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Synopsis

Glorious fun, De Sica’s neorealist comedy not only provided Anna Magnani with her best vehicle before her star-making appearance in Rome, Open City, but also gave the director a chance to parade his debonair persona as a lecherous doctor. Taking up a position as health inspector in an orphanage to pay off his debts, the incompetent physician finds himself being reformed by a doe-eyed bambina called Teresa Venerdi. (Her last name refers to the Friday she was delivered to the institute.) As the doctor’s spitfire mistress, a nightclub entertainer called Loletta Prima, “la Regina di Jazz,” Magnani exploits all the registers of contempt, coarseness and gold-digging ambition with great showgirl gusto; one critic described her as “smouldering like Mount Vesuvius,” never mind her Etna-like eruptions. “A screwball romantic comedy of the first rank” (The New York Times). —TIFF Bell Lightbox

Director

Original

Vittorio De Sica

The seminal figure of the neorealism movement, Vittorio De Sica was born in Sora, Italy, on July 7, 1901. Raised in Naples, he began working as an office clerk at a young age in order to help support his impoverished family. He became fascinated by acting while still a youth, and made his screen debut in 1918’s The Clemenceau Affair at the age of just 16. In 1923, De Sica joined Tatiana Pavlova’s famed stage company, and by the end of the decade his dashing good looks had made him one of the Italian theater’s most prominent matinee idols. With 1932’s La Vecchia Signora, he made his sound-era film debut and went on to become an even bigger star in the cinema, appearing primarily in light romantic comedies throughout the decade. In 1939, De Sica graduated to the director’s chair with Rose Scarlatte. Over the next two years he helmed three more features (1940’s Maddalena, Zero in Condotta along with 1941’s Teresa Venerdì and Un Garibaldino al Convento, respectively), but his work lacked… read more

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