Monday, September 30, 2024

RIP Kris Kristofferson

 


Kris Kristofferson, who attained success as both a groundbreaking country music singer-songwriter and a Hollywood film and TV star, died on September 28th at home in Maui, Hawaii. Born Kristoffer Kristian Kristofferson in Brownsville, Texas on June 22, 1936. Kristofferson was a Renaissance man – an athlete with a poet’s sensibilities, a former Army officer and helicopter pilot, a Rhodes scholar who took a job as a janitor in what turned out to be a brilliant career move. Kris first established himself in the music world as a songwriter in the country music capital of Nashville – writing hits such as the Grammy-winning “Help Me Make It Through the Night,” “For the Good Times,” and one-time girlfriend Janis Joplin’s plaintive No. 1 hit, “Me and Bobby McGee.” In the early 1970s he became well-known as a performer with a rumbling, unpolished baritone, as well as an in-demand actor, notably opposite Barbra Streisand in “A Star Is Born,” one of the most popular films of 1976. Kristofferson’s rugged good looks led to roles in movies such as “Cisco Pike,” “Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid,” “The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea,” “Convoy,” “Heaven’s Gate,” “Lone Star” and “Blade.”. Kristofferson appeared in one Spaghetti western as Jesse Ray Torrance in the 1999 made for TV film “Outlaw Justice” written by Gene Quintano and co-starring Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and Sancho Gracia which was filmed in Almeria, Spain. Kris also appeared in two European documentary western films as himself in “Go West Young Man” in 2003 and as narrator in “Requiem for Billy the Kid” in 2006.

RIP Klaus Manchen

 


German theater, film, TV and voice actor Klau Manchen died on September 27 in Dahlwitz-Hoppegarten, Brandenburg, Germany. He was 87. Born in Breslau, Silesia, Germany on December 1, 1936, he grew up in Berlin after the war, Manchen trained as an actor at the State Drama School in Berlin-Schöneweide (today's HfS Ernst Busch). He worked with directors such as Fritz Bornemann, Horst Schönemann, Albert Hetterle, Wolfgang Heinz and Thomas Langhoff. Klaus appeared in two Euro-westerns: “Der lange Ritt zur Schule” (The Long Ride to School) in 1981 as Jack Bull; “Der Scout” (The Scout) in 1982 as Sergeant Anderson. He was the German voice of Big Bear in the 1985/1989 animated film “Die Spur führt zum Silbersee” (The Trail to the Silver Sea).

Little Known Spaghetti Western Actors ~ Ugo Carboni

[These daily posts will cover little known actors or people that have appeared in more recent films and TV series. Various degrees of information that I was able to find will be given and anything that you can add would be appreciated.]

Character actor Ugo Carboni was born in Perugia, Umbria, Italy on October 29, 1889. He appeared in around 20 films. His credits have often been confused with actor Giuseppe Carbone as in the case of 1966’s “Un dollaro tra i denti” (A Stranger in Town) so his total credits may be in error. There’s quite a discrepancy in their ages so it’s difficult to believe they could have been confused.

Carboni died in Rome the day after Christmas in 1973. He was 84 years old.

Ugo appeared in only two Spaghetti westerns: “Uccidete Johnny Ringo” (Kill Johnny Ringo) – 1965 (Frank) and “Uno sceriffo tutto d'oro” (A Golden Sheriff) 1966 (Mary’s father).

CARBONI, Ugo (aka Ugo Carbone) [10/29/1889, Perugia, Umbria, Italy -12/26/1973, Rome, Lazio, Italy] – film actor.

Kill Johnny Ringo – 1965 (Frank)

A Golden Sheriff – 1966 (Mary’s father)

New Italian CD release “Johnny Yuma”

 








Johnny Yuma

 

Composer: Nora Orlandi

 

Country: Italy

Label: BEAT

#BEATBCM9619

Tracks: 36

Listening time: 1:12:11

Available: September 30, 2024

 

