Livio Pavanelli
Livio Cesare Pavanelli (7 September 1881 – 29 April 1958) was an Italian film actor.
Livio Cesare Pavanelli | |
---|---|
Born | Copparo, Italy | 7 September 1881
Died | 29 April 1958 76) Rome, Italy | (aged
Occupation | Actor |
Pavanelli was born in Copparo, Ferrara, Emilia-Romagna, Italy and died in Rome in 1958 at age 76.
Selected filmography
- Mariute (1918)
- Fabiola (1918)
- The Cheerful Soul (1919)
- Princess Giorgio (1920)
- The Sack of Rome (1920)
- A Woman's Story (1920)
- The Second Wife (1922)
- The Most Beautiful Woman in the World (1924)
- Niniche (1925)
- The Story of Lilian Hawley (1925)
- Chamber Music (1925)
- Dancing Mad (1925)
- My Friend the Chauffeur (1926)
- Unmarried Daughters (1926)
- The Queen of the Baths (1926)
- The Ride in the Sun (1926)
- Kissing Is No Sin (1926)
- The Laughing Husband (1926)
- Mademoiselle Josette, My Woman (1926)
- The Schimeck Family (1926)
- Accommodations for Marriage (1926)
- The White Horse Inn (1926)
- Die Königin des Weltbades (1926)
- The Queen of Moulin Rouge (1926)
- When I Came Back (1926)
- Floretta and Patapon (1927)
- Homesick (1927)
- The Marriage Nest (1927)
- Madame Dares an Escapade (1927)
- A Girl of the People (1927)
- The Long Intermission (1927)
- Luther (1928)
- He Goes Right, She Goes Left! (1928)
- Charlotte Somewhat Crazy (1928)
- Endangered Girls (1928)
- Restless Hearts (1928)
- The House Without Men (1928)
- Scampolo (1928)
- The Green Monocle (1929)
- Crucified Girl (1929)
- German Wine (1929)
- Love in the Snow (1929)
- Women on the Edge (1929)
- Bobby, the Petrol Boy (1929)
- Foolish Happiness (1929)
- Der Hund von Baskerville (1929)
- Marriage Strike (1930)
- Pergolesi (1932)
- L'ultimo dei Bergerac (1934)
- The Song of the Sun (1934)
- The Last of the Bergeracs (1934)
- To Live (1937)
- Marcella (1937)
Bibliography
- Kulik, Karol (1990) [1975]. Alexander Korda: The Man Who Could Work Miracles. London: Virgin Books. ISBN 978-0-86369-446-2.
gollark: Why NOT make a unary calculator, or a calculator which solves halting problems, or or one which only runs some sort of deranged LISP?
gollark: There are probably lots of ideas for calculators which haven't been explored much because they're "really stupid" or "mathematically impossible" or "against the laws of physics" or "entirely useless". NO MORE, I say.
gollark: Or use low power hardware and run it entirely off solar or something, there are many possibilities.
gollark: Or, with a highish res display, G R A P H I N G.
gollark: Maybe you can get some kind of 48-character-or-so letters+numbers+some punctuation keypad and have a programmable one which is actually not terrible to use.
External links
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