Italian
Cinema Sex Symbol
By Ed Garea
Laura
Antonelli, a self-described “ugly duckling” as a child who later
became one of Italy’s top sex symbols in the 1970s, died June 22 at
her seaside home in Ladispoli, west of Rome. She was 73.
Roberto
Ussia Spinaci, the councilman in charge of social services in
Ladispoli, confirmed her death, attributed to a heart attack. (She
was found by her housekeeper.) Since 2009, he said, she had been a
ward of the city, unable to care for herself.
Beginning
in the mid-1960s and continuing for almost a quarter-century,
Antonelli appeared in more than 40 films, beginning in 1964 with an
unbilled appearance in The
Magnificent Cuckold and
continuing through Malizia
2000 in 1991. Her breakthrough
to stardom came in the 1973 erotic comedy Malizia (“Malicious”),
a coming-of-age film where Antonelli’s sexy housekeeper seduces a
young man and his widowed father, a performance that won her a
Nastro d'Argento award in 1974. The film broke box office
records in Italy and established Antonelli as a major attraction.
Other notable films included Till
Marriage Do Us Part (1974), The
Innocent (1976), Wifemistress (1977,
in which she played a repressed wife
experiencing a sexual awakening),
and Passion of Love (1981).
Antonelli was in the mold of other sex symbols such as Brigitte
Bardot, Gina Lollobrigida, Sophia Loren, and Monica Vitti, who
reigned in an era when the sex was more suggestive and left to the
imagination. Her career faded when sex comedies went out of style in
the 1980s.
She
said in an interview that she never thought of herself as being
particularly sexy, but added that she had no qualms about being
considered a sex symbol or appearing in the nude. “If I manage to
communicate a kind of sensuality on the screen, it must mean that
there is something in me that I can express,” she said. “I am
proud of it. After all, sex is a reality which lives in our dreams,
in our sentiments. The important thing is to use it well and never
let it degrade into pornography. Naked beauty without intelligence
fades quickly.”
She
was born Laura Antonac (or Antonaz) on Nov. 28, 1941, in Pola, which
was then in Istria, Italy. (It was later occupied by Yugoslavia and
is now part of Croatia.) After the war, her parents fled, living in
Italian refugee camps in Genoa and Venice before settling in Naples,
where her father became a hospital administrator.
While
in her teens. Antonelli wished to become a math teacher, but in an
interview she said her parents had other ideas about a career. They
hoped that she would develop some grace, feeling she was clumsy and
ugly. Towards that end, she took hours of gym classes, where she
concentrated on gymnastics, excelling in rhythmical gymnastics, a
form of dance. She graduated as a gymnastics instructor and took a
job in Rome, where a desire for a modeling career led her to meet
people in the entertainment industry.
From
there she appeared in television commercials, including one for
Coca-Cola, and worked for a month as a television announcer before
being fired for what was described as a wooden delivery. However, a
soft-drink commercial she made attracted the attention of a film
director, who was taken by her physical charms.
This
would lead to minor roles in such forgettable fare as Dr.
Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (1966),
where she had her first credited role as Rosanna. She first attracted
attention for her role as Wanda von Dunajew in the 1969 erotic
drama Devil in the Flesh.
It was filmed for the German market and didn’t make its Italian
debut until 1973. The Italian authorities wasted no time seizing it
under pornography laws and the film didn’t see the light of Italian
theaters until 1975, when it was released with the sex scenes cut and
replaced with plotless judicial scenes. Customs authorities in both
the United States and England also confiscated it in 1969, later
allowing it to be released with all sex scenes cut, trimming the film
by as much as 45 minutes in some cases. But it did get Laura
Antonelli on the silver screen radar and would lead to bigger and
better roles. In 1975, she played a seven-minute nude scene
in The Divine Nymph,
with Terence Stamp, which was unheard of at that time.
While
most of her film career was spent in Italy, she did a handful of
films outside the country, including A Man Called
Sledge (1970), a Western co-starring James Garner, made in
the U.S., and Swashbuckler (1971) with Jean-Paul
Belmondo, filmed in France and Romania.
A
marriage to publisher Enrico Piacentini ended in divorce, after which
she took up with actor Jean-Paul Belmondo, with whom she starred in
several movies.
The
quality of her movies declined during the 1980s as she starred
in erotic films and comedies, eventually landing on television
miniseries.
Her
life was turned upside down in 1991 when she was arrested with
cocaine in her home in Cerveteri. Police,
acting on a tip, raided her apartment in Rome and found a small
quantity of cocaine. She was accused of drug dealing and, after a
long trial, sentenced to three years in prison. The verdict was later
commuted to a form of house arrest. Humiliated and ostracized within
her industry, Antonelli never made another film. She was later
diagnosed as suffering from acute depression. She
challenged her conviction, which was overturned in 2000. She
then sued for 1,000,000 Euros in
compensation for her lost career and ruined health. The
Italian Supreme Court awarded her 150,000 Euros. She later faced
further tragedy when a botched facelift left her disfigured. In
November 1996, she was admitted to the psychiatric ward of a clinic
in Civitavecchia.
In
recent years, she sued her son and housekeeper for misappropriating
funds. In 2010, her friend, actor Lino Banfi appealed to
the state to help relieve her economic troubles. She then withdrew
from public life entirely, issuing a statement, "Earthly life no
longer interests me."
She
is survived by her son, and a brother, Claudio.
Her exceptional Looks sitting by me at Hilton in Rome with J Belmont unforgettable Y didn't he help her?so rich he's a Rat ,she in need, friend,Edy
ReplyDeleteYes Jean Paul belmondo went with LAURA ANTONELLI after Ursula he Dumped,Laura died on Welfare,he has 300 million,for himself..Jesus
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