Gino Talamo
Gino Talamo (13 December 1895 – 9 July 1968) was an Italian actor, film editor and director. He directed the 1949 Brazilian film Iracema.[1]
Gino Talamo | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 9 July 1968 72) | (aged
Other names | Luigi Talamo |
Occupation | Editor Director Actor |
Years active | 1919-1963 |
Selected filmography
Actor
- Messalina (1924)
- Beatrice Cenci (1926)
Editor
- The Two Sergeants (1936)
- Doctor Antonio (1937)
- I've Lost My Husband! (1937)
- The Last Dance (1941)
- The Peddler and the Lady (1943)
- Romulus and the Sabines (1945)
- Farewell, My Beautiful Naples (1946)
- Lost in the Dark (1947)
Director
- Knights of the Desert (1942)
- Iracema (1949)
gollark: > well, the actual purpose of schools is to teach people things, but most students do not learn anything even if they go to school. source: mean math score being about 4/40 in the university entrance exam.Exactly! It's mostly worthless!
gollark: If they run that whole cycle fast enough it'll average out as a reasonable situation!
gollark: Outside of high-level stuff (GCSE *maybe*, probably A-level) I think it's *mostly* irrelevant if you take a few weeks off.
gollark: I mean, you can socialize at school, which is important, but you can do that anyway.
gollark: It annoys me that the government goes on about how amazingly important it is and how it would be unethical to make people not go to school for a bit.
References
- Sadlier p.9-10
Bibliography
- Sadlier, Darlene Joy (ed.) Latin American Melodrama: Passion, Pathos, and Entertainment. University of Illinois Press, 2009.
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