Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Little Known Spaghetti Western Actor ~ Sandro Dori

[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.]

Sandro Dori was an Italian actor known for his prolific career spanning over six decades in Italian cinema, television, and international productions, often appearing in memorable supporting and character roles across genres including comedy, drama, giallo thrillers, and historical epics. Born in Ostiglia, Lombardy on December 21, 1938, Dori began his acting career in the late 1960s and quickly became a familiar face in Italian films, collaborating with prominent directors such as Federico Fellini and Dario Argento on projects that defined Italian popular cinema during its golden age. His versatility allowed him to excel in both comedic bit parts and more dramatic supporting performances, contributing to classic works of the era.

Dori's filmography includes appearances in influential movies like Fellini's Satyricon, Argento's The Bird with the Crystal Plumage, and international features such as The Name of the Rose, showcasing his ability to enhance ensemble casts with distinctive presence.  He continued working in Italian television and film into the 21st century until his death in Civitavecchia, Rome, Lazio, Italy on February 17, 2021 at the age of 82.

Throughout his career, Dori was recognized for his reliability as a character actor, often bringing nuance and authenticity to roles that might otherwise be overlooked, cementing his status as a respected figure in Italian entertainment.

Sandro Dori appeared in two Spaghetti westerns: “Un fiume di dollari” (The Hills Run Red) as a saloon barker in 1966 and “…e per tetto un cielo di stelle” (And for a Roof a Sky Full of Stars) as a sideshow owner in 1968.

DORI, Sandro (aka Alessandro Dori) (Alberto Schiappadori) [12/21/1938, Ostiglia, Lombardy, Italy – 2/17/2021, Civitavecchia, Rome, Lazio, Italy] – film, TV, voice actor.

The Hills Run Red - 1966 (saloon barker)

And for a Roof a Sky Full of Stars – 1968 (sideshow owner)

 

Spaghetti Western Directors, Screenwriters, Cinematographers

 Spaghetti Western Director ~ Aldo Grimaldi

Aldo Grimaldi is an Italian film director and screenwriter known for his contributions to the musicarello genre and popular comedy films in Italy during the 1960s and 1970s. Born in 1942 in Catania, Sicily, he was the son of director and screenwriter Giovanni Grimaldi and began his career in the early 1960s primarily as an assistant director on films including musical comedies and other light-hearted productions. He made his directorial debut with “Nel sole” in 1967 and quickly established himself with a series of commercially oriented works blending music, humor, and often romantic or comedic elements.

His notable films include “L'oro del mondo” (1968), “Il ragazzo che sorride” (1969), “Pensando a te” (1969), “Franco e Ciccio sul sentiero di guerra” (1970), and later entries such as “Quando le donne si chiamavano madonne” (1972) and “Champagne in paradiso” (1984), many of which featured collaborations with comedy duo Franco and Ciccio or incorporated erotic undertones typical of the era's commedia all'italiana variations. Grimaldi's output reflected the vibrant, populist Italian cinema of the period, though he directed fewer projects in the 1980s before his death on 5 August 1990 in Rome at the age of 47.

Aldo Grimaldi directed one Spaghetti western, “Franco e Ciccio sentiero di guerra” (Franco & Ciccio on the Warpath) in 1969.

GRIMALDI, Aldo (Arnaldo Grimaldi) [1942, Catania, Sicily, Italy – 8/5/1990, Rome, Lazio, Italy] – director, assistant director, writer, son of director, writer, composer, songwriter Giovanni Grimaldi [1917-2001].

Franco & Ciccio on the Warpath – 1969


Italian Western Screenwriter ~ Oreste Coltellacci

 

Oreste Coltellacci is/was an Italian film producer and screenwriter. Coltellacci began in 1958 as a producer for various companies: until 1960 for Cei-Incom, from 1961 to 1963 for Incei, then for Aster and from 1965 to 1970 for Colt Produzioni. In 1975 he directed a film based on his own script.

 

Oreste Coltellacci wrote the screenplays for two Spaghetti westerns: “Lo chiamavano Verità” (They Call Him Veritas) in 1972 and “Prima ti suono e poi ti sparo” (Trinity, the Bell, the Guitar) with John Loffredo Michele Massimo Tarantini and Heinz Orthofer in 1974.

 

COLTELLACCI, Oreste [Italian] – producer, director, writer.

