spaghetti Western actors ~ Selma Vaz Dias

[These daily posts will cover little known actors or people that have appeared in more recent films and TV series. Various degrees of information that I was able to find will be given and anything that you can add would be appreciated.]

Selma Vaz Dias was born in Amsterdam pm November 23, 1911. She was a writer, painter theater, film and TV actress. She moved to the United Kingdom, where she spent most of her career.

Her cinematic credits include performances in the films of major British directors, including Alfred Hitchcock's “The Lady Vanishes” (1938) and Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's “One of Our Aircraft Is Missing” (1942). She also appeared in Ernest Morris' “The Tell-Tale Heart” (1960).

She played Solange in the two British premières (the first, given in French, the second, in English) of Jean Genet's “The Maids”, both of which were directed by Peter Zadek, in 1952 and 1956 respectively. She also played the lead role, Irma (a brothel madam), in the world première of Genet's “The Balcony” (1957) in a production directed by Zadek at the Arts Theatre Club, a "private theatre club" that enabled the production to circumvent the Lord Chamberlain's ban on public performances of the play.

Dias was married to writer Hans Werner Egli [1899-2000] (1936-1977) and the mother of one son, one daughter.

Dias died in London on August 30, 1977.

Selma Vaz Dias appeared in only one Euro-western, “The Singer Not the Song “ in 1961 as Chela.

DIAS, Selma Vaz (aka Zelma Vas Dias, Selma Cohen-Vaz Dias, Selma Vaz Díaz, Selma Van Dias, Selma Van Diaz) [11/23/1911, Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands – 8/30/1977, London, England, U.K.] – writer, theater, film, TV actress, painter, married to writer Hans Werner Egli [1899-2000] (1936-1977) mother of one son, one daughter.

The Singer Not the Song – 1961 (Chela)

Spaghetti Western Directors, Screenwriters, Cinematographers

Spaghetti Western Director ~ Osvaldo Civirani

Osvaldo Civirani was an Italian filmmaker, still photographer, producer, cinematographer, screenwriter, and author known for his work in genres such as peplum, Spaghetti westerns, and thrillers during the 1960s and 1970s.

Born in Rome on May 19, 1917, Civirani began his career in the film industry as a still photographer and camera operator, contributing to over 200 films from 1935 to 1965, including notable films like “Don Camillo e l'on. Peppone” (1955). By 1963, he transitioned into directing, helming around 20 films under his own name and pseudonyms such as Richard Kean and Glenn Eastman, often blending adventure, erotic, and action elements.

Among his most recognized directorial works are “The Devil with Seven Faces” (1971), a psychological thriller starring Rosalba Neri, and “Lucrezia” (1968), an erotic historical drama. He also produced and wrote screenplays for several projects, including “Hercules Against the Sons of the Sun” (1964) and “Il pavone nero” (1975), frequently collaborating with Italian and international talent in low-budget yet genre-defining cinema, and author of two autobiographical books on his career (1995, 2003). Civirani's multifaceted contributions helped shape the vibrant landscape of post-war Italian B-movies, though his output tapered off in the late 1970s.

Civirani died in Rome on February 20, 2008 at the age of 90.

Osvaldo Civirani directed five Spaghetti western: “Uno sceriffo tutto d’oro” (A Golden Sheriff) in 1966m “Ric & Gian alla conquista del West” (Rick and John, Conquerors of the West) and “Il figlio di Django” (Son of Django) both in 1967, “T’ammazzo…raccomandati a Dio” (Dead for a Dollar) in 1968, “I due figli dei Trinità” (Two Sons of Trinity) in 1971.

CIVIRANI, Osvaldo (aka O. Civirani, Glen Eastman, Richard Kean) [5/19/1917, Rome, Lazio, Italy – 2/20/2008, Rome, Lazio, Italy] – producer, director, author, writer, cinematographer, cameraman, married to ? father cameraman Dante DiPalma [19??-197?]

A Golden Sheriff – 1966 [as Richard Kean]

Rick and John, Conquerors of the West - 1967

The Son of Django - 1967

Dead for a Dollar – 1968

Two Sons of Trinity – 1971 [as Glenn Eastman/Richard Kean

The Return of the Two Trinities – 1972 [as Richard Kean] [Film was never made.]

 

Spaghetti Western Screenwriter ~ Roméo Bosetti

Romeo Bosetti was born in Chiari, Brescia, Italy on January 18, 1879. He was an Italian-born French actor, director, screenwriter, and film producer who played a pivotal role in the development of early cinema comedy during the silent film era. He began his entertainment career as a child performer in circuses, later transitioning to mime, acrobatics, and stage work in Parisian theaters and dance halls. By 1906, Bosetti entered the film industry, initially at Gaumont Studios under directors Alice Guy and Louis Feuillade, where he specialized in chase films before excelling in burlesque and farce genres that featured absurd situations and character-driven humor.

