Historical dictionary of Italian cinema

LEONE, SERGIO

Leone, Sergio: translation

(1929-1989)
Director, screenwriter, producer. The son of silent film director Roberto Roberti (Vincenzo Leone) and actress Bice Walerian, Leone entered the film industry at a very young age, serving as an unpaid assistant and appearing in a small role in one of his father's last films when he was only 12. In the immediate postwar period, he worked in various capacities on a host of films, including making an appearance as one of the German seminarians inVittorio De Sica'sLadri di biciclette(Bicycle Thieves, 1948). In the 1950s he served as assistant director on many of the big-budget American productions being shot atCinecitta, including Mervyn Le Roy'sQuo vadis?(1950), Robert Wise'sHelen of Troy(1955), and William Wyler'sBen-Hur(1959).Having also, during this period, regularly served as assistant director toMario Bonnard, he took over directing Bonnard's remake ofGli ultimi giorni di Pompei(The Last Days of Pompeii, 1959) at short notice but subsequently chose to go back to working as assistant director to Robert Aldrich on the ill-fatedSodom and Gomorrah(1961) before writing and directing his own sword-and-sandal epic,Il colosso di Rodi(The Colossus of Rhodes, 1961).
Real success, however, came withPer un pugno di dollari(A Fistful of Dollars, 1964, released in the United States in 1967), the film with which Leone is credited as having given birth to theWestern all'italiana, or as it often disparagingly came to be known outside of Italy, thespaghetti Western. Made on a shoestring budget and under the pseudonym Bob Robertson, the film proved to be an unexpected but enormous commercial success, prompting Leone to make the four other Westerns that confirmed his mastery of the genre,Per qualche dollaro in piu(For a Few Dollars More, 1965),Il buono, il brutto, il cattivo(The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, 1966),Cera una volta il West(Once upon a Time in the West, 1968), andGiu la testa(Duck, You Sucker, 1971).
For the next decade Leone limited himself to producing films for other directors, including Tonino Valerii'sIl mio nome e nessuno(My Name Is Nobody, 1973) andCarlo Verdone's directorial debut,Un sacco bello(Fun Is Beautiful, 1980), while preparing to make what many regard as his most accomplished film,Cera una volta in America(Once upon a Time in America, 1984), the magnificent gangster epic that finally brought him the recognition of aNastro d'argentoas well as nominations for both BAFTA and Golden Globe awards. This was to have been followed by an even more spectacular film on the German siege of Leningrad during World War II, which was apparently in the final stages of preparation at the time of Leone's untimely death in 1989.

  1. leone, sergioLeone Sergio translation Director screenwriter producer. The son of silent film director Roberto Roberti Vincenzo Leone and actress Bice Walerian Leone entered the film i...Guide to cinema
  2. leone, sergioLeone Sergio translation Director screenwriter producer. The son of silent film director Roberto Roberti Vincenzo Leone and actress Bice Walerian Leone entered the film i...Guide to cinema
  3. leone, sergioLeone Sergio translation The inventor of the spaghetti Western Sergio Leone was uniquely able to make films that were both a critical and a box office success. Born in Ro...Historical Dictionary of modern Italy
  4. leone, sergioLEONE Sergio translation Born in in Rome the son of a film director from the silent era Sergio Leone superseded John Ford as the dominant maker of Westerns in the s. His...Westerns in Cinema