They Call Him Veritas - 1972

Trinity, the Bell, the Guitar – 1974 (co)

 

Spaghetti Western Cinematographer ~ Robert Lefebvre

Robert Gerard Charles Le Febvre was a French director and cinematographer born in Paris on March 19, 1907. Although most of career he was a cinematographer working on 138 films between 1927 and 1975 her did venture being a cameraman on six films and even directed one short film “Paris sur Seine” in 1941.

Lefebvre began his ascent in the field of cinematography in the early 1930s, building on his foundational experience as a camera assistant since 1923. By 1932, he had transitioned to director of photography, debuting in this role on the feature film “Azaïs” (1931) and continuing with early works such as “Sapho” (1934), marking the start of a prolific career in French cinema.

Throughout his professional life, Lefebvre contributed as cinematographer to over 138 projects, with the bulk of his output occurring between the 1930s and 1950s. During this era, he honed his expertise in black-and-white photography, delivering visuals noted for their emotional resonance and technical precision in capturing period settings and character-driven narratives.

As post-war cinema evolved, Lefebvre adeptly transitioned to color processes, such as Eastmancolor, evident in his work on “Les Grandes Manœuvres” (1955), one of the early French features to embrace full-color production. His approach emphasized atmospheric depth, often leveraging available light sources to enhance the moody, evocative quality of historical dramas.

Robert Lefebvre was cinematographer on one Euro western, “Moartea lui Joe Indianul” (Death of Injun Joe) with Ovidiu Gologan in 1967/

LEFEBVRE, Robert (aka Le Febvre) (Robert Gerard Charles Le Febvre) [3/19/1907, Paris, Île-de-France, France – 2/15/1989, Montfort-l'Amaury, Yvelines, France] – director, cinematographer, cameraman, actor.

Death of Injun Joe – 1967 (co)

A new Japanese Blu-ray release of “Per un pugno di dollari”

 








“Per un pugno di dollari”

(A Fistful of Dollars)

(1964)

 

Director: Sergio Leone

Starring: Clint Eastwood, Gian Maria Volonte

 

Country: Japan

Label: Nile Grand Shop

Discs: 2 BluRays

Languages: Italian, English

Subtitles: Japanese

Extras: Italian opening and Italian audio for the first time in Japan

2007 HD restoration (Ripley's Film)

Complete Japanese dub included

The TV dubbing of the "Sunday Movie Theater" version, (additional recording cast: C. Eastwood = Yohei Tadano, G.M. Volonte = Yusaku Yara, S. Rupp = Michio Hazama, etc.); Another dubbed version "Monday Road Show" (C. Eastwood = Yasuo Yamada, J. Calvo = Masao Imanishi, S. Rupp = Yasuro Tanaka, etc.)

Special 32-page booklet

Trailers and radio spots; commentary by Christopher Frayling; interviews with Tonino Valerii, Franco Giraldi, Ennio Morricone etc; location commentary by Carlo Gaberszek; making of videos; about the restoration; etc.

Available” July 8, 2024

Who Are Those Guys? ~ Horst Frank

 

Horst Frank was a prolific German actor renowned for his extensive career in film, television, and theater, appearing in over 150 productions where he frequently embodied complex antagonists and rugged characters in adventure films, westerns, and crime dramas.

Born Horst Bernhard Wilhelm Frank in Lübeck, Germany on May 28, 1929, he initially trained as a trader before pursuing acting studies at the Hamburg Music Academy, graduating in 1951. His early career focused on theater stages in cities like Bonn, Basel, and Wuppertal, alongside work in radio and television with the Südwestfunk ensemble. Frank made his screen debut in 1957 as a cynical pilot in the war film Der Stern von Afrika, marking the start of a versatile filmography that spanned international co-productions from Italy and France beginning in 1959.

Throughout the 1960s, Frank became typecast as steely villains in genres like spaghetti westerns—such as “Preparati la bara!” (1968)—and action thrillers, including “Die Rache des Dr. Fu Man Chu” (1967) and “Django - Ein Sarg voll Blut” (1968). He also portrayed more nuanced figures, such as sensitive loners in “Das Mädchen Rosemarie” (1958) and neurotic roles in “Der Greifer” (1958). In later decades, his television work included gangster parts in crime series like ‘Im Namen des Gesetzes’ (1993–1996), while he balanced these with positive portrayals, notably as a father in ‘Das Traumhaus’ (1980) and the devil in the children's series ‘Timm Thaler’ (1979).