Bosetti's career gained momentum with the creation of popular comedic series at Gaumont, including the Roméo series—starring himself as the hapless protagonist in shorts like “Roméo pris au piège” (1906) and “Roméo a mangé du lion” (1907)—and the Calino series, featuring Clément Migé in films such as “Calino au théâtre “(1909) and “Calino se bat en duel” (1910). Among his notable early works are the classics “Le Tic” (1907), a farce about a woman's involuntary winking tic, and “Une dame vraiment bien” (1908), which satirized social pretensions through mistaken identities. In 1910, Pathé recruited him to lead its new comedy division, Pathé Comica, in Nice, where he directed over 100 films between 1912 and 1916 and launched additional series like Rosalie (starring Sarah Duhamel, 1912), Bigorneau (with René Lantini, 1912–1915), Casmir (1913–1916), and Gavroche (1912–1914). He also established his own production unit, Nizza, within Pathé, emphasizing working-class settings and narrative-driven comedy that advanced the genre beyond isolated gags.

His prolific output was interrupted by World War I service, from which he was discharged due to injury, allowing him to resume filmmaking postwar. He died in Suresnes, France on October 27, 1948 at the age of 69. Influenced by contemporaries like André Deed and Louis Feuillade, Bosetti's work bridged vaudeville traditions with emerging cinematic storytelling, contributing significantly to the evolution of French film comedy in its formative years.

Roméo Bosetti wrote the screenplay for one Euro-western “Roméo cow-boy” in 1908 which he also directed and starred in.

BOSETTI, Roméo (Romolus Joseph Bosetti) [1/18/1879, Chiari, Brescia, Italy - 10/27/1948, Suresnes, Hauts-de-Seine, France] - producer, director, screenwriter, acrobat, stuntman, actor, son of circus performers Giovanni Baresi, Filomena Baresi, brother of dancer Henriette Baresi, Founded Nizza Productions.

Roméo cow-boy – 1908


Spaghetti Western Cinematographer ~ Dario Di Palma

Dario Di Palma was born in Rome on November 6, 1932. He was an Italian cinematographer renowned for his contributions to cinema and television, particularly in the mid-20th century Italian film industry. Born and raised in Rome, he began his career in the 1950s as a camera operator and assistant cameraman on notable productions such as Michelangelo Antonioni's “Red Desert” (1964) and the epic “The Last Days of Pompeii” (1959), before transitioning to director of photography roles in the 1960s. His breakthrough came with films like Florestano Vancini's “Seasons of Our Love” (1966) and Vittorio De Seta's “Almost a Man” (1966), establishing his reputation for capturing nuanced visuals in Italian arthouse cinema. Among his most celebrated works is Federico Fellini's “The Clowns” (1970), a mockumentary where Di Palma's cinematography vividly evoked the whimsical yet melancholic world of circus life. Later in his career, he extended his expertise to television miniseries and features such as “Toxic Love” (1983) and “Bello di mamma” (1980), amassing credits on 49 projects as cinematographer. As the nephew of acclaimed cinematographer Carlo Di Palma, he carried forward a family legacy in the field, earning two nominations for the Silver Ribbon for Best Cinematography (B/W) in 1967 for “Seasons of Our Love” and “Un uomo a metà” before his death in Rome at age 71 on October 24, 2004.

Dario Di Palma was a cinematographer on two Spaghetti westerns: “Due contro tutti” (The Terrible Sheriff) with Ricardo Torres in 1962 and “Gli specialist” (Drop Them or I’ll Shoot) in 1968.

Di PALMA, Dario [11/6/1932, Rome, Lazio, Italy – 10/24/2004, Rome, Lazio, Italy] – cinematographer, cameraman, nephew of cinematographer Carlo Di Palma [1925-2004], cousin of production designer, costume designer Valentina Di Palma.

The Terrible Sheriff – 1962 (co)

Drop Them or I’ll Shoot – 1968 


New German 2K DVD “Rocco - Ich leg dich um”

 









“Rocco - Ich leg dich um”

(Django the Last Killer)

(1967)

 

Director: Giuseppe Vari

Starring: George Eastman, Anthony Ghidra, Dana Ghia

 

Country: Germany

Label: Indigo

Discs: 1

Region: 2

Aspect ratio 2K master 2.35:1, 15:9

Languages: Dolby Digital 2.0 English, German

Subtitles: German

Running time: 83 minutes

Extras: English trailer, artwork gallery

ASIN: ‎B0BPGGCSFG

Available: April 3, 2026

LAST FOUR ON SANTA CRUZ, THE

 

1936, Germany

Aka… Die Letzten Vier von Santa Cruz / ‘The Last Four of Santa Cruz’ (Ger)

