Damiano Damiani was born on July 23, 1922 in Pisaano,
Pordenone, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Udine, Italy. Damiano began making short
documentaries in the late 1940s, and was writing and assistant directing
features by the mid-1950s. He debuted as a director in 1960 with the
prize-winning “Il Rossetto” (aka “Lipstick”), and over the next decade helmed
such offbeat films as the Alberto Moravia adaptation “La Noia” (aka “The Empty
Canvas”) (1963) with Bette Davis, the occult romance “La Strega In Amore” (aka “The
Witch”) (1966), and the violent spaghetti western “Quien Sabe?” (aka “A Bullet
for the General”) (1966). His later films include the crime drama “Confessione
Di Un Commissario Di Polizi” (aka “Confessions of a Police Captain”) (1971),
with Martin Balsam, and the lurid occult melodramas “The Devil Is a Woman”
(1974) and “Amityville II: The Possession” (1982). In all Damiani directed two
Euro-westerns, the previously mentioned “A Bullet for the General” (1966) with
Gian Maria Volonte, Klaus Kinski and Loy Castel and “The Genius” with Terence
Hill and Miou Miou (1975) for which he also wrote the screenplay. Today we
celebrate Damiano Damiani’s 90th birthday.
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