Lucio D'Ambra


Lucio D'Ambra was an Italian writer and film director. Born as Renato Manganella, he wrote under the pen name of D'Ambra becoming a celebrated journalist, novelist, and film critic. A noted film enthusiast, D'Ambra became involved in the cinema in 1911 when he anonymously wrote screenplays. From 1916 he formally entered the film industry, setting up his own production company and directing more than twenty films. His silent comedies drew comparisons to the films of his German contemporary Ernst Lubitsch. In 1922 D'Ambra's company was absorbed into the conglomerate Unione Cinematografica Italiana and he retired from regular filmmaking although he occasionally produced further screenplays. In 1937 he published his memoirs, recounting his time working in Italy's early film industry.

Biography

D'Ambra was also a journalist, literary and theater critic, playwright and artistic director of theater companies as well as a screenwriter for cinema. Royal Academy of Italy and author of novels. In 1923 he founded at the Teatro Eliseo in Rome, together with Mario Fumagalli and Santi Severino, the company called Teatro degli Italiani, whose purpose was to enhance Italian dramaturgy while being able to count on the subsidies promised by the Italian fascism.
His literary activity was extrinsic in a series of novels collected in seven trilogies. During the Ventennio he was an ardent supporter of the regime's demographic policy, so much so that he had to declare, “With the white ribbon of cradles, Benito Mussolini friezes the fertile breasts of Italian women who, blessed by God in the glory of motherhood, prepare - spring of children - the Italy of tomorrow.”
Forty or so, on the other hand, are his works as a dramatic author. They include: The Little Red Horse, from 1928; Monte Carlo, from the following year; and Solitude, given to the presses in 1936. The author of essays and fictionalized biographies concerning characters from the world of theater, he is best known for his work as a producer and author of film subjects and Screenplay. He died a few months after the start of World War II. At the invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany he had the following to say:
“God spare mad Europe the end of the world!”.

Selected filmography

Director

  • ''The Illustrious Actress Cicala Formica''

Screenwriter

Il bacio di Cirano The Thirteenth Man Nemesis On with the Motley Take Care of Amelia Giuseppe Verdi