Ex… Letzten Vier ze Santa Cruz (Cz), A Pénz Rabjai / ‘The Money Addicts’ (Hun), Gli Ultimi Quattro di Santa Cruz (It), Los Amotinados de Santa Cruz / ‘The Mutineers of Santa Cruz’ (Sp)

T: 80 (Ger and Cz)

Pc: UFA-Universum Film [Alfred Ernst Christian Alexander Hugenberg] (Ber)

Dist: UFA-Universum Film [Alfred Hugenberg] (02/07/36, Au), UFA (03/11/36, Ger), (02/26/36, Slov), Arzén von Cserépy Film [?] (03/11/36, Hun), (05/03/36, Fin), (07/31/36, Croat), (1937, It), Trosečníci Film (1937 [?], Cz), Internet Archive.com (12/01/2022, US-Ger/Cz)

D: Werner Klinger; P: Alfred Hugenberg & Karl Ritter; Sc: Alois Johannes Lippl; Nv: Josef Maria Frank: Die Letzten Vier Von St. Paul / ‘The Last Four from St. Pauli (Ger); Ph: Erich Rudolf Schmidtke, Hans Beierlein & Konstantin Irmen-Tschet [Konstantin Cetverikov]; Ed: Gottfried Ritter & Eduard von Borsody; M:

C: Hermann Speelmans (Captain Pieter Streuvels), Irene von Meyendorff (Madeleine, his wife), Valéry Inkijinoff [Walerian Iwanowitsch Inkischinow] (Reeder Alexis Aika), Françoise Rosay [Françoise Bandy de Nalèche] (Nadja Danouw), Erich Ponto (Alexander Ghazaroff), Josef Sieber (Jack), Max Schreck (William), Beppo Brem (Erik), Andrews Engelmann (Cairos), Harald Gloth (Hein), Walter Holten (slave owner Malherbe), Ludwig Andersen (Dunard), Max Harry Ernst (A Guest), Josef Dahmen (Cocteau), Bruno Hübner (Borinsky), Hugo Gau-Hamm (Auseklis, a buccaneer), Babette Jenssen (Borinsky's lady friend) & Hardy Vogdt

Syn: 1930’s Europe. An author, a businessman, a publisher and shipowner form a business venture that will have them harvest lobsters on the island of Santa Cruz in the Canaries. After a report in the newspaper, the business' stocks do well. But the partners quarrel amongst themselves, when they discover there aren't any lobsters in waters off of Santa Cruz. Undaunted, the group head off to the island in a decrepit boat to open a cannery anyway.

     Comm: [Filmed at the Babelsberg Studios in Berlin and on location in the Canary Islands, Spain in 1935] THE LAST FOUR ON SANTA CRUZ is a bubbly crime film set in Santa Cruz, in the Canaries (where it was largely shot), and set during the 1930's. The original book was set in ‘St. Paul’, which was likely chosen to sound like ‘St. Pauli’, the red-light suburb of Hamburg, and later changed for the film.

     German poster artwork played up the presence of ‘Cacti’ that grows in the Canary Islands. The plants, plus the ‘Santa Cruz’ title, also made the film sound like it was set in California, rather than the town of Santa Cruz, in the Islands.

     The same year the rival banner Tobis-Rota-Film Verleih AG made an actual western THE KAISER OF CALIFORNIA / Der Kaiser von Kalifornien (07/21/36), which was filmed in the US (Arizona, California, Nevada and Mexico) as well as interior studio work at the Pisorno Studios, in Tirrenia, Italy.

     It would be nearly thirty years before the Germans would return to the Canaries and shoot both THE LAST RIDE TO SANTA CRUZ and TOWN WITHOUT A SHERIFF / “Stadt Ohne Sheriff” (1972-73, Ger, TV), there. The Germans had started filming in the Canaries before the Spaniards. Strange? At least the title for ‘The Last Ride’ fit the locale more than ‘Last Four’ had.

     Similar use of 'Santa Cruz' later turned up on Lux's sword and cape adventure "Il Prigioniero di Santa Cruz" (1941, It) which is set in the 1700's.

     A print in German, with Czech subtitles has survived and can be viewed at the Internet Archive.com. Italian and Spanish posters have not.

     This was director Werner Klinger’s first film. He continued working until 1968’s “Straßenbekanntschaften auf St. Pauli / ‘Causal Street Friends in St. Pauli’ (Ger), which coincidentally was set in the Reeperbahn area of Hamburg, and he died in 1972.

     Editor Eduard von Borsody was the father of Hans von Borsody (BUFFALO BILL, HERO OF FAR WEST) and distant relative by marriage to Sky du Mont [Caetano Bremme Gaspar Neven DuMont] (THE SHOE OF MANITOU, 2001 and THE CANOE OF MANITOU, 2025).