Track Listing

1. JOHNNY YUMA (Title song -Seq.1) 2:46

2. WHERE IS YOUR GUN? 0:52

3. A GUITAR FOR JOHNNY 1:58

4. JOHNNY YUMA (Title song reprise - Seq.2) 1:43

5. JOHNNY YUMA (Seq.3) 1:08

6. JOHNNY YUMA (Seq.4) 2:04

7. JOHNNY YUMA (Seq.5) 2:53

8. WAR AND REMEMBRANCE 1:02

9. LOADED GUNS 2:02

10. JOHNNY YUMA (Seq.6) 8:27

11. THAT SILENT MAN 2:05

12. FOG OF TIME 1:30

13. JOHNNY YUMA (Seq.7) 1:08

14. JOHNNY YUMA (Seq.8) 2:37

15. JOHNNY YUMA (Seq.9) 2:38

16. JOHNNY YUMA (Seq.10) 1:38

17. JOHNNY YUMA (Seq.11) 1:08

18. JOHNNY YUMA (Seq.12) 2:02

19. TRUMPET FOR A SILENT MAN 1:27

20. A LONG TIME AGO 2:02

21. JOHNNY YUMA (Seq.13) 0:43

22. A LONG TIME AGO (#2) 1:23

23. JOHNNY YUMA (Seq.14) 1:01

24. JOHNNY YUMA (Seq.15) 3:44

25. HIDDEN PAST 2:55

26. JOHNNY YUMA (Title song -Seq.1) 2:47

27. WHERE IS YOUR GUN? (#2) 1:23

28. SUDDEN SADNESS 1:01

29. A GUITAR FOR JOHNNY (#2) 2:53

30. LOADED GUNS (#2) 1:40

31. THAT SILENT MAN (#2) 2:06

32. WAR AND REMEMBRANCE (#2) 1:02

33. FOG OF TIME (#2) 1:10

34. TRUMPET FOR A SILENT MAN (#2) 1:26

35. A LONG TIME AGO (#3) 2:01

36. HIDDEN PAST (#2) 2:55

Spaghetti Western locations Then & Now ~ “Chino

In the 1973 film “Chino” the town scenes were few and far between but there was a set near north of Rancho Leone on the opposite side of route A-92. The town was ¾ scale and was mostly adobe buildings looking more like a Mexican village. It was also seen in Alex Cox’s “Stright to Hell”. It was constructed in Nueva Frontera in Tabernas, Spain.

Today the town is completely gone and only scraps of wood and a few foundations ans adobe bricks can be found.




European Western Comic Books – Bonanza

 








Bonanza

This is the Italian translated of the  American comic book of the same name published by Dell/Golden Key. Texts by Gaylord DuBois, drawings by Tom Gill and Herb Trimpe. The American comics are integrated with stories created by Fernando Fusco. In some issues appear short stories by Bedrock Barnes, again by DuBois, Gill and Trimpe.

The comic book was published by Editrice Censcio (ECE) in Milan, Italy under the direction of Battista Arcaini from February 1964 – December of that year. Each issue contained 40 black and white pages with color covers.

Special Birthdays

Udo Jürgens (composer) would have been 90 today but died in 2014.



Sunday, September 29, 2024

From the WAI! vault

 







Little Known Spaghetti Western Actors ~ Giuseppe Carbone

[These daily posts will cover little known actors or people that have appeared in more recent films and TV series. Various degrees of information that I was able to find will be given and anything that you can add would be appreciated.]


 Giuseppe Carbone was born on February 7, 1939, in Messina, Sicily, Italy. He appeared in fifty-three films between 1964 and 1982. He’s been billed under various names such as Beppe Carbone, Pino Carbone, Ugo Carbone, Pippo Carboni, Jon Davers. Carbone has also appeared in several fotoromanzi magazines. He also wrote, was assistant directorand appeared in the 1976 film “La figliastra - Storia di corna e di passioni”.

Carbone appeared in some 45 Spaghetti westerns usually in small background roles as a townsman, saloon patron, gambler or henchman.

CARBONE, Giuseppe (aka Beppe Carbone, Pino Carbone, Ugo Carbone, Pippo Carboni, Jon Davers) [2/7/1939, Messina, Sicily, Italy -     ] – assistant director, writer, fotoromanzi, film actor.

