Historical dictionary of Italian cinema

GASSMAN, VITTORIO

(1922-2000)
Actor. Celebrated as Italy's greatest stage and screen actor of the postwar period, Gassman was born in Genoa but grew up in Rome. As a teenager he showed great promise as a basketball player but eventually the lure of the stage won out and he enrolled to receive classical training in theater at the National Academy of Dramatic Art. His talent was soon recognized and even before formally graduating from the academy he was called to work with the prestigious company of Alda Borelli in Milan. By 1944 he had formed his own touring company and by 1946 he was not only appearing on stage but had also, in collaboration withLuciano Salce, published a handbook on acting,L'educazione teatrale(Training for the Theater). Following a successful tour of Paris and London, in 1948 he was called to work with directorLuchino Viscontiand won high praise, particularly for his interpretation of Stanley Kowalski in Tennessee Williams'sA Streecar Named Desireand as Troilus in Shakespeare'sTroilus and Cressida. After three years as principal actor for the National Theater, in 1952 he joined with director Luigi Squarzina to give birth to the Teatro d'Arte Italiano (Italian Art Theater), in which he performed many of the classics to great acclaim.
By this time he had, almost naturally, also begun to appear in films, his first role being one of the male leads in Giovanni Paolucci's romantic melodramaPreludio d'amore(Shamed, 1946). There followed several other romantic leads inMario Soldati'sDaniele Cortis(1947) andMario Camerini'sLa figlia del capitano(The Captain's Daughter, 1947), but, especially in the wake of his performance as the evil Walter inGiuseppe De Santis'sRiso amaro(Bitter Rice, 1949), he was frequently cast as the melodramatic villain, as inAlberto Lattuada'sAnna(1951) orLuigi Comencini'sLa tratta delle bianche(The White Slave Trade, 1952).Following his marriage in 1952 to the American actress Shelley Winters, he began appearing in a number of American films, including Maxwell Shane'sThe Glass Wall(1952), in which he played an illegal immigrant to the United States who eventually commits suicide from desperation, and Joseph H. Lewis'sCry of the Hunted(1952), in which he is an escaped convict on the run. Overall, however, and in spite of appearing with American actresses of the caliber of Elizabeth Taylor and Audrey Hepburn, Gassman's career in Hollywood remained a relatively modest affair.
Back in Italy (and having divorced Winters) he was slightly more successful directing his first film,Kean:Genio e sregolatezza(Kean:Genius or Scoundrel, 1956), in which he himself played the role of the famous 19th-century English actor Edmund Kean. The real break in his film career, however, came with his appearance as the stuttering ex-boxer, Peppe, inMario Monicelli'sI soliti ignoti(Big Deal on Madonna Street, 1958), a role that finally revealed his extraordinary propensity for comedy and which was recognized with the award of his firstNastro d'argento. The critical and box office triumph ofI soliti ignotiwas then repeated in Monicelli'sLa grande guerra(The Great War, 1960), in which Gassman's performance as the reluctant infantryman Giovanni Busacca won him his firstDavid di Donatello. With the fundamental parameters of his comic persona firmly established, there followed a host of films in which he played variations on a basic characterization, a superficial bragadoccio and a loud can-do-anything attitude masking a more basic wiliness and feeling of insecurity. It was thus as something of a personification of an Italy nervously riding the wave of the so-called economic miracle that Gassman came to appear in so many of the key films of thecommedia all'italiana, fromDino Risi'sIl sorpasso(The Easy Life, 1962) andI mostri(1963) toEttore Scola'sC'eravamo tanto amati(We All Loved Each Other So Much, 1973). Perhaps his most nuanced performance of this characterization, the retired and blind military officer in Risi'sProfumo di donna(Scent of a Woman, 1974), earned him not only another Nastro and a David but also the prize for Best Actor at Cannes. The film's widespread international success also prompted a number of further appearances in American films in the late 1970s, the most notable being in Robert Altman'sA Wedding(1978) andQuintet(1978).
Although he continued to alternate between stage and screen, as he had done throughout his career, Gassman reduced his involvement in films during the 1980s while still providing many memorable performances, the most outstanding being in the role of the patriarch in Scola'sLa famiglia(The Family, 1987), for which he was awarded the sixth David of his career, and as the zany but lovable uncle inFranco Brusati'sLo zio indegno(The Sleazy Uncle, 1989). Having collected a host of honors and prizes throughout his career, in 1993 he was awarded an honorary degree from the University of Urbino for his contribution to Italian culture. In 1996 he received a Career David and a Golden Lion at theVenice Festivalfor his extraordinary lifetime achievement.

  1. gassman, vittorioActor. Celebrated as Italys greatest stage and screen actor of the postwar period Gassman was born in Genoa but grew up in Rome. As a teenager he showed great promise as ...Guide to cinema