Italian comedian and actor Lando Buzzanca died from
dementia at the Villa Speranza clinic on December 18, 2022. He 87. The son of
actor Empedocle Buzzanca [1910-1987], and nephew of actor Gino Buzzanca
[1912-1985]. Born in Palermo, Sicily on August 24, 1935, he left high school when he was 16 years old and moved
to Rome to pursue his dream of becoming an actor. In order to survive, he took
many jobs: waiter, furniture mover, and a brief appearance as a slave in the
1959 film Ben-Hur. He became one of the great actors of Italian comedy in the 1960s
and 1970s, who was spurned by critics but obtained a great success with the cinema
going public. After two successful "James Tont" films in which he
played a parody of James Bond, starting from the late 1960s, Buzzanca had large
success in a series of Italian satirical sex comedies which satirized major
institutions such as politics, religion, trade unions and financial world. With
the decline of the genre, he slowed his film activities, focusing on theatre
and television, in which he enjoyed a resurgence of popularity in the 2000s. Buzzanca
appeared in two Euro-westerns: “For a Few Dollars Less” 1966 as Bill; “Rebels
on the Loose” 1966 as Private Chester/Ringo.
No comments:
Post a Comment