Monday, June 29, 2026

Little Known Spaghetti Western Actors ~ Mario Donatone

[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.]

Mario Donatone was an Italian character actor renowned for his versatile performances in over 150 films and television productions, as well as his work as a theater director and author.

Born Giacinto Mario Donatone on June 9, 1933 in Tripoli, Libya (then an Italian colony) to Italian parents, he debuted in cinema as an uncredited extra in Luchino Visconti's “Bellissima” (1951) at the age of 18. Over the course of his six-decade career, Donatone collaborated with acclaimed directors including Visconti, Mario Monicelli, Giuseppe Tornatore, Dario Argento, and Francis Ford Coppola, often portraying tough, authoritative, or eccentric figures in genres ranging from crime thrillers to comedies and horror.

His most iconic role came in Coppola's “The Godfather Part III” (1990), where he played Mosca, the ruthless hitman disguised as a priest who attempts to assassinate Michael Corleone (Al Pacino); originally contracted for seven days, the shoot extended to 77 days across Italy and the United States. Other notable film appearances include the henchman in Argento's horror film “Phenomena” (1985), the cardinal in “John Wick: Chapter 2” (2017), and supporting roles alongside Tomas Milian in poliziotteschi such as “Squadra antiscippo” (1976) and Delitto in Formula Uno (1984).

Beyond screen acting, Donatone was a prolific figure in Italian theater, founding and directing the Compagnia Teatrale Italia, where he staged approximately 130 comedies and oversaw around 3,000 performances throughout Italy, Europe, and two tours in Mexico. Fluent in Italian, Spanish, French, and English, he also worked as a presenter and author, drawing on his early amateur experiences in sports like football, boxing, wrestling, weightlifting, fencing, and shooting to inform his physically imposing screen presence. Donatone passed away in Rome at the age of 86 on April 14, 2020, after a period of declining health, leaving a legacy as one of Italy's most enduring character actors.

Mario Donatone appeared in one Spaghetti western as the awakened man in 1973’s “Kid il monello del West” (Bad Kids of the West).

DONATONE, Mario (aka Mario Giacinto Donatone, Dan Doney) (Giacinto Mario Donatone) [6/9/1933, Tripoli, Libya – 4/14/2020, Rome, Lazio, Italy] – author, director, writer, theater, film, TV actor, he founded Compagnia Teatrale Italia and the Castle of Santa Severa theaters.

Bad Kids of the West – 1973 (Edgar)

Spaghetti Western Directors, Screenwriters, Cinematographers

Spaghetti Western Director ~ Marino Girolami


Marino Girolami was an Italian film director, actor, and screenwriter known for his extensive work across multiple genres of Italian popular cinema, including spaghetti westerns, poliziotteschi crime films, horror, and comedies.

Born in Rome on February 1, 1914, Girolami began his film career in the 1940s and 1950s working in various production roles such as assistant director, editor, and production manager before transitioning to directing in the 1960s. He became prolific in the following decades, helming films like “Between God, the Devil and a Winchester” (1968), “Violent Rome” (1975), “Zombie Holocaust” (1979), and “Desirable Teacher” (1981), contributing to the vibrant landscape of Italian genre filmmaking during its peak.

He came from a family deeply involved in cinema, as the father of director Enzo G. Castellari and actor Ennio Girolami, and the brother of director Romolo Guerrieri. Girolami continued working into the 1980s and passed away in Rome on February 20, 1994 at the age of 88.

Marino Girolami directed five Spaghetti westerns: “I magnifici brutos del West” (The Magnificent Brutes of the West) and “I sentieri dell’odio” (Bullets and the Flesh) both in 1964, “Due rrringos nel Texas” (Two R-R-Ringos from Texas) in 1967, “Anche nel West c’era una volta Dio” (Between God, the Devil and a Winchester) in 1968 and “Reverendo Colt” (Reverend Colt) with León Klimovsky in 1970.

GIROLAMI, Marino (aka Jean Bastide, Frank Martin, Franco Martinelli, Charles Ramoulian, Bernardo Rossi, Dario Silvestri, Fred Wilson) [2/1/1914, Rome, Lazio, Italy – 2/20/1994, Rome, Lazio, Italy] – producer, production manager, director, assistant director, writer, actor, brother of director, assistant director, writer Romolo Guerrieri (Romolo Girolami) [1931-    ], father of producer, director, assistant director, writer, film editor, stuntman actor Enzo G. Castellari (Enzo Girolami) [1938-    ], assistant director, actor Ennio Girolami (Enio Girolami) [1935–2013], grandfather of producer, director, assistant director, writer, actress Stefania Girolami Goodwin [1963-    ], producer, director, assistant director, cinematographer, actor Andrea Girolami, founded Marco Film.