“Buffalo Bill l’eroe del far west” (Buffalo Bill, Hero of the Far West) 1964 (poker player), “30 Winchester per El Diablo” (Gold Train) 1965 (townsman), “I due sergenti del generale Custer” (The Two Sergeants of General Custer) 1965 (poker player), “Le colt cantarono le morte e fu tempo di massacre” (The Brute and the Beast) 1966 (hunted man), “El Cisco” (Cisco) 1966 (Mexican townsman), “Uccidi o muori” (Kill or be Killed) 1966 (saloon patron), “Arizona Colt” (The Man from Nowhere)1966 (Mexican saloon guitar player), “Un dollaro tra i denti” (A Stranger in Town) 1966 (Paco), “Lola Colt” (Black Tigress) 1967 (El Diablo henchman), “Una colt in pugno al diavolo” A Colt in the Hand of the Devil) 1967 (townsman), “Non aspettare Django, spara” (Don't Wait, Django... Shoot!) (Alvarez henchman), “Prega Dio... e scavati la fossa!” (Pray to God and Dig Your Grave) 1967 (peon), “Corri uomo corri” (Run, Man, Run) 1967 (Riza bandit), “Le due facce del dollar” (Two Faces of the Dollar) 1967 (soldier), “Per 100.000 dollari t'ammazzo” (Vengeance is Mine) 1967 (Will Roberts), “Al di là della legge” (Beyond the Law) 1968 (miner), “Black Jack” 1968 (Mexican miner), “Sangue chiama sangue” (Blood Calls to Blood) 1968 (monk), “Joe... cercati un posto per morire!” (Find a Place to Die) 1968 (one of Bobo’s volunteers), “Uno di più all'inferno” 1968 (a Ward henchman), “Ammazzali tutti e torna solo” (Kill Them All and Come Back Alone) 1968 (prison camp guard), “Il pistolero segnato da Dio” (Two Pistols and a Coward) 1968 (Lewsitown townsman). “La collina degli stivali” (Boot Hill) 1969 (Fisher henchman), “Un esercito di 5 uomini” (The 5-Man Army) 1969 (Mexican villager), “I quattro del Pater Noster” (In the Name of the Father) 1969 (poker player), Quintana -1969 (townsman), “Indio Black, sai che ti dico: Sei un gran figlio di...” (Adios Sabata) – 1970 (cantina patron), “Arizona Vuelve” (Arizona Returns) 1970 (barbershop patron), “Una novola di polvere... un grido di morte... arriva Sartana” (Gunman in Town) 1970 (shell game gambler), “Lo chiamavano Trinità...” 1970 (They Call Me Trinity), “I vendicatori dell'Ave Maria” (The Twilight Avengers) 1970 (miner), “Gli fumavano le colt…lo chiamavano Camposanto” (Bullet for a Stranger) 1971 (horse seller’s companion), “Anda muchacho, spara!” (Dead Men Ride) 1971 (Redfield henchman), “Seminò morte... lo chiamavano il Castigo di Dio!” (Django… Adios!) 1971 (deputy), “Testa t'ammazzo, croce... sei morto - Mi chiamano Alleluja” (Guns for Dollars) 1971 (Ramirez bandit), “Quelle sporche anime dannate” (Paid in Blood) 1971 (townsman), “... continuavano a chiamarlo Trinità” (Trinity is STILL My Name) 1971 (Mexican), “Alleluja e Sartana figli di... Dio” (Alleluia and Sartana, Sons of God) 1972 (El Tigre bandit), “Un animale chiamato uomo” (An Animal Called Man) 1972 (Charley Smith), “La colt era il suo Dio” (God is My Colt .45) 1972 (townsman), “Uomo avvisato mezzo ammazzato... Parola di Spirito Santo” (Blazing Guns) 1972 (soldier), “E poi lo chiamarono il magnifico” (Man of the East) 1972 (saloon patron), “Scansati... a Trinità arriva Eldorado” (Stay Away from Trinity When He Comes to Eldorado) 1973 (saloon patron), “Zanna Bianca” (White Fang) 1973 (saloon patron), and“Che botte ragazzi!” (The Return of Shanghai Joe) 1974 (Mexican).


Claudio Del Falco: Django Undisputed

The Italian western rises again, under the banner of Trinity.

Dear Claudio, I'm very curious to know about this project of the return of the western: Django Undisputed...

This was an idea launched by Minerva. I'm making films that they distribute, but, as you know, my films are centered on martial arts. I mainly do those. So, during a meeting with Gianluca Curti we decided to make a western and bring spaghetti back to Italy. He has decided, in truth. And I, a little reluctantly at first, accepted this project...

Why, didn't you like the western genre?

No, no: let's say that, initially, the push came from him, from Curti, then later... Appetite comes with eating (laughs). I took this responsibility because there the challenge was to make a western even, let's say, visible... Because they have also made many westerns. If you do a search, in recent years they have done wasterns, but at a very low cost, so no one has seen them. Maybe they even put them on Prime, but they were poor works, without actors, with a horse... that is, the western was really shitty. Instead, we decided to make it a high-budget film, and we made an important film, with important actors, like Tomas Arana from Gladiator.

There is also Ottaviano Dell'Acqua who plays the father, an important role ...

Ottaviano Dell'Acqua makes Django great... but this is also and above all a bit of a parody of Trinity: the most important western film I saw was Trinity... I used to go to school on horseback, when I was little, go figure, so I really experienced the western (laughs). So I was inspired by They Call Him Trinity and Trinity is STILL My Name. In fact, the film will be dedicated to E. B. Clucher, to Enzo Barboni, the director of Trinity... Django undisputed will be a tribute to him. The title was found by Gianluca Curti, thinking of the Undisputed saga, with Scott Adkins. So, what does Django do here? He returns home and finds his father, who is a drunkard and is played very well by Ottaviano Dell'Acqua. Octavian made an interpretation that I won't tell you! He was very good, really formidable and I think he did one of the best roles of his career. Because I sewed it on him right ...

[Ottaviano Dell'Acqua, Anna Rita Del Piano]

 Who wrote the film? 

