Marco Vicario
Marco Vicario (born 20 September 1925) is an Italian film actor, screenwriter, film producer and director. He appeared in 23 films between 1950 and 1958. He also wrote for 13 films, produced 12 and directed a further 11. He was born in Rome, Italy.
Marco Vicario | |
---|---|
Born | Rome, Italy | 20 September 1925
Occupation | Actor, screenwriter, film producer, film director |
Years active | 1950-1982 |
Spouse(s) | Rossana Podestà (1953-1976) (divorced) (2 children) Patrizia Castaldi (1986) (current bride) (1 children) |
Children | Stefano Vicario Francesco Vicario Matteo Vicario |
Selected filmography
- Sette uomini d'oro (1965 - wrote and directed)
- The Sensual Man (1974 - wrote and directed)
- Wifemistress (1977 - wrote and directed)
- Machine Gun McCain (1969 - produced)
- Seven Times Seven (1968 - produced)
- Danza macabra (1964 - produced)
- Songs of Italy (1955 - acted)
- Rome 11:00 (1952 - acted)
- The Eternal Chain (1952 - acted)
- Redenzione (1952 - acted)
- Appointment for Murder (1951 - acted)
- Operation Mitra (1951)
- Cavalcade of Heroes (1950)
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gollark: Oops too many newlines.
gollark: Quoted from my notes:The relevant factors for course choice are probably something like this, vaguely in order: “personal fit” - how much I'll actually like it. This is quite hard to tell in advance. During the Y11 careers interview I was recommended some kind of trial thing for engineering, but I doubt that's on now, like many other things. Probably more important than other things, as I'd spend 3-5 years on said course, will perform better if I do enjoy it, and will probably not get much use out of studying a subject I would not like enough to do work related to. flexibility/generality - what options are opened by studying this stuff? Especially important in a changing and unpredictable world. how hard a subject is to learn out of university - relates to necessity of feedback from people who know it much better, specialized equipment needed, availability of good teaching resources, etc. Likely to decline over time due to the internet/modern information exchange systems and advancing technology making relevant equipment cheaper. earning potential - how much money does studying this bring? I don't think this is massively significant, it's probably outweighed by other things quite rapidly, but something to consider. Apparently high for quantitative and applied subjects. entry requirements - how likely I am to be able to study it. There are some things I probably cannot do at all now, such as medicine, but I didn't and don't really care about those, and there shouldn't be many. Most of the high-requirement stuff is seemingly available with more practical ones at less prestigious universities, which is probably fine.
gollark: Replying to https://discord.com/channels/346530916832903169/348702212110680064/759121895022002206Well, yes, somewhat, BUT! There are other considerations™.
gollark: Weird.
References
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