
D’Angelo’s film career was rather irregular and discontinuous, resulting in sometimes important roles, and in other cases so insignificant that it cannot even be classified as character or supporting roles. He was one of many great Italian actors who never received a leading role. He did appear in more meatier roles on television in such series and made for television movies as ‘Jane Eyre’ (1957), ‘The Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby’ by Dickens, directed by D'Anza (1958), ‘Canne al vento’ by Deledda directed by Mario Landi (1958), In 1963 he was the narrator in ‘Crime and Punishment’, by Anton Giulio Majano. Guglielmo Morandi entrusted him with starring roles in the original absolute Romildo Craven Bait (1958) and wrote in The Vicar of Wakefield ( 1959) , followed the direction of Charles Lodovici and always starring in three episodes of the triptych the major processes of the story: Trial of Louis XVI , Marie Antoinette process and process Danton (1962) , and took part in another drama directed by Silverio Blasi and written by Giorgio Prosperi , The Life of Michelangelo ( 1964).
Towards the end of his film career he appeared in two Euro-westerns under the pseudonym of Charles Angel: “Blood at Sundown” (1966) as Judge Waldorf, “The Great Silence” (1967) as the Governor of Utah. He was the Italian voice of Piero Lulli in “God Made Them, I Kill Them” (1968).
D’Angelo died on June 9, 1973 in Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy.
Today we remember Carlo D’Angelo on what would have been his 95th birthday.
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