Theatrical,
cinematographic and television actor Adolfo Lastretti died of heart failure on
May 5, 2018 in Loiano, Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy. He was 80. His daughters, Viola and Ariadne, announced
that their father died peacefully, surrounded by the affection of friends and
relatives, due to a heart condition. Born in Tempio Pausania, Sardinia on November 18, 1937, he soon moved
to Liguria, in Rapallo, with his family for work related reasons. Here he completed
his studies and, in 1957, he played in the short “La spiaggia”. Wanting to be
an actor, in 1959 during the university period in Genoa, he enrolled in a
national competition for actors, and won. In the beginning of his artistic career; he settled in Rome, where he
enrolled at the Silvio D'Amico National Academy of Dramatic Arts, obtaining a
scholarship in 1960. Two years later he passed an audition for a show created
by Giancarlo Menotti Album Sheets, with a young Tomás Milián. From the 1960 and 1970s on he continued his
career playing in various films, with character and supporting roles and
sometimes being billed using the aliases Peter Lastrett and Guy Ranson,
alongside such great actors as James Coburn, Alain Delon, Jean-Paul Belmondo
and Richard Roundtree, until he withdrew from the scene in 2003 with a final
appearance in the soap opera Vivere. Lastretti appeared in four Euro-westerns: “Find
a Place to Die” (1968) as Reverend Riley, “Massacre at Fort Holman” (1972) as Will
Fernandez/Will Culder, “Deaf Smith & Johnny Ears” (1973) as Williams
and “The Four of the Apocalypse” 1975 as
Reverend Sullivan. Lastretti was sometimes billed as Peter Lastrett and Guy
Ranson.
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