Stefania Sandrelli

Stefania Sandrelli

  • Born: 1946-6-5
  • Birthplace: Viareggio in Lucca, Tuscany, Italy
  • Height: 5' 5¾" (1.67 m)
  • Profession: actor
  • Nationality: Italy
  • Representative Works: II Conformista, "We Were So Loved", "A Perfect Day"
  • Stefania Sandrelli is a famous Italian actress who was born on June 5, 1946. She was born in Viareggio, Italy. In 1961, the famous Italian director Germi was looking for an actor for a girl role in his new film "Italian Divorce". Out of more than 100 candidates, Stefania Sandrelli, who was still a student, was selected. In the film, she successfully created the image of a simple and lovely southern Italian girl. The film has won many awards at the international film festival , and Stefania Sandrelli has become famous. Her performance is natural and simple, and was hailed as the "most natural" actress by Italian film critics. In the 1970s, her performance became more and more mature, and her acting career became wider and wider. Bourgeois women portrayed in Bertolucci's " II Conformista " (1971) and Luciana in Scola's " We Loved This Way" (1974) , showing her acting skills Perfection has been reached. Stefania Sandrelli has thus become one of the most popular Italian actresses.
    Extended Reading
    • Dannie 2022-01-29 08:07:08

      Italian version of the red flag

      The time span is from 1900 to 1945. It is roughly divided into birth, childhood, youth, prime age, middle age, and old age. The two lines of one master and one servant born on the same day and the family and class behind them are

      only seen in 2005. Omo came back from joining the army. This time, I...

    • Grady 2022-03-20 09:02:54

      Is the goose yours, or everyone's?

      An era has come, and an era has gone. This five-hour epic is a story of two characters from different classes to illustrate an important core transformation in the human process of the last century.

        It must first be great. Human progress is made up of countless changes. Only when changes are...

    • Jordy 2022-03-21 09:03:15

      The whole film is full of violent aesthetics and bad taste. In the process of watching the film, I made a pendulum movement between emotion and discomfort for the strong political elements in it. But at the end, I realized that the film was "anti-political". Whether you were lying under the train or sitting on the train when you were young, chasing the train or hiding from the train, no matter where the train went, people could not escape either being run over by the wheels of history, or watching helplessly. The fate of others being crushed by the wheel of history but powerless. The flow of the whole episode is smooth, but some moments are a bit blunt. A group of Americans, French, and even Germans played the Italians. Apart from the incompatibility of the mouth, the temperament of the characters made me, a Chinese living in the United States, not able to see the incongruity at all. However, it is three Italian actors who shine: Laura Betti, who plays the perverted fascist cousin Regina, Alida Valli, who plays the wife of a desperate bankrupt landlord, and Stefania Casini, who plays a mad prostitute. The last half hour reminded me of the history of land reform, and even the footage clearly paid tribute to the domestic propaganda posters in the 1950s and 1960s.

    • Josie 2022-03-19 09:01:09

      Whoever touches your pencil and who licks your foreskin is a story

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      Alfredo Berlinghieri: You'd better be careful. If you don't use it, it gets rusty.