I wrote it, subject and screenplay. And it is entirely inspired by Trinity. I took the most beautiful things, which have remained in the history of cinema. Do you remember, for example, when Trinity slapped the bad guy, in the famous card game, where he shuffles the cards and so on? Here, I did it again the same, with those gags. Then, lunch with the family, a feast of beans... Even the famous sleigh attached to the horse, we have recreated it the same.

When did you shoot it? Have you finished it or are you still working on it?

The film is shot and I'm editing it: since we are very fast, I think it will be ready by mid-October. So, I think that for Christmas Gianluca, if he wants, can let him out.

It seems to me that you have never been a great fan of westerns, at least the classic, traditional one...

Let's say that I was born with the western, because I grew up in a family of horsemen: I went to school on horseback, so much so that everyone remembers me in Castel Gandolfo, when I went to Castel Gandolfo at the age of twelve, galloping, to go to school, middle school, high school. I used to go to Albano, to Marino, always on horseback, to do the shopping. So I grew up with horses. But classic western films, like Ford's, with John Wayne, I always found a bit boring. I watched them with my father, but I always considered them a little boring, with slow stories. The only western I've seen at least a hundred times is Trinity. But really! Because Trinity involves you, makes you laugh, is full of jokes. So, I said to myself: "Here, if we remake a Trinity 2.0, it works, because many young people have not seen it, or they want to see it updated again... And so we made this Trinity 2.0 in which we put the saloon with the prostitutes, all very curvy, the Japanese whose life, my brother, Bambino, saves ...

Well, I guess, then, that the challenge was to find the new Spencer and Hill...

So: instead of Bud Spencer we chose a bodybuilder because today Bud Spencer would no longer work: young people are critical and therefore one "with a belly" would not work, so I put Mister Olimpia, Fabio Romagnolo, a Schwarzenegger type, who beats, who punches in the head. And the boy who sees him says: "Kill, this one, so muscular, he beats!". I do Terence Hill, so I get on horseback, I go down... and for the first time I don't fight!

[Claudio Del Falco, Clara Guggiari]

 This is what I wanted to ask you. I mean, did you put something of "your" martial arts in it?

No! I was an actor. Strangely, I only acted this time (laughs).

So not even a punch is thrown?

No, I participate in the fights, but I only dodge the blows... The punches are all given by the one who plays Bud Spencer. Fabio Romagnolo is a bodybuilder, he is very good, huge, if you see him, he looks like a gentle giant. With the beard he is the same, inspired by Bud. I'm there with him and I'm always laughing, like Terence Hill, I tease everyone, I make fun, I'm the fastest gun in the West. But when I shoot, I disarm, I never kill. I'm so fast that I take the guns out of the hands of those who want to shoot me...

But after all, even Terence Hil and Bud Spencer, they didn't do any deaths in those westerns there...

Maybe in the first scene, when he eats the beans, he kills those two: this is not well understood...

They were certainly much softer than the violence of the spaghetti-western, the grim one, where there were dozens of deaths. Everything was more moderate...

The only one who dies in my film is killed by Mortimer, paid by Tomas Arana to kill me. He arrives in the town and kills the sheriff, who is played by Massimiliano Buzzanca, the son of Lando Buzzanca. He is the only one who dies. The film is very funny, also because I updated it later. In Trinity, there were some boring parts. For example, I find it very boring when they go to the prairie and the Mexicans arrive: that part was a bit boring and it's not in my film. In the second Trinity two there are some beautiful ideas, such as lunch. So I took all the funniest sequences from the two films and edited them all for a Django. There is the relationship between Django and Ottaviano, between son and father: the return home after many years, the family cemetery, where they train, the prostitutes who wash them... that is, I put the famous tub, but Terence Hill washed himself, while here I put four prostitutes to wash the character. Django Undisputed is very rich: we had a lot of extras, for the first time I had up to 70 people on stage. In my films, I had a maximum of 10. This time I exaggerated: 20 horses on stage at the same time, galloping. I mean that you can see that it's not an Italian low budget, understood? It could be an American budget. I am very satisfied with the result, I can't wait to show you. As soon as I have it ready, I will send it to you.

Listen, Claudio, but from the inside, since you have moved and are moving a lot: how is the situation in Italian cinema?

Let's say that I have wriggled out of Italian cinema. For me, Italian cinema does not exist. Maybe I'm the only actor you shouldn't have asked such a question. You have to do it to all Italian actors except me, because the films I make have an international destination: if one of my films is released in Italy or not, it's the same thing for me. What does Minerva International do? He dubbs my films, because he has the distribution of my films, I have a contract with them for distribution and what do they do? They dub them in six languages: dubbed themselves, not subtitled; and films are released in each country with their own language. I'm not an Italian actor "subtitled", you know what I mean? In the States I speak New York, so I'm a New Yorker...

