All Movies List
Dark Illness

as Psicanalista

1990
Taste of Life

as Il cuoco

1988
Love & Passion

as Don Vincenzo

1987
I picari

as mozzafiato

1987
Cenerentola '80

as Harry

1987
Cinderella '80

as Harry Cardone

1984
Uno scandalo perbene

as Renzo

1984
Petomaniac

as Pitalugue

1983
Tragedy of a Ridiculous Man

as Maresciallo Angrisani

1982
Più bello di così si muore

as conte Nereo Di Sanfilippo

1982
Hypochondriac

as Vincenzo

1979
To Be Twenty

as Nazariota

1978
Blood and Diamonds

as Commissario Russo

1978
Messalina, Messalina!

as Claudius

1977
Latin Male Wanted

as don Carmine

1977
The Rip-Off

as

1977
Catherine & Co.

as Moretti

1976
Rulers of the City

as Vinchenzo Napoli

1976
Blackmail Chase

as Barbone

1976
The Landlord

as Onorevole Vincenzi

1976
The Groper

as Tino Capoli / Lucki Capoli

1976
The Messiah

as Herod the Great

1975
Kidnap Syndicate

as Commissar Magrini

1975
The School Teacher

as Fefe Mottola

1975
L'ammazzatina

as Commissario Pafuso

1975
I'm Losing My Temper

as Le metteur en scène

1974
Vittorio Caprioli Vittorio Caprioli

Birthday

1921-08-15

Place of Birth

Napoli, Campania, Italia

Biography

Vittorio Caprioli (15 August 1921 – 2 October 1989) was an Italian film actor, film director and screenwriter. He appeared in 109 films between 1946 and 1990, mostly in French productions. He was born and died in Naples, Italy. Caprioli was born in Naples. Having graduated from the Accademia Nazionale di Arte Drammatica Silvio D'Amico in Rome, he made his stage debut in 1942 in the Carli-Racca company. From 1945, he began his collaboration with the Italian public broadcaster, RAI, often together with Luciano Salce, creating magazine and variety programs. Arriving in 1948 at the Piccolo theatre in Milan, where under the direction of Giorgio Strehler he took part in William Shakespeare's The Tempest. At the beginning of 1950, he was cast alongside Alberto Bonucci and Gianni Cajafa for the Neapolitan Carosello musical theatrical work, directed by Ettore Giannini. A versatile interpreter, in 1950 he founded, with Bonucci and Franca Valeri the Teatro dei Gobbi, which proposed a subtly satirical type of show. In 1960, he married Valeri with whom he presented plays. They divorced in 1974. He appeared in cinema as a character actor and made his directorial debut in 1961 with Lions In the Sun, which was later selected to enter the list of the 100 Italian films to be saved. He followed this with Paris, My Love and then a segment of I cuori infranti which was shown as part of a retrospective on Italian comedy at the 67th Venice International Film Festival. The Splendors and Miseries of Madame Royale in 1970 was generally considered to be his best film. He continued to appear on stage in between his films and was occasionally tempted by television, where he began his career in 1959, but he never really loved the small screen ("I suffer more than anything because of the absence of the public, which I consider an integral and irreplaceable part of the show in which I participate"). In the Sixties he acted in Village Wooing, directed by Antonello Falqui, and in 1972 he let himself be tempted by a television variety show, which he wrote and interpreted, Una Serata con Vittorio Caprioli. In his last years he returned to theater interpreting, among others, Don Marzio in Carlo Goldoni's Bottega del caffè, The Sunshine Boys by Neil Simon paired with Mario Carotenuto, and Capocomico in Luigi Pirandello's Six Characters in Search of an Author. During the rehearsals of a interpretation of Napoli Milionaria, he died suddenly at the age of 68, in a room of one of the famous hotels on the promenade of Naples, struck down by a heart attack. Source: Article "Vittorio Caprioli" from Wikipedia in english, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
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