Beyond acting, Frank engaged in theater tours from 1973, staging works by Noël Coward and Peter Ustinov, and appeared in notable productions like Peter Zadek's 1992 adaptation of “Der blaue Engel”. A multifaceted artist, he authored an autobiography in 1981, published a volume of poems in 1989, and recorded a children's album alongside a collection of chansons. Personally, he was married three times first to actress Marion Frank, second to an unknown woman and they had a son, third to actress Chariklia Baxevanos in 1960 and had a daughter Désirée Frank, and later to Brigitte Kollecker in 1979 and briefly lived in Tanzania from 1961 to 1963, where he farmed coffee and vegetables; he had two children. Frank died of a heart attack in Heidelberg on 25 May 1999, just days before his 70th birthday.

FRANK, Horst (aka Horst Franck) (Horst Bernhard Wilhelm Frank) [5/28/1929, Lübeck, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany – 5/25/1999, Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany (heart attack)] – film, radio, TV, voicr actor, married to actress Marion Frank (1965-1970), married to ? (19??-19??) father of a son, married to actress, singer Chariklia Baxevanos [1936-    ] (1960-1961) father of Désirée Frank [1960-    ], married to actress Brigitte Kollecker [1948-    ] (1979-1999).

Pirates of the Mississippi – 1963 (Captain Allan Kelly)

Bullets Don’t Argue – 1964 (Billy Clanton/Clayton)

Massacre at Marble City – 1964 (Dan McCormick)

Black Eagle of Santa Fe – 1965 (Blade Carpenter)

The Moment to Kill – 1967 (Jason Forrester)

Viva Django! – 1967 (Martin/David Barry)

The Wild and the Dirty – 1967 (Claude/Claudio Hamilton)

Hate Your Neighbor – 1968 (Chris Malone)

Carlos (TV) – 1971 (Ligo)

The Grand Duel – 1972 (David Saxon, Patriarch)

Carambola – 1973 (Clydeson)

Horst Frank - Der Flußpirat vom Mississippi – 2010 [himself]

Special Birthdays

Primo Zeglio (director, writer) would have been 120 today but died in 1984.









Fred Kohler Jr. (actor) would have been 115 today but died in 1993.









Carlo Accalai (actor) would have been 85 today but died in 2016.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Little Known Spaghetti Western Actors ~ Jacques Dorfmann

[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.]

Jacques Dorfmann’s name appears in countless credits, and his success illuminated the cinemas for more than thirty years. Baron of the 7th art, renowned producer and director, Jacques Dorfmann was born in Toulouse, Haute-Garonne, France on December 2, 1945. He did not experience World War II, but in the footsteps of his father, Robert Dorfmann, producer among many others of “La Grande Vadrouille”, he learned the art of film making. His mother was producer, production manager, actress Agnès Delahaie (Alice Marie Rose Jean Claude), and he was the brother of producer, actor Frédéric Dorfmann. Jacques was the father of cameraman, film editor Anthony Dorfmann and producer Marine Dorfmann with actress Patricia Chemla.

His first producer credit was on Robert Thomas's “Patate” (also known as “Friend of the Family”) in 1964. In the late 1960s he also took minor uncredited acting roles in Sergio Corbucci's “The Great Silence” (1968) and Anatole Litvak's “Mayerling” (1968).

By the end of the decade Dorfmann had moved into more substantial producing work, serving as associate producer on Jean-Pierre Melville's “L'Armée des ombres” (“Army of Shadows”, 1969), where his father's connections facilitated his role on the project. He continued this collaboration with Melville as line producer on “Le Cercle rouge” (“The Red Circle”, 1970).

In the early 1970s Dorfmann began a long-term professional collaboration with director Jean-Pierre Mocky, frequently co-producing his films alongside his brother Frédéric Dorfmann. Their joint efforts included “L'Albatros” (“The Albatross”, 1971), where he served as line producer, “Le Témoin” (“The Witness”, 1978), where he was producer, and the later “Y a-t-il un Français dans la salle?” (“Is There a Frenchman in the Room?”, 1982), on which he acted as delegate producer.

Through these early credits and partnerships Dorfmann transitioned from family-influenced beginnings in his father's production orbit to establishing himself independently as a producer in French cinema.

Jacques Dorfmann died in Paris on August 27, 2025, at the age of 79.

As mentioned above Jacques Dorfmann appeared in one Spaghetti western, “Il grande silenzio” (The Great Silence) as Miguel in 1967.

DORFMANN, Jacques [12/2/1945, Toulouse, Haute-Garonne, France – 8/27/2025, Paris, Île-de-France, France] producer, director, writer, film actor, son of producer Robert Dorfmann [1912-1999], producer, production manager, actress Agnès Delahaie (Alice Marie Rose JeanClaude) [1920-2003], brother of producer, actor Frédéric Dorfmann, father of cameraman, film editor Anthony Dorfmann, producer Marine Dorfmann with actress Patricia Chemla.