[Fabio Romagnolo, Gabriele Mallimaci]

So you will also have proposals from abroad...

Absolutely, I have them all the time. I have them both from television, for Italian films, and from abroad. But now I have this close relationship with Minerva and I don't want to betray them. I've known the Curti family for thirty years, we're very good friends, now I have to make a lot of films with them. Now I do leading roles, like: I did Assassin Club, Camille Delamarre's with Paramount. But my character, after the three protagonists, is the most important, understood? So, under these conditions, I do the role, but if they call me for a film in which, perhaps, I don't like the cast, I don't do it.

Why is it difficult to do the action genre in Italy today?

They try, to make them, but they can't. So: the director is fundamental. Why am I directing myself now? The editing is fundamental, and also the actor, who must be physical, because to make films like this, you need a physical actor. So, in Italy I don't say I'm the only one, but almost... I don't know how many actors physically manage to hold a leading role by jumping through hoops, beating them, kicking in the face... I am always very trained. When I go to make a film, I know that for twenty days, eight hours a day, I fight... And I'm not even a child anymore, I'm big in age. It takes a physical preparation that Italians don't have and they should take a stuntman. So, I have little competition in Italy at the level of actors. I take advantage of it, of course, having no competition. The Italian Van Damme is me.

But it is also true that you come from an important athletic background, I mean: you are someone who has a sporting background...

Eh, I've been making these films since the nineties. And think that this year I am also doing the unified world championship of WTKA Karate, I am training for October 29 in Massa Carrara: I still don't give up. Before Django Undisputed I made two other films, one is called Iron Fighter and the other The Martial Avenger: the first will be released now in October and the other immediately following. So Django will be released as the third film as a director. I have two films of my own, about martial arts where there is revenge, the ferocious villain, who hurts and so on...

The classic scheme...

Classic, international scheme, therefore international actors. In one I have Danny Quinn, even, who I dusted off after many years, the son of Anthony Quinn, who is my coach, and then Hal Yamanouchi. In this other one, however, I have all stuntmen: Michael Seagal who is a very good stuntman actor, the son of Hal Yamanouchi who is also a stuntman, Taiyo Yamanouchi who is very good and then all stuntmen, at least thirty ...

[Claudio Del Falco, Michael Seagal]

Being a director, then, also being on the other side, what is it like? This is the third one you've directed...

I was born as a director because I went to directing school when I was young. I come from the Jovinelli family. Do you know that grandmother fed Federico Fellini? That is, Fellini went to my grandmother's theater, he was always there. I used to go to his house, when he was shooting I was an assistant director, I was there with him. So I was born as a director, I went to directing school... Then, logically, who makes the director do it? That is, it is impossible. At a certain point I made these films as an actor and I found an important team: with Matteo De Angelis, who is my dop and helps me a lot, because when I am on stage as an actor, he helps me direct. I use the stunt coordinator as a director also, sometimes I put him as a video director. Let's say that we have very few lines in these action movies. Just this morning I made the dialogue list this morning of The Martial Avenger: there were twenty lines in the whole film ...

It's just action...

Yes, because Minerva wants this, she only wants action and in Italy these films are not made for a thousand reasons, because you need the right direction, a protagonist who has the scenic power and therefore must have a physique that gives the idea, because if you put someone with a belly the film doesn't hold up. Like Sylvester Stallone when he started: we all remember Stallone's physique, in Rocky, in Rambo. He was famous for his muscles, then later we associated him with those characters he played. You need the muscles, the physical preparation, the right direction, the editor who knows how to edit, the distribution that makes you release it all over the world... because then they are films that are not released in Italy, so if you do it for Italy it is useless. You have to have a distribution in 160 countries, because, then, over all this number of countries, it grosses, it makes a good taking. I set up this whole team between distribution, production, Salvatore Alongi who is the executive producer together with Giuseppe Andreani, so we are a group. I, then, am also very fast in directing, I am very fast in directing because I have very fast techniques: I never repeat the scene, I do all the pick-ups, practically, that is, I always pick up where I came from. Then I'll fix the editing, the scene, because these are scenes that have a lot of cuts. And having 5000 cuts, you make a film in the editing, you don't do it while you shoot it. I, already having it in mind, it is useless for a kick that I have already taken to repeat it, because I take it from another angle. It takes me very few days for a film, 12, 13, 14 days at most.

How long did it take to make Django Undisputed?

12 actual days. Very fast, shot in God's heat, in August, a massacre, but I'm very satisfied. The cast go and see: there is Nadia Bengala former Miss Italy, there is Francesca Giuliano that of the Bonolis program, as well as the great Tomas Arana ...

And what is he like, Arana?

