Anna Maria Magnani (Italian:[ˈannamaɲˈɲaːni]; 7 March 1908 – 26 September 1973) was anAcademy Award-winning Italian actress.[1] She was known for her explosive acting and earthy, realistic portrayals of characters.
Born in eitherRome orAlexandria and raised in Rome, she worked her way through Rome's Academy of Dramatic Art by singing at night clubs.[2][3] During her career, her only child was stricken bypolio when he was 18 months old and remained disabled. She was referred to as "La Lupa", the "perennial toast of Rome" and a "living she-wolf symbol" of the cinema.Time described her personality as "fiery", and drama criticHarold Clurman said her acting was "volcanic". In the realm of Italian cinema, she was "passionate, fearless, and exciting", an actress whom film historian Barry Monush calls "the volcanic earth mother of all Italian cinema."[4] DirectorRoberto Rossellini called her "the greatest acting genius sinceEleonora Duse".[2] PlaywrightTennessee Williams became an admirer of her acting and wroteThe Rose Tattoo (1955) specifically for her to star in, a role for which she received anAcademy Award for Best Actress, becoming the first Italian – and first non-native English speaking woman – to win an Oscar.
After meeting directorGoffredo Alessandrini, she received her first screen role inThe Blind Woman of Sorrento (La cieca di Sorrento, 1934) and later achieved international attention in Rossellini'sRome, Open City (1945), which is seen as launching theItalian neorealism movement in cinema.[4] As an actress, she became recognized for her dynamic and forceful portrayals of "earthy lower-class women"[5] in such films asL'Amore (1948),Bellissima (1951),The Rose Tattoo (1955),The Fugitive Kind (1960) andMamma Roma (1962). As early as 1950,Life had already stated that Magnani was "one of the most impressive actresses sinceGarbo".[6]
Magnani's parentage and birthplace are uncertain. Some sources suggest she was born in Rome, others suggest Egypt.[3] Her mother was Marina Magnani.[2] Film directorFranco Zeffirelli, who claimed to know Magnani well, states in his autobiography that she was born in Alexandria, Egypt, to an Italian-Jewish mother and Egyptian father, and that "only later did she become Roman when her grandmother brought her over and raised her in one of the Roman slum districts."[8][9] Magnani herself stated that her mother was married in Egypt, but returned to Rome before giving birth to her atPorta Pia, and did not know how the rumor of her Egyptian birth got started.[10] She was enrolled in a French convent school in Rome, where she learned to speak French and play the piano. She also developed a passion for acting from watching the nuns stage their Christmas plays. This period of formal education lasted until the age of 14.[6]
She was a "plain, frail child with a forlornness of spirit". Her grandparents compensated by pampering her with food and clothes. Yet while growing up, she is said to have felt more at ease around "more earthly" companions, often befriending the "toughest kid on the block".[6] This trait carried over into her adult life when she proclaimed, "I hate respectability. Give me the life of the streets, of common people."[6]
At age 17, she went on to study at theEleonora Duse Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in Rome for two years.[6] To support herself, Magnani sang innightclubs andcabarets; leading to her being dubbed "the ItalianÉdith Piaf". However, her actor friend Micky Knox writes that she "never studied acting formally" and started her career in Italian music halls singing traditional Roman folk songs. "She was instinctive" he writes. "She had the ability to call up emotions at will, to move an audience, to convince them that life on the stage was as real and natural as life in their own kitchen."[11] Film criticDavid Thomson wrote that Magnani was considered an "outstanding theatre actress" in productions ofAnna Christie andThe Petrified Forest.[12]
In 1933, Magnani was acting in experimental plays in Rome when she was discovered by Italian filmmakerGoffredo Alessandrini.[6] The couple married the same year.Nunzio Malasomma directed her in her first major film role inThe Blind Woman of Sorrento (La Cieca di Sorrento, 1934). Goffredo Alessandrini directed her inCavalry (Cavalleria, 1936).For directorVittorio De Sica, Magnani starred inTeresa Venerdì (1941). De Sica called this Magnani's "first true film". In it, she plays Loletta Prima, the girlfriend of De Sica’s character, Pietro Vignali. De Sica described Magnani's laugh as "loud, overwhelming, and tragic".[13]
Magnani became a major star in post-War Italian cinema, coming to international prominence in the films ofRoberto Rossellini and other Italian directors.
