Vittorio De Sica has: Performed in "La bellezza del mondo" in 1927. Played Prof. Rosolillo in "La compagnia dei matti" in 1928. Played Mister Brown in "Due cuori felici" in 1932. Played Il fine dicitore in "La vecchia signora" in 1932. Played Bruno in "Gli uomini, che mascalzoni..." in 1932. Played Willy in "Un cattivo soggetto" in 1933. Played Fritz Peters in "Lisetta" in 1933. Played Dr. Giuseppe Paladino in "Das Lied der Sonne" in 1933. Played Paladino, il avvocato in "La canzone del sole" in 1934. Played Il professore Giacomo Banti in "Tempo massimo" in 1934. Played Prof. Giovanni Agano in "Amo te sola" in 1936. Played Alfredo in "Lohengrin" in 1936. Played Vincenzo in "Questi ragazzi" in 1937. Played Paolo Veronda in "Partire" in 1938. Played Bruno Zacchi in "I grandi magazzini" in 1939. Played Pietro Haguet in "Ai vostri ordini, signora" in 1939. Played Riccardo Pietramola in "Castelli in aria" in 1939. Played Salvatore in "Le due madri" in 1940. Played Pietro Bandelli in "La peccatrice" in 1940. Played Alberto Verani in "Rose scarlatte" in 1940. Played Alfredo Hartman in "Maddalena... zero in condotta" in 1940. Played Il conte Corrado Valli in "Pazza di gioia" in 1940. Played Renato Des Grieux in "Manon Lescaut" in 1940. Played Nino Bixio in "Un garibaldino al convento" in 1942. Played Pietro Kovach in "Se io fossi onesto" in 1942. Played Leo in "I nostri sogni" in 1943. Played Maurizio in "Nessuno torna indietro" in 1945. Played Adriano Lari in "Lo sbaglio di essere vivo" in 1945. Performed in "Vivere ancora" in 1945. Played Don Vicenzino in "Natale al campo 119" in 1947. Played Professor Perboni in "Cuore" in 1948. Played Nunzio in "Sperduti nel buio" in 1949. Played Leonardo Leonardi in "Cameriera bella presenza offresi..." in 1951. Played Attorney (segment "Il processo di Frine") in "Altri tempi - Zibaldone n. 1" in 1952. Played Avvocato Arturo Cavazzuti in "Villa Borghese" in 1953. Played Baron Fabrizio Donati in "Madame de..." in 1953. Played Maresciallo Carotenuto in "Pane, amore e fantasia" in 1953. Played Antonio Valli in "Vergine moderna" in 1954. Played Maresciallo Carotenuto in "Pane, amore e gelosia" in 1954. Played Il conte Ferdinando (segment "Don Corradino") in "Tempi nostri - Zibaldone n. 2" in 1954. Played Gregory Stefanovich Smirnov in "Il matrimonio" in 1954. Played Alessio Spano in "Il segno di Venere" in 1955. Played Carlo Reani in "Gli ultimi cinque minuti" in 1955. Played Comandante Carotenuto in "Pane, amore e....." in 1955. Played Avvocato Mazzoni Baralla in "Racconti romani" in 1955. Played Vittorio Stroppiani in "Peccato che sia una canaglia" in 1955. Played Don Teofilo - governatore in "La bella mugnaia" in 1955. Performed in "Sulle strade di notte" in 1956. Played Seneca in "Mio figlio Nerone" in 1956. Played Aristide Rossi in "Tempo di villeggiatura" in 1956. Played Minor Role in "La fortuna di essere donna" in 1956. Played Count Dino della Fiaba in "Montecarlo" in 1956. Played Alfredo Celimontani in "Noi siamo le colonne" in 1956. Played Alexandre Gordy in "Casino de Paris" in 1957. Played Vincenzo Corallo in "Padri e figli" in 1957. Played Major Alessandro Rinaldi in "A Farewell to Arms" in 1957. Played Giorgio in "I colpevoli" in 1957. Played Console Bordogin in "La donna che venne dal mare" in 1957. Played Antonio Locoratolo in "Il medico e lo stregone" in 1957. Played Conte Max Orsini Varaldo in "Il conte Max" in 1957. Played Engineer Occhipinti in "Vacanze a Ischia" in 1957. Played Don Luigi in "Anna di Brooklyn" in 1958. Played Armando Conforti in "La ragazza di piazza San Pietro" in 1958. Played himself in "Portrait of Gina" in 1958. Played God in "Ballerina e Buon Dio" in 1958. Played Avvocato Bonelli in "Amore e chiacchiere (Salviamo il panorama)" in 1958. Played Il comandante Ernesto De Rossi in "Pezzo, capopezzo e capitano" in 1958. Played Il professore in "Gli zitelloni" in 1958. Played Prestigiatore in "Policarpo, ufficiale di scrittura" in 1959. Played Spartaco in "Nel blu dipinto di blu" in 1959. Played Alfredo in "La prima notte" in 1959. Played Director Pietro Giordani in "Il mondo dei miracoli" in 1959. Played The O. I. M. P. President in "Il moralista" in 1959. Played Marchese Nicola in "Uomini e nobiluomini" in 1959. Played