Italian Actress, She died in Madrid on 23 March 2020, at the age of 89 from COVID-19



In latter years she was known for her striking electric blue hair colour...Many of those early Miss Italia winners and contestants became well known in Italy and abroad. In 1947 alone there were four contestants who later went on to Italian entertainment fame: Lucia Bosè (the winner that year), Gianna Maria Canale (second place), Gina Lollobrigida (third), and Eleonora Rossi Drago (fourth).
Other early LB titles, worth checking out...Non mi piace guardarmi alle spalle. Ho vissuto momenti deliziosi e ho anche sofferto molto, però entrambe, allegria e tristezza le prendo per buone. In fondo le risa e il pianto di quiei giorni hanno formato la persona che sono oggi.
Fifth place in that same edition of Miss Italia was Silvana Mangano.Many of those early Miss Italia winners and contestants became well known in Italy and abroad. In 1947 alone there were four contestants who later went on to Italian entertainment fame: Lucia Bosè (the winner that year), Gianna Maria Canale (second place), Gina Lollobrigida (third), and Eleonora Rossi Drago (fourth).
Something Creeping in the Dark is available on Amazon Prime, and there are a couple of DVD editions in print. (I see you're located in the U.K., so you might want to try here.)colinr0380 wrote: Mon Mar 23, 2020 8:45 pm I am particularly interested in tracking down the early 70s horror film she starred in with Farley Granger, Something Creeping In The Dark.
Watched that at the weekend! A bit middling. Never had any sort of DVD release, so don't feel guilty about hunting it down online.ellipsis7 wrote: Wed Mar 25, 2020 7:31 am Yes, that was quite a lineup for the Miss Italia contest of 1947...
Lollobrigida went on to star in a comedy film Miss Italia, directed by Duilio Coletti in 1950...
The same Lollo was legally contracted to play Clara Manni in La signora senza camelie, but pulled out (claiming to not identify with the character- "Non sono Clara Manni" - she was starting to develop airs & graces at this stage)… This prompted a high profile dispute played out in the courts & the popular press through 1951-1953... Result was Bosè was drafted in to play the part, and a superb job she made of it... Lollo & Antonioni eventually made up in 1954 (the year when she made the cover of Time magazine), but never did get round to working together... Now, it is impossible to imagine anyone other than Bosè as Clara Manni...
This is exactly the sort of information I was hoping to tap into! Thank you very much. It's certainly not the most glamorous role for a leading woman, so can understand her hesitation.ellipsis7 wrote: Mon Apr 20, 2020 2:48 pm In Roberto Liberatori's fine recent biography Lucia Bosè (2019) - written with her cooperation - he writes that she reluctantly turned down the possibility of playing the part of a woman with a split personality in Le due verità directed by Antonio Leonviola, the lead role of Maria Luce in which she was substituted by Anna Maria Ferrero in the final film. So in the appendix to this book Le due verità does not appear in her filmography.
However in an earlier monograph, Lucia Bosè - Vita Cinema Luce a cura di Massimo Causo & Alberto La Monica (2006), Le due verità is included in her filmography, presumably compounding the IMDb error. However while listing her in the cast of this film, she is the only actor not identified with a particular character, making it unclear why she is there.