Spaghetti Western Director ~ Luigi Capuano
Luigi Capuano was an Italian film director and
screenwriter known for his prolific contributions to popular genre cinema,
particularly in adventure, peplum (sword-and-sandal), and swashbuckler films
during the 1950s and 1960s. Born in Naples on July 13, 1904, he served as a
military pilot during World War II before transitioning to filmmaking after the
war.
Capuano directed over 40 feature films between 1947 and
1971, frequently writing or co-writing his own screenplays, and he sometimes
used the pseudonym Lewis King for later productions. His early career included
sentimental dramas, musicals, and light entertainment films, but he gained
prominence directing entries in popular adventure cycles featuring characters
such as Zorro, Sandokan, and various pirates and musketeers. These mid-budget
genre pictures, often characterized by action, historical settings, and exotic
locales, were commercially successful in Italy and international markets during
the boom of Italian popular cinema. He continued working in related genres,
including spaghetti westerns and crime films, until the early 1970s.
Luigi Capuano died in Rome on October 20, 1979.
Capuano directed three Spaghetti westerns: “Il
magnifico Texano” (The Magnificent Texan) in 1967, “Sangue chiama sangue”
(Blood Calls to Blood) in 1968, “El Zorro, caballero de la justicia” (Zorro the
Rider of Vengeance) in 1971.
CAPUANO, Luigi (aka Lewis King) [7/13/1904, Naples,
Campania, Italy – 10/20/1979, Rome, Lazio, Italy] – director, writer.
The Magnificent
Texan – 1967 [as Lewis King]
Blood Calls to Blood
– 1968 [as Lewis King]
Zorro, Rider of
Vengeance – 1971
Spaghetti Western
Screenwriter ~ Eric Bercovici
Enrico Bercovici was
an Italian producer, composer and writer born in New York City on February 27,
1933. He was the son of director and writer Leonardo Bercovici and the nephew
of writer Konrad Bercovici.
He’s best known as
Eric Bercovici and winning a Primetime Emmy as a producer of the miniseries
Shogun, which he also wrote. For TV he wrote for series ranging
from ‘Love, American Style’ to ‘I, Spy,’ ‘The Man From U.N.C.L.E.’, ‘Mission:
Impossible’ and ‘Hawaii Five-O.’
During the 1970s and
’80s Bercovici also wrote a number of TV movies.
Bercovici died from a heart attack in Kaneohe, Hawaii on February 9, 2014 a few weeks shy of turning 81.
Enrico Bercovi co-wrote the screenplay for only one Spaghetti western, “La parola di un
fuorilegge... è legge!” (Take a Hard Ride) with Jerry Ludwig in 1975.
BERCOVICI, Eric (Enrico Bercovici) [2/27/1933, New York City, New York,
U.S.A. -
2/9/2014, Kaneohe,
Hawaii, U.S.A. (heart attack)] – producer, composer, writer, son of director,
writer Leonardo Bercovici [1908–1995], nephew of writer Konrad Bercovici
[1882-1961], married to Sylvia Messina [1933-
] father of
director,
writer, actor Luca Bercovici [1957- ],
producer, engineer Hilary Bercovici 1959-
], married to actress Karen Berger [1947- ] (197?-19??) father of musician/composer,
producer Jacob Bercovici [1975- ],
married to secretary Chiho Adachi [1954-
] (1980-2014)
Take a Hard Ride –
1975 (co)
Spaghetti Western
Cinematographer ~ Raoul Comte
Raoul Comte was a
silent film cinematographer born in Lyon, France on September 5, 1905. He
worked on four films in 1919 and 1920.
Comte died in Paris
on March 5, 1992 at the age of 86.
His only western
credit is as cinematographer on “L'oro degli Azteki” in 1920.
COMTE, Raoul [9/5/1905, Lyon,
Rhône, Rhône-Alpes, France – 3/5/1992, Paris, Île-de-France, France] –
cinematographer, married to Marie de Montrichard [1912-1986]
L'oro degli Azteki -
1920