I had already shot a film with him, Ferrero's: MMA Love Never Dies. And he was my rival already there. We always talk during the year, we wish each other well. Arana gives an additional touch of internationality. Then, since we couldn't take two actors to hold our own, there are two sports champions: me, who am world champion in karate, who is Terence Hill, and Fabio Romagnolo, who is world champion in body building, who plays Bud Spencer. And so we didn't go to usurp the throne of these two fantastic characters; Ours is a different key, we are two sportsmen lent to the cinema who interpret these characters in their own way. If we had put two actors, the comparison would not have held up...


Who Are Those Singers & Musicians? ~ S. Moriones

 

Francisco Javier Moriones was born in Rome, Italy on June 27, 1943, to a Spanish father and an Italian mother, Moriones often found himself dubbing characters characterized by a Spanish accent. 

He was a theater actor and host, for three years, on the children's television program ‘Giocagiò’, he voiced Richard Dean Anderson in the lead role of the television series ‘MacGyver’. He has also voiced Danny Trejo in several roles, Dwight Schultz from the third to fifth seasons of ‘The A-Team’, Fritz Wepper in ‘Inspector Derrick’, Sam Waterston in ‘Law & Order’, William Shatner in ‘Boston Legal’, Stacy Keach in ‘Prison Break’, and many others.

In the film field he dubbed Tommy Lee Jones in “No Country for Old Men”, Joe Pesci in “Mom, I Missed the Plane” and “Mom, I Missed the Plane: I got Lost in New York” as well as Pete Postlethwaite in “The Lost World - Jurassic Park”. He is the voice of Slinky in “Toy Story 4”, replacing Piero Tiberi, who died in 2013.

Moriones was married to Elisabetta Bonino, with whom he worked in ‘Giocagiò’: the couple had two children. He is currently married to Germana Tucci with whom he has a daughter.

As a singer he’s worked with composer Nico Fidenco and can be heard on the “John il Bastardo” LP (1967) and “Nico Fidenco – I Miei Primi 50 Anni Da Cantante E Compositore” LP released in 2010.

MORIONES, S. (aka Saverio Moriones) (Francisco Javier Moriones) [6/27/1943, Rome, Lazio, Italy -     ] – film, radio, TV actor, voice actor, singer, married to actress Elisabetta Bonino [1945-    ] father of Amparo Moriones [1967-    ], Simon Moriones, married to Germana Tucci [1947-    ] father of actress Arianna Moriones.

John the Bastard* – 1967 [sings: "The Ballad of John"]

Special Birthdays

Marina Berti (actress) would have been 100 today but died in 2002.









Werner Pochath (actor) would have been 85 today but died in 1993.









Georgi Bakhchepanov (actor) would have been 80 today but died in 1992.



Saturday, September 28, 2024

Podcast #139, Season 8, Episode 9, #139

Please join me at noon PST today as we continue Season 8 of “The Spaghetti Westerns Podcast”. This week will be covering the history of the Spaghetti westerns “Colorado Charlie” with Charlie Lawrence. We’ll also discover who Stephan Zacharias was and Whatever Happened to Dan Sturkie. The film of the week is “Have a Nice Funeral” with Gianni Garko. We’ll cover composer Gioacchino Angelo from “Colorado Charlie” and the CD of “Have a Nice Funeral”. I’ll have a book of the week, an autograph of the week some posters and Spaghetti News to catch up on. So, I hope to see you around High Noon today on You Tube and Facebook.

From the WAI! vault

 


Little Known Spaghetti Western Actors ~ Tabaré Carballo

[These daily posts will cover little known actors or people that have appeared in more recent films and TV series. Various degrees of information that I was able to find will be given and anything that you can add would be appreciated.]

Tabaré Carballo was born in Montevideo, Uruguay on February 4, 1960. He studied acting at the Buenos Aires Theater Institute and moved to Argentina to pursue his dreams. Shortly after finishing his studies, he landed his first role in the Argentine television series ‘El Marginal’. Since then, he has appeared in several films and television series in Latin America. He also taught Muy Thai martial arts.

Five years after beginning his acting career, Carballo was nominated for the Martín Fierro Award for Best Actor in a Drama for his role in ‘El Marginal’. This nomination gave Carballo the opportunity to leave Uruguay and establish himself as an international actor. Since then, he has appeared in numerous film and television productions.

In 2013 Carballo was at a self-serve gas station when he witnessed two men robbing the attendant. He intervened and one of the thieves took a shot at Tabaré. Fortunately, he wasn’t seriously injured as the bullet ricocheted off his head.

Carballo performed stunts in 1984’s “Rustler’s Rhapsody” with Tom Berenger and Andy Griffith and from 1990-1993 he appeared as Private Sepulveda/Corporal Sepulveda and a villager in the ‘New Zorro’ TV series starring Duncan Regehr.

CARBALLO, Tabaré (aka Tabare Carvallo) [2/4/1960, Montevideo, Uruguay -     ] – stuntman, film actor.