Magnani gained international renown as Pina inRoberto Rossellini's neorealistRome, Open City (Roma, città aperta, 1945). In a film about Italy's final days under German occupation duringWorld War II, Magnani's character dies fighting to protect her husband, an underground fighter against theNazis.[14]
Other collaborations with Rossellini includeL'Amore (1948), a two-part film which includesThe Miracle andThe Human Voice (Il miracolo, andUna voce umana). In the former, Magnani, playing a peasant outcast who believes the baby she is carrying is Christ, plumbs both the sorrow and the righteousness of being alone in the world. The latter[15] film is based onJean Cocteau's play about a woman desperately trying to salvage a relationship over the telephone.[16]
AfterThe Miracle, Rossellini promised to direct Magnani in a film he was preparing, which he told her would be "the crowning vehicle of her career". However, when the screenplay was completed, he instead gave the role forStromboli toIngrid Bergman, later Rossellini's lover. This permanently ended Magnani's personal and professional association with Rossellini.[6]
As a result, Magnani took on the starring role ofVolcano (1950), which was said to have been produced to invite a comparison.[6]: 125 Both films were shot in similar locales ofAeolian Islands, only 40 kilometres apart; both actresses played independent-minded roles in a neorealist fashion; and both films were shot simultaneously.Life wrote "in an atmosphere crackling with rivalry... Reporters were accredited, like war correspondents, to one or the other of the embattled camps...Partisanship infected theVia Veneto (boulevard in Rome), where Magnaniacs and Bergmaniacs clashed frequently." However, Magnani still considered Rossellini the "greatest director she ever acted for".[6]
With director Luchino Visconti on the terrace ofPalazzo Altieri, where Magnani lived in the 1950s
InLuchino Visconti'sBellissima (1951), she plays Maddalena, a blustery, obstinate stage mother who drags her daughter toCinecittà for the 'Prettiest Girl in Rome' contest, with dreams that her plain daughter will be a star. Her emotions in the film went from those of rage and humiliation to maternal love.[17]
Magnani then went on to star as Camille (stage name: Columbine) inJean Renoir's filmThe Golden Coach (Le Carrosse d'or, 1952). She played a woman torn with desire for three men - a soldier, a bullfighter, and a viceroy. Renoir called her "the greatest actress I have ever worked with".[18]
Art critic of the time, Pauline Kael, says thatThe Golden Coach was Magnani's greatest screen performance.[19]
She played the widowed mother of a teenaged daughter inDaniel Mann's 1955 film,The Rose Tattoo, based on the play byTennessee Williams. It co-starredBurt Lancaster, and was Magnani's first English-speaking role in a mainstream Hollywood movie, winning her theAcademy Award for Best Actress. Lancaster, who played the role of a "lusty truck driver", said, "if she had not found acting as an outlet for her enormous vitality, she would have become a great criminal".[17]
Film historian John DiLeo has written that Magnani's acting in the film "displays why she is inarguably one of the half dozen greatest screen actresses of all time", and added:
"Whenever Magnani laughs or cries (which is often), it's as if you've never seen anyone laugh or cry before: has laughter ever been so burstingly joyful or tears so shatteringly sad?[20]: 275
Tennessee Williams wrote the screenplay and based the character of Serafina on Magnani as Williams was a great admirer of her acting abilities,[4] and he even stipulated that the movie "must star whatTime described as "the most explosive emotional actress of her generation, Anna Magnani."[17] In hisMemoirs, Williams described why he insisted on Magnani playing this role:
"Anna Magnani was magnificent as Serafina in the movie version ofTattoo...She was as unconventional a woman as I have known in or out of my professional world, and if you understand me at all, you must know that in this statement I am making my personal estimate of her honesty, which I feel was complete. She never exhibited any lack of self-assurance, any timidity in her relations with that society outside of whose conventions she quite publicly existed...[s]he looked absolutely straight into the eyes of whomever she confronted and during that golden time in which we were dear friends, I never heard a false word from her mouth."[21]
It was originally staged on Broadway withMaureen Stapleton, as Magnani's English was too limited at the time for her to star. Magnani won other Best Actress awards for her role, including theBAFTA Film Award,Golden Globes Award,National Board of Review, USA, and theNew York Film Critics Circle Awards.[22] When her name was announced as the Oscar winner, an American journalist called her in Rome to tell her the news; he had difficulty convincing her he was serious.[23]
Magnani worked again in the United States, speaking both English and Italian, inGeorge Cukor's dramaWild Is the Wind (1957), in which she played the Italian bride of sheep farmerAnthony Quinn who falls for his surrogate sonTony Franciosa. Both Magnani and Quinn were nominated for Oscars for their performances.[24]
She then appeared in another Tennessee Williams property, the 1960 filmThe Fugitive Kind, which originally was titledOrpheus Descending after the play on which it was based). Directed bySidney Lumet, she co-starred withMarlon Brando, for whom this also was a reunion with Williams, whoseA Streetcar Named Desire vaulted him to stardom. In the film, she played Lady Torrance, a woman "hardened by life's cruelties and a grief that will not fade."[20] It also co-starred a youngJoanne Woodward in one of her early roles.