The Great Silence – 1967 (Miguel)

Spaghetti Western Directors, Screenwriters, Cinematographers

Spaghetti Western Director ~ Oliver Griffiths

Oliver Griffiths was born in Derby, England on October 7, 1995, he began making films in 2009 at the age of 13, gradually learning the skills of directing, writing, editing. acting and producing by making numerous short films and a zero-budget feature film in 2012.

From 2014-2017 he studied Film Production at the University of Derby, where he directed multiple short films, including his final year film project titled 'Enemies', which went on to win the Audience Choice Award for Best Picture at the Cine17 University Degree Show and received numerous accolades and nominations on the film festival circuit between 2017 and 2019. He graduated with a First-Class Honours Degree in 2017.

Aside from short films, Oliver Griffiths has worked on music videos and director and editor and has also worked in various other departments such as Assistant Directing, Composing and designing film posters.

His most recent short film, the Western Drama 'A Personal Errand' was completed in 2022 and has been selected for various film festivals and has received a number of award wins and nominations.

Oliver Griffiths directed two Euro-westerns: “Rogue River” in 2012 and “A Personal Errand” in 2022.

GRIFFITHS, Oliver [10/7/1995, Derby, England, U.K. -     ] – producer, director, writer, composer, film editor, actor.

Rogue River – 2012

A Personal Errand – 2022


Spaghetti Western Screenwriter ~ Enrico Colombo

Enrico Colombo was an Italian producer, production manager and screenwriter. He was born in Milan, Italy on August 1, 1930, and wrote screenplays for seven films between 1950 and 1973. He also was a production manager on three films and produced two films. Colombo died in Rome on September 29, 2012, at the age of 82.

Enrico Colombo co-wrote the screenplays for two Spaghetti westerns: “Réquiem para el gringo” (Duel in the Eclipse) with Maria del Carmen Martinez Roman in 1968 and “Ancora dollari per i McGregor” (Another Dollar for the McGregors) with José Luis Merino and María del Carmen Martínez Román in 1970.

COLOMBO, Enrico (aka E. Colombo) [8/1/1930, Milan, Lombardy, Italy – 9/29/2012, Rome, Lazio, Italy] – producer, production manager, writer.

Duel in the Eclipse - 1968 (co)

Another Dollar for the McGregors – 1970 (co)

 

Spaghetti Western Cinematographer ~ Franz Xaver Lederle

Franz Xaver Lederle was born on February 18, 1931, and is a German cinematographer renowned for his contributions to West German cinema in the 1960s and 1970s, particularly his work on the popular Jerry Cotton film series.

Born in Mindelheim, Bavaria, Lederle began his career in the film industry as a camera assistant before establishing himself as a director of photography. His early notable projects included cinematography for crime and thriller films, such as “The Puzzle of the Red Orchid” (1962), where he captured the atmospheric tension characteristic of Edgar Wallace adaptations. By the mid-1960s, he became a key collaborator on the Jerry Cotton series produced by Constantin Film, shooting entries like “Death in the Red Jaguar” (1968), “Tip Not Included” (1966), and “The Trap Snaps Shut at Midnight” (1966), which adapted the FBI agent novels into stylish, action-oriented spy thrillers.

Lederle's versatility extended beyond crime genres; he also worked on erotic and horror films, including Jess Franco's “Succubus” (1968) and the controversial “Bloody Friday” (1972), for which he served as both cinematographer and writer. Throughout his career, spanning over 60 credits, Lederle's technical expertise in lighting and composition helped define the visual style of post-war German B-movies, blending noir influences with the era's emerging exploitation elements.

Franz Xaver Lederle was a cinematographer on one Euro-western film, “Der Schrei der schwarzen Wölfe” (Cry of the Black Wolves) in 1972 and the German television series, ‘Ay, ay, Sheriff’ (Aye, Aye Sheriff) in 1973.

LEDERLE, Franz Xaver (aka Franco El Redel, G. Ford, Francis Lederle, Francis X. Lederle, Franx X. Lederle, Franz Lederle, Franz X. Lederle, Franz-X. Lederle) [2/18/1931, Mindelheim, Bavaria, Germany -     ] – writer, cinematographer, cameraman.

Cry of the Black Wolves – 1972 [as Franz X. Laderle]

Aye, Aye Sheriff (TV) - 1973