Rustlers’ Rhapsody – 1984 [also stunts]

Zorro (TV) – 1990-1993 (Private Sepulveda/Corporal Sepulveda, villager)

“De Tocht Alleen”

 

De Tocht Alleen – German title

The Journey Alone – English title

 

A 2024 Dutch short film production

Producer: Brahma T Ramsodit

Director: Michiel Kole

Story: Michiel Kole, Brahma T Ramsodit

Screenplay: Michiel Kole, Brahma T Ramsodit

Cinematography: Lars Struck [color]

Music: Maurits Handlogten

Running time: 8 minutes

 

Cast:

Blackstone - Brahma T Ramsodit

Violet Moon - Fawn Winters

Outlaws Blackstone and Violet Moon. Together on the run, their love seems gone when she suddenly leaves him. Is it betrayal or is something else in play? We follow his footsteps in the lonely desert. While searching for answers. Longing for his love. Being challenged by body and mind.


Spaghetti Western Locations for “The Forgotten Pistolero”

We continue our search for locations for “The Forgotten Pistolero”. After the scene at the grave Sebastian and Rafael return to the cabin. Sebastian treats the wounded wrist of Rafael. He pours hot water on the wound while Rafael bites down on a piece of leather. He wraps the wrist in a clean cloth. Rafael asks about Sebastian’s spread and he’s told he’s been living there for about 12 years. Rafael thanks him and calls him Sebastian. He’s asked how he knows his name? Rafael says he once knew a man with that name, and he’ll tell the story tomorrow. The two say goodnight and go to bed.

Leonard Mann said most of the interiors were shot in Rome.



For a more detailed view of this site and other Spaghetti Western locations please visit my friend Yoshi Yasuda’s location site: http://y-yasuda.net/film-location.htm and Captain Douglas Film Locations http://www.western-locations-spain.com/


Special Birthdays

Alicia Altabella (actress) would have been 100 today but died in 2015.








Chelelo (Eleazar García Sáenz) (actor) would have been 100 today but died in 1999.






Marcello Mastroianni (actor) would have been 100 today but died in 1996.







Brigitte Bardot (actress) is 90 today.










Sergio Ukmar (actor) would have been 90 today but died in 1985.



Friday, September 27, 2024

Spaghetti Western Trivia – Spaghetti western posters

In 1969’s “El Zorro justiciero” (Zorro the Lawman) there’s a scene in the sheriff’s office where Bill Warner played by Andres Mejuto reports a robbery of money, he had in his safe that he was planning to buy a ranch he won at auction. Of course, Zorro played by Fabio Testi is blamed as the thief. At the sheriff’s office we see behind Warner on the wall a poster of a man with a reward of $1000. The photo on the poster is that of Anthony Steffen from “Django the Bastard.”





Little Known Spaghetti Western Actors ~ Alexandru Cargea

[These daily posts will cover little known actors or people that have appeared in more recent films and TV series. Various degrees of information that I was able to find will be given and anything that you can add would be appreciated.]

Alexandru Cargea is a Romanian stunt man. He’s appeared in nineteen films since 2007 and is a  member of Praetorian Stunts Unlimited and Uniunea Cascadorilor din Romania.

Alexandru is married to Ioana, and they have a daughter.

He’s performed stunts in two Euro-westerns: “Infern în Tombstone” (Dead in Tombstone) 2012 and the recent “Django” relevision series in 2021. Cargea also performed stunts for the TV mini-series “Hatfields & McCoys” which was filmed in Romania in 2012.

CARGEA, Alexandru (aka Caragea Alexandru) [Romanian] – stuntman, married to Ioana Caragea, father of a daughter.

Dead in Tombstone – 2012 [stunts]

Hatfields & McCoys (TV) – 2012 [stunts]

Django (TV) – 2021 [stunts]

“The House That Was Not”

 

The House That was Not – International title

 

A 2022 Irish shot film production [YDB Films (Dublin)]

Producer: Dean Byrne

Director: Dean Byrne

Story: Elia W. Peattie

Screenplay: Dean Byrne

Cinematography: John Farrelly

Music: Joey Mullins

Running time: 20 minutes

An Irish immigrant joins her American husband on a Kansas frontier farm in 1870. She is soon plagued by disturbing visions, centered on a mysterious cabin nestled in the wheat fields surrounding their home. In the face of crop failures and madness, paranoia and fear set in as she struggles to come to terms with the isolation and harshness of life in the wilderness.

50th Anniversary of the premier of “Patience Has a Limit, We Don’t!”

