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Ugo Fantozzi

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Ugo Fantozzi
Fantozzi character
Ugo Fantozzi (Paolo Villaggio) in the film Fantozzi, during the iconic five-pin match scene.
First appearanceFantozzi (novel - 1971)
Fantozzi (1975 film)
Last appearanceFantozzi 2000 - La clonazione (film - 1999)
Tragica vita del ragionier Fantozzi (novel - 2012)
Created byPaolo Villaggio
In-universe information
Nickname
  • Fantocci, Pupazzi, Bambocci, Fantozzo, Bacarozzi (mistakenly)
  • Puccettone (by Calboni)
RaceWhite
Occupationaccountant
SpousePina Fantozzi
ChildrenMariangela Fantozzi (daughter)
RelativesUga Fantozzi (granddaughter)
NationalityItalian

Ugo Fantozzi is a fictional character, appearing in Italian literature and film, created by Paolo Villaggio. The character, initially part of Villaggio's television monologues, later became protagonist of a series of short stories published at first on newspapers, later in collections, which in turn inspired a successful film series, starring Villaggio himself as the main character.

The character

Fantozzi was created in 1968 out of a television program, Quelli della domenica, in which Villaggio played a stereotypically unlucky Italian salaryman, named "Giandomenico Fracchia" (who, on the success of the Fantozzi saga, will later have his own cinematographic duology in the 1980s, composed of Fracchia la belva umana and Fracchia contro Dracula).

The first collection, Fantozzi, was published in 1971, and introduced a hapless accountant, fighting with the vices, the tortures and the changes in Italian society. He is an extravagant exaggeration of customs and habits of Italy's lower middle class.

Fantozzi has a slovenly wife named "Pina" of whom he is never satisfied, particularly in bed. He also has a daughter named Mariangela who is so ugly that everyone, especially Fantozzi's colleagues and bosses, mistakes her for a monkey.

Since Fantozzi's family atmosphere is so bad, he attempts to escape by having fun with his colleagues at Megaditta ("Mega-Company"), the large company where he works. However, the dynamics of the workplace are just as dysfunctional as his personal life but, while Fantozzi's colleagues (most notably the geometrist Calboni) sell out their dignity and compete with each other to allow themselves to be treated like floor mats, Fantozzi always tries to maintain his honor. A notable collague of Fantozzi's is Silvio Filini, a comically sight impaired clerk at Megaditta who is prone to organizing events and parties, which usually badly fail, although Filini is sometimes less unlucky than Fantozzi. Despite their friendly relationship, Fantozzi and Filini always keep interactions very formal.

Fantozzi is not always submissive, and can sometimes react ruthlessly, often having the courage to rebel and assert his dignity, and also that of his colleagues, when others cannot. It is, however, his superiors who always retain the power and Fantozzi, due to his dignity and gentle soul, is forced to endure the worst possible suffering.

Fantozzi's bad luck shows up even after he passes away (in the movie Fantozzi in paradiso), as, on the way to Paradise, the divine airplane carrying him is hijacked by Buddhist terrorists seeking revenge for terrorism against them before death. In front of Buddha, who comically decides using a wheel of fortune (which leads Fantozzi to refer to him as "Mike"), he is convicted to living his whole previous life once again.

Setting

Fantozzi's adventures and misadventures often take place in an unnamed city of Italy (usually filmed in Rome), likely inspired by both Rome and Milan. Reality is often surreal, with events apparently happening just for Fantozzi (and, sometimes, other character)'s bad luck, or bizarre titles attributed to characters, or even some strange phenomena such as the employer's clouds, all obviously played for the laughs. Notoriously, characters in the Fantozzi universe mistakenly conjugate Italian-language verbs to conjunctive in third-person singular (which, in feminine form, is used in Italian to speak formally, a form of speech overly used by characters in the series), saying, for example, the verb "go", "andare", as "vadi" rather than the correct form "vada". This erroneous form of speech, already present in Italian comedy films as early as in films by Totò, has become extremely famous and is usually linked to the character of Fantozzi.

Books

  • Fantozzi, Milano, Rizzoli, 1971.
  • Il secondo tragico libro di Fantozzi, Milano, Rizzoli, 1974.
  • Le lettere di Fantozzi, Milano, Rizzoli, 1976.
  • Fantozzi contro tutti, Milano, Rizzoli, 1979.
  • Fantozzi subisce ancora, Milano, Rizzoli, 1983.
  • Caro direttore, ci scrivo... : lettere del tragico ragioniere, raccolte da Paolo Villaggio, Milano, Mondadori, 1993.
  • Fantozzi saluta e se ne va: le ultime lettere del rag. Ugo Fantozzi, Milano, Mondadori, 1994.
  • Tragica vita del ragionier Fantozzi, Milano, Mondadori, 2012.

Films

Graphic novel

  • Fantozzi Forever (2014)