Guide to cinema

TOGNAZZI, UGO

(1922-1990)
Actor. A popular actor who appeared in over 140 films in a career that spanned three decades, Tognazzi began working in amateur theater in his teens and continued to hone his stage skills by entertaining troops while doing his military service during World War II. After the war he embarked on a professional career in show business and began touring in numerous vaudeville shows and musical revues. Over the next decade he became enormously popular with his comic sketches and routines, initially only onstage and on the radio but eventually also on television, where for almost five years he performed regularly with fellow comic actor Raimondo Vianello in the long-running variety programUno due tre(One Two Three, 1955-1959).During this time he also appeared on the big screen in a host of lightweight comedies, but his film career only really took off in the early 1960s, due largely to the much more complex characters he was able to create in two films directed byLuciano Salce,Il federale(The Fascist, 1961) andLa voglia matta(The Crazy Urge, 1962). From then on, usually playing some variation on a cynical, self-serving, womanizing scoundrel, he became one of the fixtures of the Italian silver screen, starring in films such asDino Risi'sImostri(The Monsters, 1963, also known in the United States as15 from Rome),Antonio Pietrangeli'sIl magnifico cornuto(The Magnificent Cuckold, 1964),Alberto Lattuada'sVenga a prendere il caffe da noi(Come Have Coffee with Us, 1970), andMario Monicelli'sVogliamo i colonelli(We Want the Colonels, 1973). He contributed significantly in his sardonic supporting role toPier Paolo Pasolini'sPorcile(Pigpen, 1969) but undoubtedly provided his most memorable performances in the many films in which he worked withMarco Ferreri, which includedL'ape regina(The Conjugal Bed, 1963),La donna scimmia(The Ape Woman, 1964),Marcia nuziale(Wedding March, 1965),L'udienza(The Audience, 1972), andLa grande abbuffata(The Grande Bouffe, 1973). After playing so many dubious characters, his performance as the morally questionable father willing to exploit his own son's kidnapping for business reasons inBernardo Bertolucci'sLa tragedia di un uomo ridicolo(Tragedy of a Ridiculous Man, 1981) earned him the Palme d'or at Cannes and his fourthNastro d'argento.
Outside of Italy, Tognazzi is probably best remembered as Renato Baldi, the gay character he played in the threeCage aux follesfilms (1978, 1980, 1985), all directed by Edouard Molinaro and Georges Lautner. Tognazzi also tried his hand at directing himself in three films,Il mantenuto(His Women, 1961),Il fischio al naso(The Seventh Floor, 1967), andSissignore(Yes Sir, 1968).
Historical Dictionary of Italian Cinema by Alberto Mira

  1. tognazzi, ugoActor. A popular actor who appeared in over films in a career that spanned three decades Tognazzi began working in amateur theater in his teens and continued to hone his...Historical dictionary of Italian cinema