Italian writer and director Ettore Scola dies at 84.
Ettore Scola, one of the last of a generation of great Italian writers and directors, who was best known for Il Sorpasso (1962), We All Loved Each Other So Much (1974), A Special Day (1977), "That Night in Varennes (1982), The Family (1987), and The Dinner (1998), fell ill on Sundayand died late Tuesday at a Rome hospital. He was 84.
Scola was perhaps best known for We All Loved Each Other So Much, a 1974 portrait of postwar Italy that starred Nino Manfredi, Vittorio Gassman and Stefania Sandrelli. He directed and co-scripted with Maccari the 1977 Sophia Loren-Marcello Mastroianni film A Special Day, which picked up Oscar nominations for best foreign film and best actor for Mastroianni. He and Loren played neighbors who meet in 1938 during Hitlers visit to Italy.
Scola won best director at Cannes for 1976s Ugly, Dirty and Bad and shared the festivals best screenplay award for La terrazza (1980). Another film much applauded on the festival circuit was the directors 1983 film Le bal.
Scola started as a screenwriter, co-scripting Il Sorpasso with director Dino Risi and Ruggero Maccari. Starring Gassman and Jean-Louis Trintignant, the 1962 film was a road movie that is a classic of the genre.
Scola directed and co-scripted 1987s The Family, starring Gassman, Stefania Sandrelli and Fanny Ardant; the Washington Post called the film a thoughtful Italian Upstairs, Downstairs.
He directed and co-scripted 1998s The Dinner, starring Ardant, Gassman and Giancarlo Giannini; Variety said of the film, A grotesque grab bag of trattoria diners, repping a cross-section of Italian society, eats its way through Ettore Scolas The Dinner, a relaxing, well-oiled comedy with little to digest.
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