Ottavio Terenzi, padre di Marco in "Il nemico di mia moglie" in 1959. Played Ricco Poccari in "The Four Just Men" in 1959. Played Clarence Day in "Vita col padre e con la madre" in 1960. Played Il sindaco in "Il vigile" in 1960. Played Joe in "The Millionairess" in 1960. Played Piero Cuocolo in "Le pillole di Ercole" in 1960. Played Director in "Un amore a Roma" in 1960. Played The prince in "Gastone" in 1960. Played Colonel Belalcazar in "Le tre eccetera del colonnello" in 1960. Played Gen. Clave in "The Angel Wore Red" in 1960. Played Mario Vitale in "It Started in Naples" in 1960. Played Pope Pius VII in "Austerlitz" in 1960. Played Bancroft in "La Fayette" in 1961. Played Colonnello Filippo Bitossi in "Gli attendenti" in 1961. Played Maresciallo Vittorio Cottone in "I due marescialli" in 1961. Played Genie in "Le meraviglie di Aladino" in 1961. Played Defense lawyer in "Il giudizio universale" in 1961. Played Attore di Fumetti in "Gli incensurati" in 1961. Performed in "Eva" in 1962. Played himself in "Lykke og krone" in 1962. Played The Count in "The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders" in 1965. Played himself in "Sunday Night" in 1965. Played Commendator Trepossi in "Io, io, io... e gli altri" in 1966. Played himself in "Caccia alla volpe" in 1966. Played Cesare Celli in "Lionpower from MGM" in 1967. Performed in "Gli altri, gli altri e noi" in 1967. Played Cesare Celli in "The Biggest Bundle of Them All" in 1968. Played himself in "Sophia: A Self-Portrait" in 1968. Played himself in "The David Frost Show" in 1969. Played himself in "Rom aktuell" in 1969. Played himself in "Aquarius" in 1970. Played himself in "Film Night" in 1970. Played Enrico Formichi in "Trastevere" in 1971. Played Don Michele in "Cose di Cosa Nostra" in 1971. Played Player in Venice casino in "Io non vedo, tu non parli, lui non sente" in 1971. Played Enrico Dolphi in "Snow Job" in 1972. Played Giudice (1972) in "Le avventure di Pinocchio" in 1972. Played Cardinale Giove in "Ettore lo fusto" in 1972. Played Mauro Del Giudice in "Il delitto Matteotti" in 1973. Played Father Damico in "The Small Miracle" in 1974. Played Maresciallo Cenciarelli in "Storia de fratelli e de cortelli" in 1974. Performed in "Viaggia, ragazza, viaggia, hai la musica nelle vene" in 1974. Played Il Marchese Di Fiore in "Blood for Dracula" in 1974. Performed in "Un sorriso, uno schiaffo, un bacio in bocca" in 1975. Played himself in "Io sono Anna Magnani" in 1980. Played Count Prospero B. in "Nuovo Cinema Paradiso" in 1988. Played General della Rovere in "Roberto Rossellini: Frammenti e battute" in 2000. Performed in "Come inguaiammo il cinema italiano - La vera storia di Franco e Ciccio" in 2004. Played himself in "Cineastas contra magnates" in 2005. Played himself in "Marcello, una vita dolce" in 2006. Played himself in "Vittorio D." in 2009. Played himself in "1960" in 2010. Performed in "Pupi Avati, ieri, oggi, domani" in 2010. Played himself in "Dai nostri inviati: La Rai racconta la Mostra del Cinema 1968-1979" in 2011.
Vittorio De Sica was born on July 7, 1901.
Vittorio De Sica was born on July 7, 1901.
Vittorio De Sica died on November 13, 1974 at the age of 73.
Vittorio De Sica died on November 13, 1974 at the age of 73.
Vittorio De Sica was born on July 7, 1901 and died on November 13, 1974. Vittorio De Sica would have been 73 years old at the time of death or 114 years old today.
The cast of Vittorio D. - 2009 includes: Woody Allen as himself Christian De Sica as himself Vittorio De Sica as himself Clint Eastwood as himself Sophia Loren as herself
Vittorio de Sica
Vittorio De Sica is 176 cm.
Brando De Sica has: Played himself in "Quelli che... il calcio" in 1993. Played ragazzino in "Tre" in 1996. Played Aspreno Colonna in "A spasso nel tempo" in 1996. Played Pietro Valobra in "Compagni di scuola" in 2001. Played Ricky in "Attenti a quei tre" in 2004. Played himself in "Mardik: Baghdad to Hollywood" in 2008.
The Bicycle Thief
It was Vittorio De Sica who directed the 1961 film Two Women.
The 1957 Oscars were the first ever televised. The only Oscar that Farewell to Arms was nominated for was Actor in a Supporting Role. While it was won by Red Buttons for the movie Sayonara, Vittorio de Sica was nominated.