Roberto Accornero

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Roberto Accornero
Roberto Accornero 18.3.2020 (c) foto Angelica Accornero.png
Born (1957-03-09) 9 March 1957 (age 67)
Ivrea, Italy
Occupation(s)Actor, voice actor
Years active1981–present
Height1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)

Roberto Accornero (born 9 March 1957) is an Italian television, film and voice actor. [1]

Contents

In the several roles he played, there was that of father Angelo Dell'Acqua in the miniseries John XXIII: The Pope of Peace, and that of captain Aloisi in the series Il maresciallo Rocca. [2]

Biography

Accornero began very early to make theater. He didn't finish university, but accepted a job from his professor, Gian Renzo Morteo. In 1981 he began an intense activity in radio prose which led him to a lasting partnership with Alberto Gozzi and with the Barlumen Institute. In those same years he was very comfortable in the role of Pieretto in Pavia's film Il diavolo sulle colline, by Vittorio Cottafavi (Cannes Film Festival, 1985). He went on and worked with Fellini (Ginger and Fred), Soldini (L'aria serena dell'Ovest), Giannarelli, Calopresti, Ferrario, Argento, Verdone, Faenza, Saura, Martone.

In the theater he worked for two seasons with Carlo Cecchi, then with Ronconi, Missiroli and many others. On television he had often been in national-popular dramas, in roles of guard but also of thief, directed by Gregoretti, Perelli, Di Carlo, Questi, Capitani, Giordana, Zaccaro, Dayan, Cavani, Frazzi and many others. In 2010 he was awarded in three festivals as best actor for Cribari's Diario di un disagiato. Among the roles he had played are those of Monsignor Angelo Dell'Acqua in the miniseries Papa Giovanni, that of Captain then Major Aloisi in the series Il Maresciallo Rocca and that of the inflexible and cynical human resources manager Guido Geller in the sitcom Camera Café  [ it ].

Film

Dubbing roles

Animation

Live action

Radio

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References

  1. "Roberto Accornero". ge-agency.com. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  2. "Roberto Accornero – Artists United for Animals". artistsunitedforanimals.org. Retrieved 20 March 2020.