Franco Citti
Franco Citti was an Italian actor, best known as one of the close collaborators of director Pier Paolo Pasolini. He came to fame for playing the title role in Pasolini's film Accattone, which brought him a BAFTA Award nomination for BAFTA [Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role|Best Foreign Actor]. He subsequently starred in six of Pasolini's films, as well as 60 other film and television roles. His brother was the director and screenwriter Sergio Citti.
Biography
Citti was born in Rome in 1935 and was raised with his older brother Sergio Citti, working as a painter and day laborer. At the age of 26, he was discovered by Pier Paolo Pasolini, who appreciated his distinctly Roman features, and cast him in the title role of his 1961 directorial debut Accattone. Citti led a cast of other non-professional actors, and proved the breakthrough of the cast, earning a BAFTA Award nomination for a Best Actor in a Leading Role|Best Foreign Actor], as well as a nomination for a Nastro d'Argento for Best Actor.Pasolini cast him in six of his subsequent films, making him one of the filmmaker's close creative collaborators. He played Carmine, opposite Anna Magnani, in Mamma Roma, the title character in [Oedipus Rex (1967 film)|Oedipus Rex], a cannibal in [Pigsty (film)|Pigsty], Ser Ciappelletto in [The Decameron (1971 film)|The Decameron], Satan in The [Canterbury Tales (film)|The Canterbury Tales], and the Demon in Arabian Nights. He appeared in Laura Betti's 2002 documentary Pier Paolo Pasolini e la ragione di un sogno, in which he discussed his working relationship with Pasolini.
Citti also worked with such notable filmmakers as Sergio Corbucci, Carlo Lizzani, Valerio Zurlini, and Bernardo Bertolucci. He appeared in a number of films directed by his brother Sergio, and co-directed with him the 1998 film Cartoni animati. To non-Italian audiences, Citti is perhaps best known for his role as Sicilian bodyguard Calò in The Godfather and The Godfather: Part III, uttering the memorable line "In Sicily, women are more dangerous than shotguns."
He died in Rome on 14 January 2016, at the age of 80, after a long illness.
Filmography
- Accattone - Vittorio "Accattone" Cataldi
- Violent Life - Tommaso
- Mamma Roma
- The Shortest Day - Fante Romano
- Du mouron pour les petits oiseaux - Renato
- Requiescant - Burt
- Oedipus Rex - Edipo
- Black Jesus - Oreste
- Kill Them All and Come Back Alone - Hoagy
- Il magnaccio
- Gangster's Law - Bruno Esposito
- Pigsty - Cannibal
- Una ragazza di Praga - Alberto Marini
- Gli angeli del 2000 - Franco
- Ostia - Rabbino
- The Decameron - Ciappelletto
- La primera entrega
- The Godfather - Calò - Sicilian Sequence
- The Canterbury Tales - The Devil
- Bawdy Tales - Artemio
- Storia de fratelli e de cortelli - Artemio
- Ingrid sulla strada - Renato
- Giuda uccide il venerdì
- - The Demon
- Chi dice donna dice donna - Benito
- Colpita da improvviso benessere - Luiso Malerba
- Live Like a Cop, Die Like a Man - Rudy
- Todo modo - Autista di M.
- Rome: [The Other Side of Violence] - Berte
- Puttana galera! - Ciro
- Destruction Force - Antonio Lanza
- Watch Me When I Kill - Pasquale Ferrante
- Beach House - Nando
- La Luna - Man in Bar
- L'albero della maldicenza - Angelo Maria
- Ciao marziano - Er Cinese
- Eroina - Alfredo, il 'Sceriffo'
- Il minestrone - Francesco
- Pè sempe
- The Black Stallion Returns - Foreign Legion Officer
- The Malady of Love - Cigal
- Rosso di sera - Franco
- Kafka la colonia penale
- The Secret - Franco
- The Godfather: Part III - Calò
- Appuntamento in nero - Projectionist
- El infierno prometido - Caronte
- Power and Lovers - Michele
- We Free Kings
- Festival
- The Mayor
- Cartoni animati - Peppe
- E insieme vivremo tutte le stagioni -
- Pier Paolo Pasolini e la ragione di un sogno - Himself
Awards and nominations
Avellino Neorealism Film Festival- Special Mention