Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Rossana Podestà obit

Rossana Podestà: Helen of Troy, Sex Comedy Actress

She was not on the list. 


Remembering Rossana Podestà: Helen of Troy actress later featured in sword-and-sandal spectacles and risqué sex comedies

Rossana Podestà, the sensual star of the 1955 epic Helen of Troy and other sword-and-sandal European productions of the 1950s and 1960s – in addition to a handful of risqué sex comedies of the 1970s – died earlier today, Dec. 10, in Rome according to several Italian news outlets. Podestà was 79.

She was born Carla Dora Podestà on Aug. 20, 1934, in, depending on the source, either Zlitan or Tripoli, in Libya, at the time an Italian colony. According to the IMDb, the renamed Rossana Podesta began her film career in 1950, when she was featured in a small role in Dezsö Ákos Hamza’s Strano appuntamento (“Strange Appointment”). However, according to online reports, she was actually discovered by director Léonide Moguy, who cast her in a small role in the 1951 drama Tomorrow Is Another Day / Domani è un altro giorno, starring Pier Angeli and Aldo Silvani.

Her rise was swift. By 1952, Rossana Podestà was playing Ophelia (as Ofelia) to Erminio Macario’s Hamlet (Amleto) in Giorgio Simonelli’s Hamlet spoof, Io, Amleto (“I, Hamlet”); the following year, she was the female lead in Emilio Fernández’s Mexican-made – and mostly silent – Rossana / La Red, playing the homonymous Rossana, a woman who becomes the object of desire of two friends/ex-cons. Her next big film was the English-language spectacle Ulysses / Ulisse (1954), directed by Mario Camerini (replacing G.W. Pabst), and starring Kirk Douglas in the title role, alongside Silvana Mangano as Circe and Penelope and Anthony Quinn as Antinoos; Rossana Podesta, for her part, was cast as Nausicaa.

Rossana Podestà as Helen of Troy

For Helen of Troy, which never quite became the mammoth blockbuster it was intended to be, Rossana Podesta was cast in the title role as the Face That Launched a Thousand Ships. If online reports are to be believed, contenders for the part included Hollywood stars Lana Turner, Elizabeth Taylor, Rhonda Fleming, Ava Gardner, and Yvonne De Carlo, but director Robert Wise selected Podestà – who had to take a crash course in English – while attending the Cannes Film Festival. Stanley Baker costarred as Achilles, alongside Jacques Sernas (dubbed by Edmund Purdom) as Paris, Cedric Hardwicke as Priam, and Torin Thatcher as Ulysses.

According to reports, the Helen of Troy production was beset with problems, including a fire that ravaged much of the film’s Italian set, and injuries to both crew members and actors. Rossana Podesta herself didn’t escape unscathed, hurting her foot and developing an eye problem. (Diane Kruger would play Helen of Troy in Wolfgang Petersen’s 2004 international blockbuster Troy, starring Brad Pitt as Achilles and Orlando Bloom as Paris, and featuring Peter O’Toole as Priam and Sean Bean as Odysseus a.k.a. Ulysses. Additionally, Sienna Guillory played Helen in John Kent Harrison’s 2003 TV movie Helen of Troy.)

Sword-and-sandal spectacles

Following Ulysses and Helen of Troy, the Rossana Podesta previously seen in smaller, neo-realist Italian dramas and comedies – e.g., Valerio Zurlini’s Le ragazze di San Frediano (“The Young Women of San Frediano,” 1955) – was replaced by the sensuous star of several peplum (a.k.a. sword-and-sandal) spectacles. Those included Sergio Grieco and Franco Prosperi’s Slave of Rome / La schiava di Roma (1961), in the title role opposite Guy Madison; Antonio Margheriti’s The Golden Arrow (1962), with Tab Hunter; and Robert Aldrich’s superspectacle Sodom and Gomorrah (1962), also starring Stewart Granger, Pier Angeli, and Stanley Baker.

During that period, Rossana Podesta could also be seen acting sensuously in (or out of) modern dress, whether supporting Esther Williams and Jeff Chandler in the Richard Wilson-directed misfire Raw Wind in Eden (1960), or frolicking with Magali Noël, Dawn Addams, and Christian Marquand on a deserted island in Edmond T. Gréville’s Temptation / L’île du bout du monde (1959).

Later years: Marco Vicario’s sex comedies & off-screen relationship with Walter Bonatti

From 1953-1976, Rossana Podesta was married to film multitasker Marco Vicario (88 last September 20), whose credits as director and screenwriter include Seven Golden Men / 7 uomini d’oro (1965), a caper movie starring Podestà at her sexiest and the winner of the Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalist’s Best Producer Award (equivalent to Best Film); and the psychological sex drama Wifemistress / Mogliamante (1977), starring Laura Antonelli in the title role and Marcello Mastroianni as the husband/voyeur. Podestà and Vicario had two sons, television directors Francesco Vicario and Stefano Vicario.

