
Massimo Girotti
Biography
Massimo Girotti (18 May 1918 – 5 January 2003) was an Italian film actor whose career spanned seven decades. Born in Mogliano, in the province of Macerata, Girotti developed his athletic physique by swimming and playing polo. While studying engineering, he attracted the attention of Mario Soldati, who offered him a small part in the film Dora Nelson (1939), but it was not until later, in Alessandro Blasetti's La corona di ferro (The Iron Crown) (1941) and Roberto Rossellini's Un Pilota ritorna (A Pilot Returns) (1942), that he began to make an impression as a serious actor. In 1943 came a turning point in his career when Luchino Visconti cast him opposite the torrid Clara Calamai in Ossessione (Obsession), an earlier adaptation of the same novel on which Hollywood's The Postman Always Rings Twice is based. The film marked, in a sense, the birth of Italian neo-realism. Some of his notable post-war films include Caccia tragica (The Tragic Hunt) (1946) by Giuseppe De Santis and In nome della legge (1949) (In the Name of the Law) by Pietro Germi. In 1950, he starred opposite Lucia Bosé in Michelangelo Antonioni's first full-length feature, Cronaca di un amore (Story of a Love Affair) (1950). In 1953, he played Spartacus in an Italian epic film known in the US as Sins of Rome and then, returned to work again for Visconti, in Senso (1954), giving perhaps the finest performance of his career. In the years which followed, he appeared in many mainly Italian films for directors such as Lizzani, Bolognini, Vittorio Cottafavi, Lattuada, but it was not until 1968 that he once again played a role worthy of his talents - that of the father in Pasolini's Teorema (Theorem) with Terence Stamp and Silvana Mangano. Two years later, Pasolini cast him as Creonte opposite Maria Callas in his Medea (1969). In 1972, he was in Bernardo Bertolucci's Last Tango in Paris. That same year he made a rare appearance in a horror film when he agreed to a supporting role in Baron Blood as a favor to its director Mario Bava. He continued to act in character roles for the next thirty years. Some of the films he appeared in have been notable, including Joseph Losey's Monsieur Klein (1976) with Alain Delon and Jeanne Moreau, Art of Love (1983) by Walerian Borowczyk, the 1985 television miniseries Quo Vadis?, Roberto Benigni's Il mostro (The Monster) (1994). He died in Rome of a heart attack after having just completed his last film, Ferzan Özpetek's La Finestra di fronte (Facing Windows) (2003). Source: Article "Massimo Girotti" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
Also Known As
Movie Appearances

Last Tango in Paris
as Marcel
1972

The French Revolution
as Envoyé du Pape
1989

The Innocent
as Count Stefano Egano
1976

Theorem
as Paolo, the Father
1968

Baron Blood
as Dr. Karl Hummel
1972

Obsession
as Gino Costa
1944

The Red Tent
as Giuseppe Romagna Manoja
1969

Medea
as Creonte
1969

Luchino Visconti
as Self (archive footage)
2002

Duel Without Honor
as Carlo
1950

The Witches
as Sportsman (segment "La strega bruciata viva")
1967

Facing Windows
as Simone / Davide Veroli
2003

The Love of a Woman
as André Lorenz
1953

The Iron Crown
as Arminio / King Licinio
1941

The Suspicious Death of a Minor
as Gaudenzio Pesce
1975

Story of a Love Affair
as Guido
1950

Art of Love
as Ovid
1983

Letters of a Novice
as Don Paolo Conti
1960

Preludio d'amore
as Rocco
1946

Marguerite of the Night
as Valentin
1955
TV Appearances

Il segno del comando
as George Powell
1971

Jekyll
as John Utterson
1969

Quo Vadis?
as Aulus Plautius
1985

Christopher Columbus
as Duca Medina Coeli
1985

Der Ochsenkrieg
as Someier
1987

Der Erfolg ihres Lebens
as Le comte di Falco
1990

The French Revolution
as L'envoyé du Pape (« Les Années Lumière »)
1989

Origins of the Mafia
as Viceroy Caracciolo
1976