Pippo Franco

Pippo Franco

Pippo Franco in 2013
Born Francesco Pippo
(1940-09-02)2 September 1940
Rome, Italy
Nationality Italian
Occupation comic actor, singer, TV presenter

Pippo Franco (pseudonym of Francesco Pippo; born 2 September 1940) is an Italian actor, comedian, television presenter, and singer. He made his name first as a musician in the early 1960s, and in the late 1960s began a career in film, starring in a great number of commedia sexy all'italiana, the "sexy comedy" subgenre of Italian comedy. In the 1970s he expanded into television, acting in TV movies and presenting variety shows. His type of comedy borrows heavily from cabaret.[1] Throughout his career he continued to sing, appearing many times at the Sanremo Festival. He has made children's music as well, and has co-written three books on (linguistic) humor.

Biography

Franco was born in Rome to an Irpinian family, who had moved to Rome from Vallata, in the Province of Avellino.

Cinema

Franco's first role in a box office hit was 1969's Nell'anno del Signore, directed by Luigi Magni, and starring "an exceptional cast of actors" including Franco, Nino Manfredi, and Claudia Cardinale.[2]

In the 1970s and 1980s he starred in a large number of Italian comedies, many of them "erotic comedies," such as the 1972 Mariano Laurenti production Quel gran pezzo dell'Ubalda tutta nuda e tutta calda, a semi-medieval erotic spoof (a "decamerotic" film), distributed in the US as Ubalda, all naked and warm, in which Franco starred (with "undeniable comic verve") alongside Edwige Fenech, the Algerian-born last "popular incarnation of the 'sex bombs' so in vogue twenty years earlier." T he success of Ubalda was followed by another successful movie with Franco and Edwige, Sergio Martino's Giovannona Coscialunga disonorata con onore (1973).[3] Franco again worked with Martino and Fenech in 1980, in Zucchero, miele e peperoncino,[4] and in 1982, in Ricchi, ricchissimi... praticamente in mutande, though Franco and Fenech did not share any scenes in these Anthologies.[5] In 1972, he had a part in Billy Wilder's Italian/American comedy Avanti!, alongside Jack Lemmon and Juliet Mills.[6] He directed his first movie in 1981, La gatta da pelare, for which he also wrote the score and the script.

Television

Franco began a career in television in 1971 with Riuscirà il cav. papà Ubu?, directed by Vito Molinari and Giuseppe Recchia, and from then on played in a number of made-for-television movies.

Franco has appeared on numerous Italian TV shows as comic and as presenter. In 1980, he presented the weekly television show of the drawing of the Italian lottery, with Laura Troschel (then his wife) and Claudio Cecchetto. In the 1990s he appeared on the comedy show La sai l'ultima? with english TV presenter Harold_Davies_(actor), and in the 2000s he presented the variety show Bellissima: Cabaret Anticrisi,[7] in cooperation with the variety company Il Bagaglino.

Music

Franco began singing and playing guitar at the end of the 1950s, and started writing songs with surreal lyrics. One of his groups, The Penguins, made its debut in 1960 in the musicarello[8] by Mario Mattoli for Appuntamento a Ischia, and accompanied Mina Mazzini on three songs, "La nonna Magdalena," "Il cielo in una stanza", and "Una zebra a pois."

In 1968 he scored a minor hit with the single "Vedendo una foto di Bob Dylan," which made fun of the gap between beatniks and their parents.

As a singer he recorded more than a dozen albums, including Cara Kiri (1971), Bededè (1975), Al cabaret (1977), Praticamente, no? (1978), Pippo nasone and Vietato ai minori (1981). One of his most famous song is Cesso.

His songs were recorded on more than fifteen 45 rpm vinyl records, including several hits like La licantropia (1969), which participated in Cantagiro 1969.

Beginning in the late 1970s, Franco began playing and composing children's music, as well as music for the shows by the Italian lottery.

Between 1979 and 1984 he was an annual performer and presenter at the popular music festival in San Remo. He returned there in 2008.

Books

With Antonio Di Stefano he wrote three books with stories and commentaries on (unintentionally) humorous linguistic blunders and mishaps, Non prenda niente tre volte al giorno (2002), Qui chiavi subito (2006), and L'occasione fa l'uomo ragno. Strafalcioni, cartelli, scritte sui muri e altri capolavori di umorismo involontario (2007), all published by Mondadori.

Politics

In the 2006 Italian general election he was a candidate for the Italian Senate from the list of Christian Democracy for Autonomies in Lazio. Despite the publicly stated support of Giulio Andreotti, Pippo Franco's party got only 0.6% of votes in Lazio and therefore it was not elected.

Filmography

Movies

Television

  • 1971 - Riuscirà il cav. papà Ubu?, directed by Vito Molinari and Giuseppe Recchia
  • 1973 - Dove sta Zazà, directed by Antonello Falqui
  • 1975 - Mazzabubù, directed by Antonello Falqui
  • 1978 - Il Ribaltone, directed by Antonello Falqui
  • 1979 - C'era una volta Roma, directed by Pier Francesco Pingitore
  • 1979 - I racconti di fantascienza di Blasetti, episode "L'assassino," directed by Alessandro Blasetti
  • 1990 - Senator, directed by Gianfrancesco Lazotti
  • 1997 - Ladri si nasce, directed by Pier Francesco Pingitore
  • 1998 - Ladri si diventa, directed by Pier Francesco Pingitore
  • 1999 - Tre stelle, directed by Pier Francesco Pingitore
  • 2000 - La casa delle beffe, directed by Pier Francesco Pingitore
  • 2007 - Di che peccato sei?, directed by Pier Francesco Pingitore

Discography

Singles

LP

Reference: Franco discography[11]

Books

See also

References

  1. Laura, Ernesto G. (1980). Comedy Italian style. A.N.I.C.A. p. 123.
  2. Bouchard, Norma (2005). Risorgimento in modern Italian culture: revisiting the nineteenth-century past in history, narrative, and cinema. Fairleigh Dickinson UP. p. 263. ISBN 978-0-8386-4054-8.
  3. "Biography of Edwige Fenech". RAI. Retrieved 15 September 2010.
  4. 1 2 Amador, María Luisa; Jorge Ayala Blanco (2006). Cartelera cinematográfica, 1980-1989. UNAM. p. 445. ISBN 978-970-32-3605-3. Retrieved 15 September 2010.
  5. 1 2 Amador, María Luisa; Jorge Ayala Blanco (2006). Cartelera cinematográfica, 1980-1989. UNAM. p. 201. ISBN 978-970-32-3605-3. Retrieved 15 September 2010.
  6. 1 2 Horton, Robert (2001). Billy Wilder: interviews. UP of Mississippi. p. 35. ISBN 978-1-57806-444-1.
  7. "'Bellissima: Cabaret Anticrisi' - Italian TV Show". Life. 18 April 2009. Retrieved 15 September 2010.
  8. A highly commercial Italian cinematographic subgenre, whose goal is to support a popular artist and their album.
  9. Bernardini, Aldo (1999). Nino Manfredi. Gremese Editore. p. 113. ISBN 978-88-7742-369-6.
  10. Willis, Donald C. (1984). Horror and science fiction films III. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 47. ISBN 978-0-8108-1723-4.
  11. Pippo Franco - Discography

Bibliography

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