Tuesday, 23 June 2015
Laura Antonelli dies
One
of the most marvelous and most sensuous actresses of her day Laura Antonelli
has died aged 73. For a comparatively brief time she was one of the most
popular European actresses of the day. She first attracted attention in a somewhat sleazy version of Venus in Furs (Massimo Dallamo, 1969). Most critics and most reviews in English first noticed her in the
1973 comedy Malizia (Salavatore Samperi). Over the next dozen or so years she carved out a
career mostly in common or garden Italian sex comedies and dramas. But there
were two great films included there, Visconti's lush L'innocente (1976) and Ettore Scola's Passione d'Amore (1981, screened at the 1982 Melbourne Film
Festival). In a report in the New York Times Visconti is quoted a saying that “she has that mysterious quality which I call charm, namely
beauty plus intelligence.” Passione d'Amore, a major commercial success in Italy and an art house success around the world (as was Visconti's film) also
became the basis for the basis for Stephen Sondheim's brilliant piece of
musical theatre Passion. At the height of her popularity Antonelli oozed
sensuality and her frequent casual nakedness was quite something at a time when
'pornography' was much more restrained and fleeting occurrence in mainstream
movies. Her career fell apart in 1991 with accusations of drug possession. She finally cleared her name of those charges in 2006. For a longer report there is this in the New York Times.
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