The Magnificent Brutes of the West – 1964 [as Fred Wilson]

Bullets and the Flesh - 1964 [as Fred Wilson]

Two R-R-Ringos from Texas -1967 [as Frank Martin]

Between God, the Devil and a Winchester – 1968 [as Dario Silvestri]

Two Gringos from Texas – 1968 [Film was never made.]

Reverend Colt – 1970 (co)


Spaghetti Western Screenwriter ~ Juan Cobos

Born in Madrid in 1933, the son of a single mother, Juan Cobos had a difficult childhood that led him to start working at the age of 8 as a waiter on Gran Vía. It was there that he went to the cinema for the first time in 1942 to see Cecil B. DeMille's Cleopatra and where, he always said, he fell in love with the seventh art. He would study English Philology at the Complutense University and Geography and History, although he would soon devote his interests to cinematography to the point of participating in the Salamanca Conversations in 1955 in which a significant group of Spanish filmmakers warned about the need for a change in our industry. By then he was already writing for the magazine Vida nueva from which came out, in 1956, the magazine Film Ideal that Juan Cobos co-founded together with Miguel Marías, José María Otero, Emilio San de Soto and Luis Alonso, among others. Throughout his career he would found or participate in several film magazines such as Temas de cine in 1960, Griffith in 1965 or Nickel Odeon, of which he was director between 1995 and 2003.

But his relationship with cinema was not limited to film criticism and information. In love as he was with that world, he studied directing at the Official School of Cinematography (EOC) after which he would work as an assistant director and as a director of short films. Not surprisingly, between 1967 and 1970, he was director of the Department of Documentary Film at Estudios Moro. But his main activity in the world of cinema was as a screenwriter. In the 60s and 70s he signed, among others, the scripts of Rififí en la ciudad (1963), Cuando tú no estás (1966), Los chicos con las chicas (1967), Bandidos (1967), La vil seducción (1968), Una mujer de cabaret (1974), Largo retorno (1975) o El rediezcubrimiento de México (1979).

Juan Cobos wrote co-wrote the screenplays for two Spaghetti westerns: “7 dollari sul rosso” ($7.00 to Kill) with Melchiade Coletti-Franciolini and Arnaldo Francolini in 1966 and “Crepa tue… che vivo io!” (Bandidos) with Romano Migliorini, Gianbattista Mussetto in 1967.

COBOS, Juan (Juan de Cobos) [1933, Madrid, Madrid, Spain – 4/5/2025, Madrid, Madrid, Spain] – director, writer, married to ? father of David Cobos, co-founded the magazines Film Ideal, Temas de cine, Esquema de películas, Griffith, Nickel Odeon

Seven Dollars to Kill – 1966 (co)

Bandidos – 1967 (co)


Spaghetti Western Cinematographer ~ Luigi Kuveiller

Luigi Kuveiller was an Italian cinematographer whose career spanned more than five decades, encompassing over 100 film and television credits from the 1950s onward. Born in Rome on October 3, 1927, he began working in the industry as a camera assistant and operator before rising to director of photography, contributing distinctive visual styles to Italian and international cinema.

Kuveiller is particularly noted for his frequent collaborations with director Elio Petri, including the politically charged thriller Investigation of a “Citizen Above Suspicion” (1970), which earned international acclaim for its innovative cinematography that heightened themes of power and paranoia. He also shot Petri's “La classe operaia va in paradiso” (1971), a David di Donatello Award-winning drama exploring labor struggles, and “A Quiet Place in the Country” (1968), a psychological horror film. His work with Petri often featured bold use of color and light to underscore social commentary; Petri's “A Quiet Place in the Country” (1968) won the Silver Bear at the 1969 Berlin International Film Festival.

Beyond Italian arthouse cinema, Kuveiller lent his expertise to Hollywood projects, notably serving as cinematographer on Billy Wilder's comedy “Avanti!” (1972), a satirical take on bureaucracy set in Italy that showcased his ability to blend humor with scenic elegance. He further distinguished himself in the giallo genre with” Deep Red” (1975), directed by Dario Argento, where his dynamic camera work amplified the film's suspenseful atmosphere and vivid horror elements. Later in his career, Kuveiller transitioned to television while maintaining his reputation as a versatile technician who bridged experimental and commercial filmmaking. Luigi died in Fiano Romano, Lazio, Italy on January 10, 2013 at the age of 85.

Luigi Kuveiller was a cinematographer on one Spaghetti western, “Sledge” (A Man Called Sledge) in 1970.

