Fabio Testi | |
---|---|
Born | Peschiera del Garda, Italy | 2 August 1941
Occupation | Actor |
Spouse(s) | Lola Navarro (m. 1984–1996) |
Partner | Ursula Andress (1973–1977) |
Children | 3 |
Fabio Testi (born 2 August 1941) is an Italian actor. After growing up witnessing film work done around Lake Garda, Testi entered the sets of the film and began work as a stuntman and a double on set, where he worked as a stuntman on The Good, the Bad and the Ugly . Testi continued stunt work and getting roles in low budget genre films until he was cast in Vittorio De Sica's film The Garden of the Finzi-Continis . Following this film, Testi became a star in Italy, appearing in some artistic films by Giuseppe Patroni Griffi and Claude Chabrol. Testi also continued to work in poliziotteschi genre films in the 1970s as well as a few gialli , and gained infamy for his publicised relationships with actresses Ursula Andress and Charlotte Rampling. [1]
Testi's popularity as an actor slowed towards the 1980s after which he predominantly worked in television series. By the early 2000s, Testi also began appearing in reality shows such as Gran Hermano VIP . Since 2006 he has been involved in Italian politics, running for Mayor of Verona as a member of Cattolici Liberali Cristiani.
Fabio Testi was born on 2 August 1941 in Peschiera del Garda on the Lake Garda in Northern Italy. [2] A number of adventure and pirate films were shot at this lake which led him to enter the sets of these films originally as a stuntman and as a double. [2] He initially took these roles in film and television work as a way of paying for his architecture degree, but later chose to enter film work. [2] Among early work, Testi was a stunt double in Sergio Leone's The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly . [2] [3] He also played in Leone's follow-up as one of Henry Fonda's henchmen. [3] Most of Testi's role in the film was cut except for one shot, as Leone felt that Testi was too clean-looking for the film. [3]
Demofilo Fidani gave Testi his first on-screen role in his film Straniero... fatti il segno della croce! (transl. Stranger, Make the Sign of the Cross) [3] Testi continued his career doing what film historian and critic Roberto Curti described as "low-grade genre" films including a Zorro film The Avenger, Zorro by Rafael Romero Marchent, the thriller Death Knocks Twice with Anita Ekberg and singer Dean Reed by Harald Philipp, and more films by Fidani such as One Damned Day at Dawn… Django Meets Sartana! where he played the role of Sartana. [3] While director Fidani was scouting locations for the film Jungle Master, he met Vittorio De Sica who was also location scouting at the Orto Botanico dell'Università di Roma "La Sapienza". [3] Fidani recalled that the two directors spoke: De Sica was looking for a younger Latin actor but couldn't find anyone, and asked Fidani if he knew any. [3] Fidani stated he knew an actor who "can't act to save his life, but with you as a guide ... you know, I never have enough time, I always go for the first take'" [3] Fidani stated later that upon discovering that Testi had been cast by De Sica, he had made Testi cut his hair. [3] Curti noted that Fidani had a "notorious habit of embellishing his own career and filmography" and that the story may not be true. [3]
Testi was cast in The Garden of the Finzi-Continis which won De Sica an Academy Award. [3] Following the release of the film, Testi became a big box office name in Italy. [3] He continued to do genre films as well as artistic films such as Giuseppe Patroni Griffi's 'Tis Pity She's a Whore , Denys de la Patelliere's Le Tueur and Claude Chabrol's Nada and Andrzej Zulawski's That Most Important Thing: Love . [3] In the 1970s, Testi also worked on several genre films, predominantly crime films such as Pasquale Squitieri's Gang War in Naples , Sergio Sollima's Blood in the Streets , Tonino Valerii's Go Gorilla Go and Enzo G. Castellari's The Big Racket . [3] Testi also did work in giallo films, such as Massimo Dallamano's What Have You Done to Solange? and Alberto Negrin's Red Rings of Fear . [3] [4] Testi also worked Lucio Fulci on two of his films: Four of the Apocalypse and Contraband . [4]
Testi was cast in a role intended for Maurizio Merli in Stelvio Massi's Speed Cross and Speed Driver . [4] Testi fell out of popularity in film by the 1980s showing up in Gianfranco Baldanello's thriller The Uranium Conspiracy and Silvio Amadio's drama A Gun for a Cop . [4] From the eighties onward, Testi predominantly worked in television, such as Castellari's mini-series The Return of Sandokan where he replaced Philippe Leroy as Yanez. [4] Testi also began showing up in television reality shows such as L'isola dei famosi in 2003, the Spanish show El gran hermano in 2005. [4] In the late 2000s, Testi entered politics, where he ran for mayor in Verona. [4]
On 5 October 2024 he received the Nosferatu Award at Festival Internacional de Cinema Fantàstic de Catalunya in Sitges, [5] and on 10 October he received the Tabernas de Cine Award in the 14th Almeria Western Film Festival. [6]
Testi was known to be in relationships with several actresses, including Edwige Fenech, Charlotte Rampling, Lynne Frederick, [7] Ursula Andress and Jean Seberg. [3] His longest relationship was with Spanish actress Lola Navarro, whom he began dating in the late 1970s and had three children with. [3] The two married in 1984 [8] and separated in 1996. [3] As of 2013, Testi was focusing on his interest in agriculture, and owned the third largest kiwi farm in Italy. [4] He considers himself Roman Catholic. [9]
Ernesto Gastaldi is an Italian screenwriter. Film historian and critic Tim Lucas described Gastaldi as the first Italian screenwriter to specialize in horror and thriller films. Gastaldi worked within several popular genres including pepla, Western and spy films.