     Even with Ms. Françoise Rosay in the cast it appears that THE LAST FOUR ON SANTA CRUZ wasn't picked up for France. Even stranger?

     Actor Max Schreck is best remembered as having played the titular vampire character “Nosferatu” (1922, Ger).

     In 1975 Antonio Margheriti Dawson shot the Lee Van Cleef topper TAKE A HARD RIDE in the Canaries. Recently the Secuoya Studios' TV ZORRO (2024, Sp) and TRINIDAD (2026, Sp) have also been shot there.

     Still, if you squint THE LAST FOUR ON SANTA CRUZ is not really a western.  Just an interesting curio that showcases the Island.

 

By Michael Ferguson

Special Birthdays

Louiguy (Louis Guglielmi) (composer) would have been 110 today but died in 1991.









John Scanlon (actor) would have been 105 today but died in 1994.

Heinz Palm [voice actor] would have been 105 today but died in 2018.

Dominique Paturel [voice actor] would have been 95 today but died in 2022.









Hans Gudegast (actor) is 85 today.


 





Marisa Paredes (actress) would have been 80 today but died in 2024.







Miguel Bose (actor) is 70 today.


 

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Little Known Spaghetti Western actors ~ Gianni Diana

[These daily posts will cover little known actors or people that have appeared in more recent films and TV series. Various degrees of information that I was able to find will be given and anything that you can add would be appreciated.]

Gianni Diana is/was an Italian character actor who appeared in only five films between 1977 and 2001.

Like so many of these actors I can find no biographical information on him. There are several people with that name on the WEB but none reference being an actor.

Gianni Diana appeared in only one Spaghetti Westerns, “Zanna Bianca nel West” (White Fang and the Kid) in 1977 as one of Morgan’s henchman.

DIANA, Gianni [Italian] – film actor.

White Fang and the Kid – 1977 (Morgan henchman)

Spaghetti Western Directors, Screenwriters, Cinematographers

Spaghetti Western Director ~ Claudio Cirri

Claudio Cirri is an Italian producer, director, writer, SFX and film actor. He was born in Firenze, Tuscany on January 16, 1979. He dreams of working in Hollywood. His first short film “The Loot” was awarded at California Film Award 2014 and the soundtrack received many music awards. In 2021he was an Award Winner at Almeria Western Film Festival for “Abigail”

Claudio Cirri has directed three Euro-westerns: “The Loot” in 2012, “Abigail” in 2021 and “Gallows Ridge” in 2024

CIRRI, Claudio [1/16/1979, Firenze, Tuscany, Italy -    ] – producer, director, writer, SFX, film actor.

The Loot – 2012

Abigail - 2021

Gallows Ridge – 2024


Spaghetti Western Screenwriter ~ Giorgio Boschetti

Giorgio Boschetti was an Italian cinematographer and photographer. He was one of the founders of Cineclub Biella in 1951. He specialized in making mountain documentaries and received a Diplome d’Onneur for the 1957 film “Una foglia per sognare” (A Leaf to Dream).

Giorgio Boschetti was born in Italy, most likely Turin, in 1931. Whether he’s still living is unknown. A photography studio with his name still exists in Turing today most likely operated by his son.

Giorgio Boschetti wrote the screenplay for only one Euro-western, “Cowboy Story” with Giuseppe Sacchi in 1953

BOSCHETTI, Giorgio [1931, Italy -    ] – writer, cameraman, cinematographer.

Cowboy Story – 1953 (co)


Spaghetti Western Cinematographer ~ Emanuele Di Cola

Emanuele Di Cola is/was an Italian director, cameraman and cinematographer. He directed one film in 1973, was a cameraman on seven films between 1962 and 1971. His main profession was as a cinematographer where he worked on sixteen films between 1965 and 1972.

Although he on a decent number of films in different departments there is no biographical information on him.

Di Cola was a cinematographer on five Spaghetti westerns; “El hombre que mató a Billy el Niño” (A Few Bullets More) in 1967, “Dos hombres van a morir” (Ringo the Lone Rider) in 1968, “Zorro, la Maschera della vendetta” (Zorro the Dominator) in 1969, “Ancora dollari per i McGregor” (Another Dollar for the MacGregors) in 1970, “El Zorro, caballero de la justicia” (Zorro, Rider of Vengeance) in 1971.


Di COLA, Emanuele (aka Emanuele Cole, Emmanuele di Cola) [Italian] –  director, cinematographer, cameraman.

A Few Bullets More – 1967

Le radici della vendetta – 1967 [film was never made]

Ringo: The Lone Rider – 1968

Zorro the Dominator - 1969

Another Dollar for the McGregors – 1970

Zorro, Rider of Vengeance – 1971