Paola Pezzaglia Explained

Paola Pezzaglia
Birth Name:Paolina Pezzaglia
Birth Date:13 September 1886
Birth Place:Milan, Kingdom of Italy
Death Date:17 December 1925 (aged 39)
Death Place:Florence, Kingdom of Italy
Resting Place:Trespiano Cemetery
Occupation:Actress
Years Active:1893 - 1925
Children:2

Paolina Pezzaglia Greco (13 September 1886  - 17 December 1925) was an Italian theatre and film actress.

Early life

Pezzaglia was the only daughter of the VIP hair-stylist Gerolamo Pezzaglia (1854 - 1899) and Adelinda Monti (1854 - 1940).[1] The family name was Pezzaglia, however, the variant spelling Pazzaglia is also found in some documents and sources.

Her uncle was the actor and "capocomico" Angelo Pezzaglia,[2] who encouraged her to start acting on stage.[3] At the age of 6 she already enchanted the public in theatre, and she grew to be a popular actress, acting in more than 120 theatrical pieces throughout Italy, Switzerland, Tunisia, Spain and Egypt.

Career

She was first actress in Ermete Zacconi's "Compagnia", which was highly successful.[4]

In 1914 Pezzaglia played the character of Sofia in the film Il fornaretto di Venezia, directed by Luigi Maggi.[5] In 1918 she was cast as Biribì in the four-film serial movie Il mistero dei Montfleury. In 1918 she performed in La capanna dello zio Tom, directed by Riccardo Tolentino, and Le peripezie dell'emulo di Fortunello e compagni, directed by Cesare Zocchi Collani, playing the character of Madama Girasole.[6]

She was a nonconformist artist, playing also male or grotesque characters.[7]

In 1921 she was in the cast of La vendetta dello scemo, directed by Umberto Mucci.[8]

Death

Pezzaglia continued acting on stage till the end of her life, when, during a successful theatrical season, she died of pneumonia in Florence at the age of 39.[9] She is buried at Trespiano Cemetery in Florence, Italy.

Personal life

In 1908 she married the actor Antonio Greco and they had a son, Ruggero. Antonio died in 1913, at 29.[10] In 1920 she had a daughter, Anna, with the actor and producer Luigi Mottura, who was 16 years younger. The two never married.[11]

In popular culture

The story of her life is told in the website "Archivio Pezzaglia-Greco" ("Pezzaglia-Greco Archive") by her grandson Gianni Greco, an Italian writer and radio-TV anchorman, with a lot of unpublished documents and photos. And in 2013 the Pezzaglia-Greco Archive was declared "of historical interest particularly important" by the Italian Ministry of Heritage and Culture and Tourism.[12]

In Amber Tamblyn's book, Dark Sparkler (2015), Pezzaglia is mentioned in a poem.

Filmography

References

  1. [Alessandro Gandini]
  2. [Francesco Possenti]
  3. http://pezzagliagreco.blogspot.com/ Archivio Pezzaglia-Greco, chapters 8 - 9 - 10 - 11
  4. L'Argante - Giornale Teatrale, Milano, June 8th, 1911.
  5. https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2309872/ IMDb Internet Movie Database
  6. https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2309872/ IMDb Internet Movie Database
  7. Gazzetta del Popolo, daily newspaper, September 29th, 1913.
  8. https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2309872/ IMDb Internet Movie Database
  9. Il Risveglio, monthly, Firenze, January 15th, 1926.
  10. Il Cittadino, daily newspaper, Savona, April 13th, 1909.
  11. http://pezzagliagreco.blogspot.com/ Archivio Pezzaglia-Greco, chapters 19 - 21 - 22
  12. http://pezzagliagreco.blogspot.it Pezzaglia-Greco Archive

External links