The
premier Italian actor of the postwar era, Marcello Mastroianni was
among the most popular international stars in movie history. A speculative,
almost introverted screen presence, he was the perfect foil for the
arid, often puzzling films of directors like Michelangelo Antonioni
and Federico Fellini, with whom he achieved some of his greatest success.
Born September 28, 1924 in Fontana Liri, Italy, Mastroianni worked
in Rome as a draughtsman during World War II. Towards the close of
the conflict he was captured by the Nazis and exiled to a labor camp
in northern Germany, but he managed to escape and subsequently flee
to Venice, where he spent the remainder of the war in hiding. Upon
returning to Rome in 1945, Mastroianni accepted an accounting position
with Eagle Lion (Rank) Films, and in his spare hours performed with
a local drama troupe, earning raves for an appearance in Angelica
which brought him to the attention of director Luchino Visconti, who
subsequently cast him in his production of As You Like It. Mastroianni
became a regular member of Visconti's company and starred in dramas
ranging from A Streetcar Named Desire to Death of a Salesman to Uncle
Vanya. In 1947 he made his film debut in I Miserabli but did not reappear
again onscreen for two more years.
Although
Mastroianni enjoyed a successful and prolific motion-picture career
from 1949 onward, the films he made in his earliest days as a screen
actor were almost exclusively minor efforts, rarely screened outside
of Italy. In 1955 he co-starred with Vittorio De Sica and Sophia
Loren -- an actress with whom he would frequently be paired in the
years to come -- in Alessandro Blasetti's comedy Peccato che Sia
una Canaglia and later worked with director Mario Monicelli on Padri
e Figli. Still, for the most part both the casts and crews of his
projects were undistinguished, and he remained an unknown outside
of his native land. However, in 1957 Mastroianni reunited with Visconti
for Le Notti Bianche, a picture which the actor later noted as a
film that re-ignited his waning interest in the performing process.
He next appeared as a supporting player in Monicelli's classic crime
caper I Soliti Ignot, and for the first time he enjoyed success
in the overseas market. However, his international breakthrough
was Fellini's 1960 masterpiece, La Dolce Vita; a long, enigmatic
exposé of the lives of Italy's Via Veneto set (Rome's wealthy
socialites and partygoers), the picture was a global smash, and
star Mastroianni, portraying a jaded, disillusioned gossip columnist,
became a worldwide success story.
Mastroianni's
next major role was in Antonioni's 1961 effort La Notte, where again
his distanced, expressionless demeanor fit perfectly into the film's
air of alienation and remote emotionality. It was a more assured
Mastroianni who next resurfaced in Pietro Germi's Divorzio all'Italiana,
a black comedy which was an award-winning box-office smash in Italy.
It also proved to be a major hit on the international arthouse circuit,
where the actor won the British Film Academy "Best Foreign
Actor" award. The 1962 Louis Malle-helmed La Vie Privée,
in which he co-starred with Brigitte Bardot, was a success as well.
Along with the great Jean-Paul Belmondo, Mastroianni had emerged
as the most in-demand actor on the European continent, commanding
fees upwards of 100 million lire per film and working with Italy's
most noted filmmakers. For 1963's masterful Otto e Mezzo, he reteamed
with Fellini, and in the same year's I Compagni he reunited with
Monicelli. Under the supervision of producer Carlo Ponti, Mastroianni
and Sophia Loren -- Ponti's wife -- paired with director De Sica
in 1963's Ieri, Oggi, Domani; the same principals also tackled 1964's
Matrimonio all'Italiana, which like its predecessor was a hit overseas.
Sans
Loren, Mastroianni continued appearing in Ponti productions, including
1965's Oggi Domani Dopodomani and La Decima Vittima, but without
his alluring co-star the actor's international stock plummeted.
He also appeared in the 1966 American television production The
Poppy Is Also a Flower, followed by the odd Spara Forte piu Forte
Non Capisco with Raquel Welch. Mastroianni quickly returned to Fellini's
stable to begin work on the long-planned Il Viaggio di G. Mastorna.
However, disagreements between the director and producer Dino De
Laurentiis forced Fellini to walk out on the project prior to production,
leaving Mastroianni to star in Visconti's 1967 Camus adaptation
Lo Straniero. He next travelled to Britain to star in Diamonds for
Breakfast, the first of his English-language films in which his
performance was not overdubbed. De Sica joined him behind the camera
for the 1969 MGM production A Time for Lovers, while John Boorman
helmed 1970's Leo the Last. None of these pictures proved successful,
however, and Mastroianni returned to the comforts of Italy for his
next several projects, including 1970's Fellini's Roma, before starring
in Roman Polanski's 1973 feature What?. He also appeared in a number
of pictures with his offscreen paramour Catherine Deneuve.
After
several critical and commercial disappointments, Mastroianni scored
with the Taviani brothers' 1975 historical drama Allonsanfan. That
same year, he successfully reunited with Loren in La Pupa del Gangster.
Still, while he remained a highly prolific performer, appearing
in several films annually during the late 1970s and early 1980s,
few of his projects managed to penetrate the international market;
too many disappointing efforts had dimmed Mastroianni's stardom,
and those movies that did expand into the worldwide market were
primarily those attached to a renowned filmmaker (as was the case
with Fellini's 1981 La Città delle donne and 1986's Ginger
e Fred). For 1987's Oci Ciornie, he earned honors from the jury
at the Cannes Film Festival, and later won an Academy Award nomination.
Although now in his early 60s, Mastroianni did not begin to decrease
his workload. While the majority of his foreign films did not surface
in English-language markets -- the exception being Maria Luisa Bemberg's
bizarre De Eso No Se Habla, in which he portrayed a wealthy sophisticate
who falls in love with a dwarf -- in 1993 he appeared in Robert
Altman's star-studded Ready-to-Wear, sparring one last time with
Loren. After completing work on Raul Ruiz's acclaimed Trois vies
et une seule mort (Three Lives and Only One Death), Mastroianni
died in Paris on December 19, 1996; he was 72. Jason Ankeny
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