KUVEILLER, Luigi [10/3/1927, Rome, Lazio, Italy - 1/10/2013, Fiano Romano, Lazio, Italy] – cinematographer, cameraman.

A Man Called Sledge – 1970

Spaghetti western locations Then & Now – “Johnny Yuma”

Here in 1966’s “Johnny Yuma” we see Johnny (Mark Damon) riding through a village street. The scene was filmed in Polopos, Almería, Spain.

Here’s the same street as seen in 2026.





European Westerns ~ COLLANA FRONTIERA

 








Frontier Stories

The Frontier Series comic books were only two issues and were released in 1975 and published in Rome by LSE from Giacchetti by editor Lodovico Magrini. Each issue contained 96 black and white pages with color covers.

Titles

01 (00.00.75) - "L'uomo dalla taglia facile"

02 (00.00.75) - "Un uomo chiamato Sartana"

Special Birthdays

Jean Kent (actress) would have been 105 today but died in 2013.






Alice Arno (actress) is 80 today.



Sunday, June 28, 2026

Little Known Spaghetti Western Actors ~ Silvia Donati

[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.]

Silvia Donati is was an Italian character actress. She appeared in only one film according to the IMDb and that was also her only Spaghetti western “I quattro del Pater Noster” (In the Name of the Father) as a casino cashier in 1969.

I can find no biographical information on her.

DONATI, Silvia [Italian] – film actress.

In the Name of the Father – 1969 (casino cashier)

Spaghetti Western Directors, Screenwriters, Cinematographers

Spaghetti Western Director ~ Jean Girault

Jean Girault was a French film director and screenwriter renowned for his contributions to popular comedy cinema, most notably the Gendarme series featuring Louis de Funès as the bumbling Sergeant Ludovic Cruchot.

Born in Villenauxe-la-Grande in the Aube department on May 9. 1924, to a sales representative father and a teacher mother, Girault faced early hardships, including his father's abandonment and a childhood battle with tuberculosis. After earning his baccalauréat and briefly studying medicine, he attended the Institut des hautes études cinématographiques (IDHEC) and began his career in the 1940s as a screenwriter and assistant director, collaborating with figures like Jacques Vilfrid and Marcel Blistène on shorts, theater pieces such as Douce Anita, and early feature scripts.

Girault transitioned to directing with his debut feature “Les Pique-assiette” in 1960, quickly establishing himself in the comedy genre with films like “Pouic-Pouic” (1963) and the blockbuster “Le Gendarme de Saint-Tropez” (1964), which launched a franchise that spanned six installments, including “Le Gendarme à New York” (1965), “Le Gendarme se marie” (1968), “Le Gendarme en balade” (1970), “Le Gendarme et les extra-terrestres” (1979), and “Le Gendarme et les gendarmettes” (1982). Girault's films, including the Gendarme series often co-written with Vilfrid, amassed over 75 million admissions in France and highlighted his knack for farce, ensemble casts, and satirical takes on authority, frequently starring de Funès alongside Michel Galabru, Claude Gensac, and later Jacques Villeret in “La Soupe aux choux” (1981).

Beyond the Gendarme saga, Girault directed more than 30 films over two decades, including “Les Grandes Vacances” (1967), “Jo” (1971), and an adaptation of Molière's “L'Avare” (1979), blending lighthearted narratives with occasional dramatic elements while maintaining a focus on accessible, crowd-pleasing entertainment. His style emphasized verbal humor, physical comedy, and social observation, though it received mixed critical acclaim for its formulaic approach. In 1978, he was awarded the Prix du meilleur cinéaste by the Amicale des cadres de l’industrie cinématographique.

Girault's life was marked by personal reserve and professional humility; married with limited public details on his private affairs, he succumbed to tuberculosis complicated by a heart attack at age 58 while overseeing post-production on “Le Gendarme et les gendarmettes”. His legacy endures through the enduring popularity of his films, which continue to draw audiences for their timeless comedic appeal and role in elevating de Funès to stardom.

Jean Girault co-directed one Spaghetti western, “Le juge Roy Bean” (Judge Roy Bean) with Federico Chentrens in 1971

GIRAULT, Jean [5/9/1924, Villenauxe-la-Grande, Aube, France – 7/24/1982, Paris, Île-de-France, France (tuberculosis)] – director, writer, actor, married to makeup artist, actress Francoise Girault (Françoise Louise Jourdanet) [1946-2019] (19??-1982) father of Dominique Girault.

Judge Roy Bean – 1971 (co)


Spaghetti Western Screenwriter ~ Franco Cobianchi

Franco Cobianchi was an Italian actor and screenwriter known for his contributions to 1960s genre cinema, including peplum films, Spaghetti westerns, and adventure productions. Born on June 23, 1923 in Ferrara, Italy, he began his film career in the mid-1950s with supporting acting roles in comedies, melodramas, and adventure pictures, frequently appearing under pseudonyms such as Franco D'Este, Peter White, and Lanfranco Cobianchi.

