Dino De Laurentiis facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Dino De Laurentiis
|
|
---|---|
De Laurentiis in 2009
|
|
Born |
Agostino De Laurentiis
8 August 1919 Torre Annunziata, Kingdom of Italy
|
Died | 10 November 2010 Beverly Hills, California, U.S.
|
(aged 91)
Resting place | Cimitero Comunale Torre Annunziata |
Occupation | Film producer |
Years active | 1938–2010 |
Spouse(s) |
|
Children | 6, including Veronica and Raffaella |
Relatives |
|
Agostino "Dino" De Laurentiis (Italian: [ˈdiːno de lauˈrɛnti.is]; 8 August 1919 – 10 November 2010) was an Italian-American film producer. Along with Carlo Ponti, he was one of the producers who brought Italian cinema to the international scene at the end of World War II. He produced or co-produced more than 500 films, of which 38 were nominated for Academy Awards. He also had a brief acting career in the late 1930s and early 1940s.
Contents
Early life
De Laurentiis was born at Torre Annunziata in the province of Naples, and grew up selling spaghetti made by his father's pasta factory. He studied at the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia in Rome in 1937 and 1938, when his studies were interrupted by the outbreak of World War II.
Career
Film production
De Laurentiis produced his first film, L'ultimo Combattimento, in 1941. In 1946 his company, the Dino de Laurentiis Cinematografica, moved into production. In the early years, De Laurentiis produced Italian neorealist films such as Bitter Rice (1949) and the early Fellini works La Strada (1954) and Nights of Cabiria (1956), often in collaboration with producer Carlo Ponti.
In the 1960s, Laurentiis built his own studio facilities. He produced such films as Barabbas (1961), a Christian religious epic; The Bible: In the Beginning... (1966); Kiss the Girls and Make Them Die, an imitation James Bond film; Navajo Joe (1966), a spaghetti Western; Anzio (1968), a World War II film; Barbarella (1968) and Danger: Diabolik (1968), both successful comic book adaptations; and The Valachi Papers (1972), released before its originally scheduled date in order to capitalize on the popularity of The Godfather. His studio financially collapsed during the 1970s.
De Laurentiis moved to the U.S. in 1976, and became an American citizen in 1986. In the 1980s he had his own studio, De Laurentiis Entertainment Group (DEG), based in Wilmington, North Carolina. The building of the studio made Wilmington a center of film and television production. In 1990, De Laurentiis obtained backing from an Italian friend and formed another company, Dino De Laurentiis Communications in Beverly Hills.
De Laurentiis made a number of successful and/or acclaimed films, including The Scientific Cardplayer (1972), Serpico (1973), Death Wish (1974), Mandingo (1975), Three Days of the Condor (1975), The Shootist (1976), Drum (1976), Ingmar Bergman's The Serpent's Egg (1977), Ragtime (1981), Conan the Barbarian (1982), Blue Velvet (1986) and Breakdown (1997). De Laurentiis' name became well known through the 1976 King Kong remake, which was a commercial hit; Lipstick (1976); Orca (1977); The White Buffalo (1977), a western; the disaster movie Hurricane (1979); the remake of Flash Gordon (1980); David Lynch's Dune (1984); and King Kong Lives (1986). De Laurentiis also produced several adaptations of Stephen King works, including The Dead Zone (1983), Cat's Eye (1985), Silver Bullet (1985), and Maximum Overdrive (1986). De Laurentiis's company was involved with the horror sequels Halloween II (1981), Evil Dead II (1987) and Army of Darkness (1992).
De Laurentiis also produced the first Hannibal Lecter film, Manhunter (1986), an adaptation of the Thomas Harris novel Red Dragon. He passed on adapting the novels' sequel, The Silence of the Lambs (1991), but produced the two follow-ups, Hannibal (2001) and Red Dragon (2002), a re-adaptation of the novel. He also produced the prequel Hannibal Rising (2007).
DDL Foodshow
DDL Foodshow was an Italian specialty foods store with the three locations, two in New York City and one in Beverly Hills in Los Angeles. They were opened in the early 1980s and owned and operated by De Laurentiis.
The first store was opened in the restored palm court in the ornate lobby of the Endicott Hotel on Manhattan's Upper West Side in close proximity to the older establishment, Zabar's food emporium on Broadway. The first NYC store opened in November 1982, and it was reported that the store "opened to crowds of 30,000 over the Thanksgiving weekend, when de Laurentiis himself greeted customers at the door." The store's assistant manager said that "it was like the premiere of a movie."
