Birth Date: | 29 June 1945 |
Birth Place: | Milan, Italy |
Death Place: | Rome, Italy |
Occupation: | Actress |
Yearsactive: | 1965–2024 |
Relatives: | Renzo Ricci (grandfather) Margherita Bagni (grandmother) Alessandro Gassmann (half-brother) Leo Gassmann (half-nephew) |
Children: | 2 |
Parents: | Vittorio Gassman Nora Ricci |
Paola Gassman (29 June 1945 – 9 April 2024) was an Italian actress.
Through her mother, Nora Ricci, Paola Gassman was a fifth generation actor, as Ricci was the daughter of actors Renzo Ricci and Margherita Bagni.
Gassman devoted herself almost exclusively to the theater, with the exception of some sporadic but significant television appearances in comedies and scripts. At the beginning of her career she spent three years in the Milan company Teatro Libero, directed by Luca Ronconi. She performed in their show Orlando furioso, which toured in many European countries and in the United States before being adapted into a television series. Also during that period, she performed in the shows La tragedia del avengeratore and Cucina. She then joined the Brignone-Pagliai company, where she performed in Ibsen's Spectra and Fabbri's Family Process.
Gassman was directed by her father, Vittorio Gassman, onstage. With the theatrical company Pagliai-Gassman staged many shows both in the dramatic and in the comic and brilliant genre. She had a long period dedicated to Luigi Pirandello.She also performed in Goldoni's The Liar, Georges Feydeau's The Cat in the Pocket, Svevo's Wedding Scenes, and Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice and A Midsummer Night's Dream.
She acted with directors such as Squarzina, Bolognini, Sciaccaluga, and Ronconi. Her later shows included Miller's Down from Mount Morgan; Crouse's Life with Father; Mary Coyle Chase's Harvey; Iphigenia in Aulis and Helen (both by Euripides); and Viaggio a Venezia and La Bottega del Caffe (both by Goldoni).
In recent years with Ugo Pagliai,[1] [2] she dedicated herself to poetry and to all those pieces that are linked to memory and repertoire. In 2007, she published the autobiography A big family behind your back through Marsilio Editori.[3]
Gassman was a companion of the actor Ugo Pagliai, whom she never married, and whom she shared one son: Tommaso. She and her then-husband, actor Luciano Virgilio, had a daughter; Simona Virgilio[4] known at the National Academy of Dramatic Art "Silvio D'Amico" (exactly as Paola's parents had done twenty years before). Her father Vittorio Gassman died of a heart attack on her 55th birthday.
After a prolonged illness, Paola Gassman died in Rome on 9 April 2024, at the age of 78.[5] [6] [7]
1970 | Let's Have a Riot | Luigi Zampa | ||||
1982 | From Father to Son | Vittorio and Alessandro Gassman | ||||
2001 | Days | Laura Muscardin | ||||
2010 | Looking for Mary | |||||
2017 | Prayer | Davide Cavuti | Documentary | |||
2021 | My Father | Antonio D'Ottavio | Documentary | |||
2021 | A Martian Named Ennio | Davide Cavuti |
Year | Show | Role | Episode | Notes | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1972 | The Famous Evasions | "L'évasion de Casanova" | directed by Jean-Pierre Decourt | |||
1973 | Clash By Night | by Clifford Odets, directed by Maurizio Scaparro | ||||
1975 | Orlando furioso | directed by Luca Ronconi | ||||
1976 | Forget Lisa | directed by Salvatore Nocita | ||||
1979 | Fantastic Tales | "The Fall of House Usher" | directed by Daniele D'Anza | |||
1981 | Portrait of the Unknown | by Diego Fabbri, directed by Mario Ferrero | ||||
1983 | The Cat in the Pocket | by Georges Feydeau, directed by Luigi Proietti | ||||
1986 | The Physicists | by Friedrich Dürrenmatt, directed by Vittorio Barino | ||||
2013 | All the Music of the Heart | "The Call" | directed by Ambrogio Lo Giudice |
2010 | Mia divina Eleonora | Milo Vallone | |||||
The Balcony of Golda | |||||||
2016 | I hate Hamlet | Alessandro Benvenuti |