Podestà’s film career began winding down following the Seven Golden Men sequel Il grande colpo dei 7 uomini d’oro (“The Big Swindle of the Seven Golden Men,” 1966), also directed by Marco Vicario. In the 1970s, she was seen in only a handful of movies, most notably in two sex comedies directed and co-written by her husband:

Homo Eroticus (1971), featuring Rossana Podestà as the wife of a businessman (Luciano Salce) whose errand boy (Lando Buzzanca) has three testicles – an “enhancement” that makes him irresistible to every woman and a boundless source of enjoyment to one voyeur husband;

The Sensuous Sicilian / Paolo il caldo (literally, “Paolo, the Hot One,” 1973), in which Podestà is one of the women in the life of the sexually insatiable nobleman Paolo (Giancarlo Giannini).

Rossana Podestà’s last film appearances were in supporting roles in Luigi Cozzi’s neo-sword-and-sandal box office dud Hercules (1983), starring Lou Ferrigno and Sybil Danning; and, as the mother of a terrorist, in Giuseppe Bertolucci’s well-received drama Segreti segreti (“Secrets Secrets,” 1985), also featuring Mariangela Melato, and veterans Alida Valli, Stefania Sandrelli, and Lea Massari.

Since 1981, Podestà’s off-screen companion was mountain climber and journalist Walter Bonatti, a superstar in Italy. He died in September 2011. At the time, Podestà complained of being mistreated by the staff of the hospital where Bonatti was receiving care, for she was not officially his wife. A year after Bonatti’s death, she published Walter Bonatti: Una vita libera (“Walter Bonatti: A Free Life”).

Death

Rossana Podestà’s passing is the latest in the film world, following the recent deaths of The Fast and the Furious’ Paul Walker, British actress Jean Kent (Trottie True), French filmmaker Édouard Molinaro (La Cage aux Folles), and, yesterday, three-time Best Actress Oscar nominee and The Sound of Music costar Eleanor Parker (who, coincidentally, also costarred with Ulysses’ Kirk Douglas in Detective Story; Douglas turned 97 yesterday).

 

Selected filmography

1950: Strano appuntamento - Their daughter

1951: Tomorrow Is Another Day - Stefania

1951: The Seven Dwarfs to the Rescue - Princess Snow White

1951: Cops and Robbers - Liliana Bottoni

1952: Viva il cinema! - Marisa

1952: Gli Angeli del quartiere - Lisa

1952: I, Hamlet - Ofelia

1952: The Phantom Musketeer - Ornella

1952: Don Lorenzo

1953: Viva la rivista!

1953: Finishing School - Pereira

1953: Addio, figlio mio! - Elsa

1953: Rossana - Rossana

1953: Voice of Silence

1954: Ulysses - Nausicaa

1955: Le ragazze di San Frediano - Tosca

1955: Nosotros dos - María Pedrosa

1955: Non scherzare con le donne

1955: Songs of Italy

1956: Helen of Troy - Helen

1956: Playa prohibida - Isabella

1956: Santiago - Doña Isabella

1958: The Amorous Corporal - Bethi

1958: Raw Wind in Eden - Costanza Varno

1958: The Sword and the Cross - Marta

1959: Temptation - Caterina

1959: Un vaso de whisky - María

1960: Fury of the Pagans - Leonora

1961: La grande vallata

1961: Slave of Rome - Antea

1962: Alone Against Rome - Fabiola

1962: The Golden Arrow - Jamila

1963: Sodom and Gomorrah - Shuah

1963: The Virgin of Nuremberg - Mary Hunter

1964: The Naked Hours - Carla

1964: Last Plane to Baalbek - Isabel Moore

1965: Seven Golden Men - Giorgia

1966: Seven Golden Men Strike Again - Giorgia

1970: The Swinging Confessors - Silvia

1971: Man of the Year - Cocò Lampugnani

1972: L'uccello migratore - Delia Benetti

1973: The Sensual Man - Lilia

1975: Il gatto mammone - Rosalia

1976: Sex Diary - Serena

1977: Pane, burro e marmellata - Simona

1979: 7 ragazze di classe - Ivonne

1980: Sunday Lovers - Clara (segment "Armando's Notebook")

1980: Tranquille donne di campagna - Anna Maldini

1983: Hercules - Hera

1985: Secrets Secrets - Maria, Rosa's Mother (final film role)


No comments:

Post a Comment