Carla Del Poggio
Carla Del Poggio | |
---|---|
Born | Maria Luisa Attanasio |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1940–1956 |
Spouse | Alberto Lattuada (1945-2005) (His Death) |
Carla Del Poggio (2 December 1925 - 14 October 2010)[1] was an Italian cinema, theatre, and television actress.
Early and Personal Lives
Born Maria Luisa Attanasio in Naples, she was the wife of Italian director Alberto Lattuada for 60 years, from 2 April 1945 until his death 3 July 2005. She died on 14 October 2010.
Filmography [2]
- Maddalena... zero in condotta, by Vittorio De Sica (1940)
- La bocca sulla strada, by Roberto Roberti (1941)
- La scuola dei timidi, by Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia (1941)
- Un garibaldino al convento, by Vittorio De Sica (1942)
- C'è sempre un ma!, by Luigi Zampa (1942)
- Violette nei capelli, by Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia (1942)
- Incontri di notte, by Nunzio Malasomma (1943)
- Signorinette, by Luigi Zampa (nel ruolo di Renata) (1943)
- Tre ragazze cercano marito, by Duilio Coletti (1943)
- L'angelo e il diavolo, by Mario Camerini (1946)
- Umanità, by Jack Salvatori (1946)
- Il bandito, by Alberto Lattuada (1946)
- Caccia tragica, by Giuseppe De Santis (1947)
- Gioventù perduta, by Pietro Germi (1947)
- Senza pietà, by Alberto Lattuada (1948)
- Il Mulino del Po, by Alberto Lattuada (1949)
- Cavalcata d'eroi, by Mario Costa (1950)
- Luci del varietà, by Alberto Lattuada and Federico Fellini (1950)
- Il Sentiero dell'odio, by Sergio Grieco (1951)
- Sigillo rosso, by Flavio Calzavara (1951)
- La Ragazza di Trieste (Les Loups chassent la nuit),by Bernard Borderie (1951)
- Core 'ngrato, by Guido Brignone (1951)
- Wolves Hunt at Night (1952)
- Tormento del passato, by Mario Bonnard (1952)
- Roma 11 o'clock, by Giuseppe De Santis (1952)
- Melodie immortali, by Giacomo Gentilomo (1952)
- Bufere, by Guido Brignone (1952)
- Cose da pazzi, by Georg Wilhelm Pabst (1953)
- L'eroe della Vandea (Les Révoltès de Lomanach), by Richard Pottier (1954)
- Il tradimento di Elena Marimon (Le Secret d'Helene Marimon), by Henri Calef
- I Girovaghi, by Hugo Fregonese (1956)
References