Food critic Gael Greene wrote a scathing review on the opening in New York. In an interview with the Chicago Tribune a month later, she admitted that the store was "probably the most stunningly handsome grocery in the world, certainly in New York," but "the pricing was insane. They hadn't paid enough attention to the competition." She reported that she'd talked to De Laurentiis: "Dino's reaction was that I'm full of it. And we're meeting over a bowl of pasta to discuss it." A review in The San Francisco Examiner said that it was "worth a peek and a purchase."
DDL Foodshow was later considered to be a forebear of the new Italian specialty goods food-store restaurant dining attraction Eataly.
Family
His brief first marriage in Italy was annulled. In 1949, De Laurentiis married actress Silvana Mangano, with whom he had four children: Veronica; Raffaella, who is also a film producer; Federico De Laurentiis, his only son, a producer who died in a plane crash in 1981 (Dino's movie Dune is dedicated to him); and Francesca. De Laurentiis and Mangano divorced in 1988; she died in 1989. In 1990, he married Martha Schumacher, who produced many of his films beginning in 1985, and with whom he had two daughters, Carolyna and Dina. One of his grandchildren is Giada De Laurentiis, host of Everyday Italian, Behind the Bash, Giada at Home, and Giada's Weekend Getaways on Food Network. He was the younger brother of Luigi De Laurentiis, who became a film producer after Dino had done so, and uncle of Aurelio De Laurentiis, also a producer, and the chairman of S.S.C. Napoli football club.
Awards and recognitions
In 1958, he won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film for producing La Strada. At the time producers and directors would win the award instead of the country it was made in.
In 2001, he received the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
In 2012, he received the America Award of the Italy-USA Foundation (in memory).
Death
De Laurentiis died on 10 November 2010 at his residence in Beverly Hills at the age of 91.
Filmography
Films produced
Year | Title | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1946 | Black Eagle | Riccardo Freda | |
The Bandit | Alberto Lattuada | ||
1947 | The Captain's Daughter | Mario Camerini | |
Bullet for Stefano | Duilio Coletti | ||
1948 | Bitter Rice | Giuseppe De Santis | |
The Street Has Many Dreams | Mario Camerini | ||
1949 | The Wolf of the Sila | Duilio Coletti | |
1951 | Anna | Alberto Lattuada | |
1952 | Europe '51 | Roberto Rossellini | |
Lieutenant Giorgio | Raffaello Matarazzo | ||
Toto in Color | Steno | ||
1953 | Funniest Show on Earth | Mario Mattoli | |
The Unfaithfuls | Mario Monicelli | ||
Man, Beast and Virtue | Steno | ||
1954 | La Strada | Federico Fellini | |
Attila | Pietro Francisci | ||
Woman of Rome | Luigi Zampa | ||
The Gold of Naples | Vittorio De Sica | ||
Poverty and Nobility | Mario Mattoli | ||
Where Is Freedom? | Roberto Rossellini | ||
A Slice of Life | Alessandro Blasetti, Paul Paviot | ||
An American in Rome | Steno | ||
1955 | Ulysses | Mario Camerini | |
The River Girl | Mario Soldati | ||
Mambo | Robert Rossen | ||
The Miller's Beautiful Wife | Mario Camerini | ||
1956 | War and Peace | King Vidor | |
Nights of Cabiria | Federico Fellini | ||
1958 | This Angry Age | René Clément | |
Tempest | Alberto Lattuada | ||
1959 | The Great War | Mario Monicelli | |
1960 | Everybody Go Home | Luigi Comencini | |
Five Branded Women | Martin Ritt | ||
Under Ten Flags | Duilio Coletti | ||
Crimen | Mario Camerini | ||
The Hunchback of Rome | Carlo Lizzani | ||
1961 | The Last Judgment | Vittorio De Sica | |
A Difficult Life | Dino Risi | ||
The Fascist | Luciano Salce | ||
The Best of Enemies | Guy Hamilton | ||
Black City | Duilio Coletti | ||
1962 | Mafioso | Alberto Lattuada | |
The Italian Brigands | Mario Camerini | ||
