
Thu 11/11/2010
Obit: Dino De Laurentiis, 91, Greatest
Italian Producer?
Dino De Laurentiis,
a mogul who moved from Italian postwar masterpieces to Oscar-winning Fellini
films, cult flicks Barbarella and Conan the Barbarian and Hollywood smashes
like Death Wish, King Kong and the Hannibal franchise, received the 2001
Irving Thalberg award for career achievement.
MOVIE MOGUL DE LAURENTIIS
DIES
(ANSA) - Rome, November 11, 2010 -
Dino De Laurentiis, a mogul who moved from Italian postwar masterpieces
to Oscar-winning Fellini films, cult flicks Barbarella and Conan the Barbarian
and Hollywood smashes like Death Wish, King Kong and the Hannibal franchise,
has died in his Los Angeles home at the age of 91.
Born Agostino De Laurentiis at Torre
Annunziata near Naples in 1919, the son of pasta-makers, he started in
the film business in his 20s and made his first mark with neorealist classic
Riso Amaro (Bitter Rice) in 1948, starring Silvia Mangano, later his wife
from 1957 until her death in 1989.
He set up a joint company with fellow
producer Carlo Ponti, Sophia Loren's husband, in 1948, and made Toto' a
Colori, Italy's first colour film, with comic great Toto' in 1952.
De Laurentiis produced Federico Fellini's
first two Oscar-winning features, La Strada (1954) and Le Notti di Cabiria
(1957), before winning a Golden Lion in Venice with La Grande Guerra (1959)
starring Alberto Sordi and Vittorio Gassman.
His flair for epic filmmaking began
with Ulysses in 1954, starring Kirk Douglas and Mangano.
After Barbarella with Jane Fonda,
made at his Dinocitta' studios outside Rome in 1968, he moved to LA where
his credits include Three Days of the Condor with Robert Redford, Al Pacino's
Serpico, Flash Gordon, Dune and the Madonna vehicle Body of Evidence.
His biggest success after the 1976
remake of King Kong with Jessica Lange came from the adaptations of Thomas
Harris's Hannibal Lector series.
After passing on the first, Oscar-winning
The Silence of the Lambs, he produced Manhunter, Hannibal, Red Dragon and,
in 2007, Hannibal Rising.
Other career highlights included,
in the mid-1980s, The Bounty with Mel Gibson and The Year of the Dragon
with Mickey Rourke.
De Laurentiis' knack for picking winners
was shown in the Death Wish pictures starring Charles Bronson and the Conan
films which made a star out of Arnold Shwarzenegger.
Other crowd-pleasers included Mandingo
with boxer Ken Norton in 1975 and Sam Raimi's Army of Darkness in 1992.
In 2001, he received the Irving Thalberg
award for career achievement, saying "I've been very lucky, I've had the
privilege of working with cinema's greatest masters".
In a 2001 interview he said "making
movies is all about instinct. Nobody told Picasso how to paint".
Among the first tributes Thursday,
Italian director Gianni Amelio called De Laurentiis "the greatest Italian
producer".
Amelio, known for award-winning pics
like Lamerica and Cosi' Ridevano (The Way We Laughed), noted that "he steered
Italian cinema towards Hollywood, with films like War and Peace (1956,
starring Katherine Hepburn and Henry Fonda)".
Ricky Tognazzi, son of Italian movie
great Ugo Tognazzi, said "his films are immortal".
De Laurentiis is survived by his wife
Martha, their two children, and four children from his first marriage with
Mangano.
His daughter Raffaella and nephew
Aurelio are film producers.
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