Clara Colosimo was born on May 23, 1922 in Conegliano, Italy.
She studied opera as a mezzo soprano then went into theater reciting Beckett.
She moved to Rome
in the early 1960s to pursue a career as a theater actress. She made her film
debut in Giulio Petroni’s “Tepepa” (aka “Blood and Guns”) in 1968. She would
alternate between films and theater the rest of her career.
She was much appreciated by the most important filmmakers of
1960s Italian comedy, (as Pietro Germi who used her alongside Dustin Hoffman
and Stefania Sandrelli in “Alfredo Alfredo”), her film career continued with
the revival of such comedy films as “Satyricon” (1968) by Federico Fellini, and
“Fantozzi subisce ancora” (1983) and in her unforgettable part of the concierge
meddling in “La patata bollente” (1979) and Artemio's mother in “Il ragazzo di
campagna” both with Renato Pozzetto. She also personified dramatic roles in
“Novecento” (1976) by Bernardo Bertolucci, and distinguished herself in the character
harpist, (one of the main roles) in the film “Prova d'orchestra” (1980) by
Federico Fellini. Her last film was in “Atto di dolore” (1991) by Pasquale
Squitieri. Clara suffered a heart attack in her home in Rome and died on June 15, 1994. She appeared
in 65 films between 1968 and 1991 appearing in five Euro-westerns from the
previously mentioned “Tepepa” (aka “Blood and Guns”) in 1968 to “White Fang and
the Kid” in 1977.
COLOSIMO, Clara
[5/23/1922, Conegliano, Veneto,
Italy – 6/15/1994, Rome, Lazio,
Italy] –
theater, film, TV, voice actress.
Blood and Guns –
1968 (sergeant’s wife)
Night of the
Serpent - 1968 (Mercedes)
For a Book of
Dollars – 1973 (nun)
A Genius – 1975
(La ruffian)
White Fang and
the Kid – 1977
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