1963 | Il Boom | Vittorio De Sica | |
The Verona Trial | Carlo Lizzani | ||
1964 | My Wife | Luigi Comencini, Mauro Bolognini, Tinto Brass | |
1965 | Battle of the Bulge | Ken Annakin | Uncredited |
1966 | The Bible: In the Beginning | John Huston | |
Kiss the Girls and Make Them Die | Henry Levin | ||
Navajo Joe | Sergio Corbucci | ||
The Hills Run Red | Carlo Lizzani | ||
1967 | The Stranger | Luchino Visconti | |
Matchless | Alberto Lattuada | ||
The Witches | Luchino Visconti, Mauro Bolognini, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Franco Rossi, Vittorio De Sica | ||
1968 | Danger: Diabolik | Mario Bava | |
Barbarella | Roger Vadim | ||
Anzio | Edward Dmytryk, Duilio Coletti | ||
Bandits in Milan | Carlo Lizzani | ||
Caprice Italian Style | Mauro Bolognini, Mario Monicelli, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Steno | ||
1969 | Fräulein Doktor | Alberto Lattuada | |
Brief Season | Renato Castellani | ||
The Bandit | Carlo Lizzani | ||
1970 | A Man Called Sledge | Vic Morrow | |
Waterloo | Sergei Bondarchuk | ||
The Deserter | Burt Kennedy | ||
1972 | The Valachi Papers | Terence Young | |
The Assassin of Rome | Damiano Damiani | ||
The Most Wonderful Evening of My Life | Ettore Scola | ||
1973 | Serpico | Sidney Lumet | |
Chino | John Sturges | ||
Mean Frank and Crazy Tony | Michele Lupo | ||
1974 | Death Wish | Michael Winner | |
Two Missionaries | Franco Rossi | ||
Crazy Joe | Carlo Lizzani | ||
Three Tough Guys | Duccio Tessari | ||
1975 | Mandingo | Richard Fleischer | |
1976 | King Kong | John Guillermin | |
Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson | Robert Altman | ||
Drum | Steve Carver | ||
The Serpent's Egg | Ingmar Bergman | ||
The Shootist | Don Siegel | ||
1977 | Orca | Michael Anderson | |
1978 | The Brink's Job | William Friedkin | |
King of the Gypsies | Frank Pierson | ||
1979 | Hurricane | Jan Troell | |
1980 | Flash Gordon | Mike Hodges | |
1981 | Beyond the Reef | Frank C. Clarke | |
Halloween II | Rick Rosenthal | ||
Ragtime | Miloš Forman | ||
1982 | Fighting Back | Lewis Teague | |
Conan the Barbarian | John Milius | ||
Amityville II: The Possession | Damiano Damiani | ||
1983 | Amityville 3-D | Richard Fleischer | |
Halloween III: Season of the Witch | Tommy Lee Wallace | ||
Dead Zone | David Cronenberg | ||
1984 | The Bounty | Roger Donaldson | |
Firestarter | Mark L. Lester | ||
Conan the Destroyer | Richard Fleischer | ||
Dune | David Lynch | ||
1985 | Maximum Overdrive | Stephen King | |
Marie | Roger Donaldson | ||
Silver Bullet | Daniel Attias | ||
Cat's Eye | Lewis Teague | ||
Year of the Dragon | Michael Cimino | ||
Red Sonja | Richard Fleischer | ||
1986 | Crimes of the Heart | Bruce Beresford | |
Raw Deal | John Irvin | ||
Blue Velvet | David Lynch | ||
Trick or Treat | Charles Martin Smith | ||
Tai-Pan | Daryl Duke | ||
Manhunter | Michael Mann | ||
King Kong Lives | John Guillermin | ||
1987 | Million Dollar Mystery | Richard Fleischer | |
Hiding Out | Bob Giraldi | ||
Evil Dead II | Sam Raimi | ||
The Bedroom Window | Curtis Hanson | ||
From the Hip | Bob Clark | ||
1989 | Collision Course | Lewis Teague | |
1990 | Sometimes They Come Back | Tom McLoughlin | |
Desperate Hours | Michael Cimino | ||
1992 | Once Upon a Crime | Eugene Levy | |
Kuffs | Bruce A. Evans | ||
Army of Darkness | Sam Raimi | ||
Body of Evidence | Uli Edel | ||
1995 | Solomon & Sheba | Robert Young | |
Slave of Dreams | |||
Rumpelstiltskin | Mark Jones | ||
Assassins | Richard Donner | ||
1996 | Unforgettable | John Dahl | |
Bound | The Wachowskis | ||
1997 | Breakdown | Jonathan Mostow | |
2000 | U-571 | ||
2001 | Hannibal | Ridley Scott | |
2002 | Red Dragon | Brett Ratner | |
2006 | The Last Legion | Doug Lefler | |
2007 | Hannibal Rising | Peter Webber | |
Virgin Territory | David Leland |
See also
In Spanish: Dino De Laurentiis para niños