In an article he wrote forLife, Williams discussed why he chose Magnani for the part:
"Anna and I had both cherished the dream that her appearance in the part I created for her inThe Fugitive Kind would be her greatest triumph to date...She is simply a rare being who seems to have about her a little lightning-shot cloud all her own...In a crowded room, she can sit perfectly motionless and silent and still you feel the atmospheric tension of her presence, its quiver and hum in the air like a live wire exposed, and a mood of Anna's is like the presence of royalty."[26]
The production was troubled, as Magnani and Brando did not get along.David Thomson has written:
Rumors had it that Magnani (fifty-one at the time) assumed in advance that there would be a sexual encounter with Brando (thirty-six), and when that failed to materialize, she became aggressive and insecure; and that Brando believed she refrained from washing to goad him.[27]
The movie received mixed reviews and was a failure at the box office.[28]
InPier Paolo Pasolini'sMamma Roma(1962), Magnani is both the mother and the whore, playing an irrepressible prostitute determined to give her teenaged son a respectable middle-class life.Mamma Roma, while one of Magnani's critically acclaimed films, was not released in the United States until 1995, deemed too controversial 33 years earlier. By now, she was frustrated at being typecast in the roles of poor women. Magnani in 1963 commented, "I’m bored stiff with these everlasting parts as a hysterical, loud, working-class woman".[29]
In one of her last film roles,The Secret of Santa Vittoria (1969), she co-starred withAnthony Quinn, with whom she had appeared with a decade before inWild is the Wind. They played husband and wife in whatLife called "perhaps the most memorable fight sinceJimmy Cagney smashedMae Clarke in the face with a half a grapefruit."
In real life as well as in their reel life, Magnani and Quinn feuded in private outside view of the cameras, and their animosity spilled over into their scenes:
"By the time the movie makers were ready to shoot the fight scene, the stars were ready, too. Magnani not only went for Quinn with the pasta and with a rolling pin, but [also] with her foot; she kicked so hard she broke a bone in her right foot. She also bit him in the neck. 'That's not in the script', Quinn protested. Magnani snarled, 'I'm supposed to win this fight, remember?"[30]
She later played herself (within a dramatic context) inFederico Fellini'sRoma (1972). Towards the end of her career, Magnani was quoted as having said, "The day has gone when I deluded myself that making movies was art. Movies today are made up of…intellectuals who always make out that they’re teaching something".[citation needed]
According to film criticRobin Wood, Magnani's "persona as a great actress is built, not on transformation, but on emotional authenticity... [she] doesn't portray characters but expresses 'genuine' emotions."[3] Her style does not display the more obvious attributes of the female star, with neither her face or physical makeup being considered "beautiful", wrote Wood. However, she possesses a "remarkably expressive face," and for American audiences, at least, she represents "what Hollywood had consistently failed to produce: 'reality'". She was the atypical star, the "nonglamorous human being", as her genuine style of acting became a "rejection of glamour".[3]
Her most distinguished work in Hollywood is inWild Is the Wind, according to Wood. Directed byGeorge Cukor, "the American cinema's greatest director of actresses," he was able to draw out the "individual essence" of Magnani's "sensitive and inward performance."[3]
She marriedGoffredo Alessandrini, her first film director, in 1935, two years after he discovered her on stage. After they married, she retired from full-time acting to "devote herself exclusively to her husband", although she continued to play smaller film parts.[6] They separated in 1942.
Magnani had a love affair with actorMassimo Serato, by whom she had her only child, a son named Luca,[8] who was born on 29 October 1942 in Rome, after her separation from Alessandrini. At the age of 18 months, Luca contractedpolio and subsequently lost the use of his legs due to paralysis. As a result, Magnani spent most of her early earnings for specialists and hospitals. After once seeing a legless war veteran drag himself along the sidewalk, she said, "I realize now that it's worse when they grow up", and resolved to earn enough to "shield him forever from want".[6]
In 1945, she fell in love with directorRoberto Rossellini while working onRoma, Città Aperta (Rome, Open City). "I thought at last I had found the ideal man... [He] had lost a son of his own and I felt we understood each other. Above all, we had the same artistic conceptions." Rossellini could be violent, volatile and possessive, however, and they would argue about films or out of jealousy. "In fits of rage they threw crockery at each other."[6] As artists, though, they complemented each other well while working on neorealist films. The two split up when Rossellini had an affair withIngrid Bergman, whom he married after she conceived a child.
Magnani was mystically inclined and consulted astrologers, as well as believing in numerology. She also claimed to be clairvoyant.[6] She ate and drank very little and could subsist for long periods on nothing more than black coffee and cigarettes. However, these habits often affected her sleep: "My nights are appalling," she said. "I wake up in a state of nerves and it takes me hours to get back in touch with reality."[6]
On 26 September 1973, Magnani died at the age of 65 in Rome frompancreatic cancer. Huge crowds gathered for the funeral. She was provisionally laid to rest in the familymausoleum ofRoberto Rossellini; but then subsequently interred in the Cimitero Comunale ofSan Felice Circeo in southernLazio.
^Knox, Mickey.The Good, the Bad, and the Dolce Vita, Nation Books (2004), pg. 126
^Thomson, David (2002).The New Biographical Dictionary of Film. New York City: Alfred A. Knopf. p. 550.
^Commire, Anne; Klezmer, Deborah, eds. (1999).Women in world history: a biographical encyclopedia. Waterford, CT: Yorkin Publications. p. 84.ISBN978-0-7876-3736-1.