 

Today marks the 50th anniversary of the premier of “Patience Has a Limt, We Don’t!” It was directed by Franco Ciferri using the alias of Frank Farrow. The film starred Sal Borgese and Peter Martell. It tells the story of Corporal McDonald, an Irish soldier and member of the 7th Cavalry who is stationed in the American West. One day he steals and hides a military chest, containing a huge treasure. After diligently marking the place where he has hidden it, he dies leaving two sons Bill (Peter Martell) and Duke (Sal Borgese) each 50% of the precious map with his wife Isabel (Rita di Lernia) at a farmhouse in a desolate area of Texas. Twenty years after the crime, Lieutenant Pollock (Ray Nolan), among other things is the rejected lover of the widow, continues to investigate the whereabouts of the treasure and convinces the heirs, to search for the chest. They are pursued by swindlers, but after many adventures they find the chest. Outsmarting the robbers, they decide to give the treasure back to the regiment. Then a random explosion reveals the presence of abundant oil in the basement of their farmhouse, and they are consoled with a lavish income. One of the bottom of the barrel Spaghetti westerns it was also one of the last and helped seal the fate of the genre.

 

La pazienza ha un limite… noi no! – Italian title

¡Caray, qué palizas! – Spanish title

Kombinadoroi tou Texas – Greek title

Bill and Duke – English title

Patience has a Limit, We Don’t – English title

 

A 1974 Italian, Spanish film co-production [Pantherfilms (Rome), Ancia Century Films,

     Pérez Pareja, M. Flor (Madrid)]

Producers: Francesco Campitelli, Armando Morandi

Director: Frank Farrow (Franco Ciferri)

Story: Fabio Carboni, Armando Morandi

Screenplay: Fabio Carboni, Armando Morandi, Amando De Ossorio (Amando

     Rodriguez)

Cinematography: Miguel Fernández Mila [Techincolor, Techniscope]

Music: Leonerbert (Franco Bixio, Fabio Frizzi, Vincenzo Tempera)

     Songs: “The Ballad of Bill and Duke”, “The March of the Scared” sung by Ed Tapton

                 (Eo Tapton)

Running time: 96 minutes

 

Cast:

Duke/Doug ‘Pistolero’ McDonald – Sal Borgese (Salvatore Borgese)

Bill ‘Pupo’ McDonald – Peter Martell (Pierto Matrellanza)

Isabel McDonald – Rita di Lernia (Maria de Lernia)

Joe – Luis Barboo

Rosie – Marisa Medina (Maria Medina)

Mancha Negra/Black Spot – Pepe Ruiz (José Ruiz)

Lieutenant Edmund Pollock – Ray Nolan (Ramón Lillo)

Bank customer - Luciano De Ritas

Sheriff - Bruno Boschetti

Wagon driver soldier - Paco Nieto (Francisco Nieto)

Rosie's escort – Venancio Muro

Town rowdy - José Luis Chinchilla

Poker players - Javier de Rivera (Javier Corsini), Zalde (José Lizalde), Antonio Orengo

Barber - Fulvio Pelegrino

Horse seller - Armando Morandi

Man leading horse - Leon Klimovsky

With: Carla Mancini, Manuel Zarzo, Luigi Antonio Guerra, Peter Jacob (Pietro Ceccarelli), Viki Hernandez



Special Birthdays

Joe Stöckel (director, writer, actor) would have been 130 today but died in 1959.









Henry Luzi (actor) would have been 105 today but died in 2011.



Thursday, September 26, 2024

Little Known Spaghetti Western Actors ~ Conny Caracciolo

[These daily posts will cover little known actors or people that have appeared in more recent films and TV series. Various degrees of information that I was able to find will be given and anything that you can add would be appreciated.]

Princess Connie Caracciolo is/was an Italian actress, She was born into the noble family of the Caraccciolos in Naples Italy sometime in the late 1930s. At the age of four she moved to Rome with her family. Later she became a model and film actress where she appeared in six films between 1965 and 1970. She then returned to modeling. She took her first steps in the fashion world in 1982 in a workshop where she created skirts and sheath dresses, simple but unique. After two years she sold the villa she inherited and built his spacious and welcoming atelier.

She has always frequented the most important salons of the Roman nobility, so much so that she is nicknamed the "New Parisian of fashion".

He has received many special awards during his career for professional merits such as the 2007 Labor Award as company of the year, the Venice International Grand Prix delivered by the Chamber of Deputies and the award of the Senate of the Republic.

Today she operates a studio and store in Rome.

Conny appeared in two Spaghetti westerns: “Un hombre viene a matar” (Rattler Kid) 1967 (Jill Scott), “Vendetta per vendetta” (Revenge for Revenge) 1968 (Sandy Baker)

CARACCIOLO, Conny (aka Connie Caracciolo, Conny Carol) ) (Princess Conny Caracciolo di Torchiarolo[193?, Naples, Campania, Italy -    ] – model, photonovelo, film actress, fashion designer.

Rattler Kid – 1967 (Jill Scott)

Revenge for Revenge – 1968 (Sandy Baker)