Sartana is a series of Spaghetti Western films which follows the adventures of the title character, a gunfighter and gambler who uses mechanical gadgets and seemingly supernatural powers to trick his rivals. The series features five official entries: If You Meet Sartana Pray for Your Death (1968), I am Sartana, Your Angel of Death (1969), Sartana's Here… Trade Your Pistol for a Coffin, Have a Good Funeral, My Friend... Sartana Will Pay and Light the Fuse... Sartana Is Coming. The first film was directed by Gianfranco Parolini, with the remaining four directed by Giuliano Carnimeo. Sartana is portrayed by Gianni Garko in all films in the series except for Sartana's Here… Trade Your Pistol for a Coffin, in which he was portrayed by George Hilton.
The Garden of the Finzi-Continis is a 1970 Italian historical drama war film directed by Vittorio De Sica. The screenplay by Ugo Pirro and Vittorio Bonicelli adapts Italian Jewish author Giorgio Bassani's 1962 semi-autobiographical novel of the same name, about the lives of an upper-class Jewish family in Ferrara during the Fascist era. The film stars Lino Capolicchio, Dominique Sanda, Helmut Berger, Romolo Valli, and Fabio Testi in his breakthrough role.
Fernando Di Leo was an Italian film director and script writer. He made 17 films as a director and about 50 scripts from 1964 to 1985.
Mario Caiano was an Italian film director, screenwriter, producer, art director and second unit director.
Alberto De Martino was an Italian film director and screenwriter. Born in Rome, De Martino started as a child actor and later returned to the cinema where worked as a screenwriter, director and dubbing supervisor. De Martino's films as a director specialised in well-crafted knock-offs of Hollywood hit films. These films were specifically created films in Western, horror and mythology genres which were developed for the international market. The Telegraph stated that his best known of these film was probably The Antichrist. The Antichrist capitalized on the box-office appeal of The Exorcist (1973) and in its first week in the United States earned a greater box office than Jaws.
Marino Girolami was an Italian film director and actor.
One Damned Day at Dawn… Django Meets Sartana! is a 1970 Spaghetti Western directed by Demofilo Fidani.
...e vennero in quattro per uccidere Sartana! is an Italian 1969 Spaghetti Western film directed by Demofilo Fidani.
Massimo Dallamano, sometimes credited as Max Dillman, Max Dillmann or Jack Dalmas, was an Italian director and director of photography.
The Big Racket is a 1976 Italian poliziottesco film directed by Enzo G. Castellari. Fabio Testi stars as a police inspector who takes on a gang of hoodlums who terrorise an Italian city by extorting cash from local shop and bar owners.
Payment in Blood is a 1967 Italian Spaghetti Western film. It represents the official film debut for director Enzo G. Castellari of Few Dollars for Django. The film stars Edd Byrnes and Guy Madison.
A Few Dollars for Django is a 1966 Italian/Spanish co-production Spaghetti Western film directed by León Klimovsky and Enzo G. Castellari and starring Anthony Steffen. Although credited only to León Klimovsky, A Few Dollars for Django was predominantly directed by an uncredited Enzo G. Castellari.
Django and Sartana Are Coming... It's the End is a 1970 Spaghetti Western directed by Demofilo Fidani and/or Diego Spataro.
Django Defies Sartana is a 1970 Italian Spaghetti Western directed by Pasquale Squitieri. The film is also known as Django Against Sartana. or Django Challenges Sartana.
Giù le mani... carogna! is a 1971 Italian Spaghetti western film directed by Demofilo Fidani. The film is known in English as Down with Your Hands... You Scum!