He gained particular recognition for his work in popular Italian low- and mid-budget films, acting in titles such as “Maciste e i 100 gladiatori” (1964), “Il colt è la mia legge” (My Gun is the Law, 1965), “I lunghi giorni della vendetta” (Long Days of Vengeance, 1967), and “Commandos” (1968). Cobianchi also wrote screenplays and stories for several films in the same era, including “The Conqueror of Atlantis” (1965), “My Gun is the Law” (1965), and “If You Want to Live... Shoot!” (1968), where he additionally served as an assistant director. His career exemplified the prolific character players and multi-hyphenates of Italy's post-war popular film industry, though it ended prematurely with his death on 9 August 9, 1970, in Rome, Italy, at age 47.

As mentioned above Franco Cobianchi co-wrote the screenplays for three Spaghetti westerns: “La Colt è la mia legge” (The Colt is My Law) with Mario Musy (Mario Glori), Ramón Comas Turner and Alfonso Brescia in 1965, “Se vuoi vivere…spara!” (If You Want to Live... Shoot!) with Darturo M. Tejedor and Sergio Garrone in 1967 and “Tre croci per nopn morire” (No Graves on Boot Hill) with Sergio Garone in 1968.

COBIANCHI, Franco (aka F. Cobianchi, Franco D'Este Cobianchi, Lanfranco Cobianchi, Franco D'Este, Franco d'Este, Franco D’Este, Peter White, Franco D'Este/Peter White) (Franco Cobianchi d'Este) [10/3/1930, Orbignano, Pistoia, Italy – 7/12/2015, Coccomaro DiCona, Ferrara, Italy] – assistant director, writer, film actor.

The Colt is My Law – 1965 (co) [as Franco D’Este]

If You Want to Live... Shoot! – 1967 (co) [as F. Cobianchi]

No Graves on Boot Hill – 1968 (co)


Spaghetti Western Cinematographer ~ Robert Krasker

Robert Krasker was an Australian cinematographer best known for his innovative black-and-white work on British films, including his Academy Award-winning cinematography for “The Third Man” (1949), which featured distinctive high-contrast lighting, tilted camera angles, and atmospheric depictions of post-war Vienna.

Born on August 21 1913, in Alexandria, Egypt, to Romanian merchant Leon Krasker and Austrian-born Matilde Rubel, Krasker was the youngest of five children and emigrated with his family to Perth, Western Australia. After studying art in Paris and optics and photography in Dresden in the 1930s, he moved to London in 1932, where he began his career at Alexander Korda's London Film Productions as a camera assistant and operator under cinematographer Georges Périnal, gaining expertise in lighting, composition, and camera placement. His first solo cinematography credit came with “The Gentle Sex” (1943, directed by Leslie Howard), marking the start of a prolific career spanning over 60 films, primarily in Britain.

Krasker's notable collaborations included directors David Lean, Carol Reed, and Laurence Olivier, with standout works such as “Henry V” (1944), his first in Technicolor, which earned praise for its painterly visuals inspired by medieval manuscripts; “Brief Encounter” (1945), capturing emotional intimacy through subtle lighting; and “Odd Man Out” (1947), a film noir precursor noted for its shadowy, tension-filled Belfast streets. His Oscar for “The Third Man”, the first for an Australian cinematographer, highlighted his mastery of wide-angle lenses, unusual perspectives, and realism over glamour, influencing the film's iconic sewer chase and canted angles. Later highlights included “Romeo and Juliet” (1954, for which he won a British Society of Cinematographers award), “Alexander the Great” (1956), “The Criminal” (1960), “El Cid” (1961, shot in 70mm Technirama and earning another BSC award), and “The Running Man” (1963, BAFTA-nominated). Fluent in French with good knowledge of Spanish and Italian, Krasker never married and virtually retired after “The Trap” (1966) due to health issues and shifting cinematic trends toward color and widescreen formats, though he later contributed to short films in the 1970s and 1980. He died on August 16, 198,1 in London a week shy of turning 68, leaving a legacy as a pioneer of expressive, narrative-driven cinematography in mid-20th-century British film.

As mentioned above Robert Krasker was the cinematographer on one Euro-western, “The Trap” in 1966.

KRASKER, Robert (aka Bob Klasker, Bob Krasker, R. Krasker) [8/21/1913, Alexandria, Egypt – 8/16/1981, London, England, U.K.] – cinematographer, cameraman.

The Trap – 1966