Andrea Di Stefano

Andrea Di Stefano (born 15 December 1972) is an Italian actor and film director.

Andrea Di Stefano
Born (1972-12-15) 15 December 1972
Rome, Italy

Life and career

Born in Rome, he moved to New York City to study acting at the Actors Studio. In the U.S. he played in Smile, an independent movie which was directed by Andrew Hunt.

He played the leading role in the 1997 film Il principe di Homburg directed by Marco Bellocchio and entered into the 1997 Cannes Film Festival.[1] He has played in films such as Il fantasma dell'opera by Dario Argento, Almost Blue by Alex Infascelli, and Angela by Roberta Torre.

Lately he played the role of Giancarlo in the movie Cuore Sacro directed by Ferzan Özpetek.

Andrea Di Stefano has also appeared in many TV episodes. In 1999 with the role of Fabrizio Canepa in Ama il tuo nemico by Damiano Damiani. In 2006 he played in the TV movie I colori della gioventù directed by Gianluigi Calderone and in the most recent Medicina generale broadcast in the spring 2007 in which he played Giacomo Pogliani, a talented doctor in a big Roman hospital.

In 2012, he portrayed a priest in the Academy Award-winning film Life of Pi.

In 2014, di Stefano wrote and directed his first feature film, Escobar: Paradise Lost, starring Benicio del Toro and Josh Hutcherson.

In 2016, he played the role of Philip Catelli, in In guerra per amore, directed by PIF.

In 2019, he co wrote (with Matt Cook and Rowan Joffé) and directed The Informer, adapted from the crime novel by Börge Hellström and Anders Roslund.

gollark: And that one's only something like 15 years old.
gollark: Or indeed *any* random stuff someone is transmitting, unless it's explicitly meant for me/broadcasting.
gollark: For example, the wireless telegraphy act some year or other technically forbids me from using my £30 RTL-SDR stick for picking up entirely unencrypted pager messages or whatever just broadcast over the radio spectrum.
gollark: Really, aren't MANY laws stupid?
gollark: ++delete <@!341618941317349376>

References

  1. "Festival de Cannes: The Prince of Homburg". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 21 September 2009.


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