Francesco Acquaroli

Francesco Acquaroli (born 27 March 1962) is an Italian actor.

Francesco Acquaroli
Born (1962-03-27) 27 March 1962
OccupationActor

Biography

Acquaroli was born in Rome in 1962, after high school he attended the La Scaletta Theater School where he taught by Antonio Pierfederici with whom he made his theater debut in 1987.

In 1988/89 he was in "La nave" by Gabriele D'Annunzio with the direction of Aldo Trionfo. Then he continue with other great directors such as Elio De Capitani, Mario Missiroli, Luca Ronconi, Giuseppe Patroni Griffi and many more.

He made his television debut in 1997 in The Red and the Black where he played the Count of Altamira.

He participated in other television series including Distretto di Polizia, L'avvocato Porta, Romanzo criminale – La serie, and Squadra antimafia – Palermo oggi, Rocco Schiavone in seasons 1 to 3, for Rai 2 and in Solo for Mediaset.

In film, Acquaroli debuted in Diaz – Don't Clean Up This Blood by Daniele Vicari, followed by Oranges & Hammer by Diego Bianchi, Pasolini by Abel Ferrara, Era d'estate by Fiorella Infascelli, Mia Madre by Nanni Moretti, I Can Quit Whenever I Want by Sydney Sibilia, The Last Will Be the Last by Massimiliano Bruno, Dogman by Matteo garrone, The Best Years by Gabriele Muccino, My Name Is Mohammed by Pascaljevich, and Adults in the Room by Costa-Gavras. He is the protagonist of Paolo Sorrentino's short film Little Roman Adventures.

His performance in Sole cuore amore by Vicari presented at the Rome Film Festival, met with great acclaim from critics and audiences, winning the Alberto Sordi prize as supporting actor at the Bari International Film Festival.

Acquaroli is the narrative voice in I mille giorni di Mafia Capitale, a documentary aired on Rai 3 in September 2017 . On Netflix, in Suburra: Blood on Rome, he portrays Samurai, one of the protagonists. Season 4 of Fargo will be released in the US in April with the direction of the first episode of Noah Hawley, where he plays Ebal Violante.[1]

Personal life

Since 2018, Acquaroli has supported Médecins Sans Frontières; he has lent his voice to the video and radio spot of the campaign "Cure in the heart of the conflicts".[2]

Filmography

Cinema

Television

References

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