Claudia Cardinale death: ’60s actress and star of dies aged 87


Acclaimed Italian actor Claudia Cardinale, who starred in some of the most celebrated European films of the 1960s and 1970s, has died, AFP reported Tuesday. She was 87.

She starred in more than 100 films and made-for-television productions, but she was best known for embodying youthful purity in Federico Fellini’s , in which she co-starred with Marcello Mastroianni in 1963.

Cardinale also won praise for her role as Angelica Sedara in Luchino Visconti’s award-winning screen adaption of the historical novel The Leopard that same year and a reformed prostitute in Sergio Leone’s spaghetti western Once Upon a Time in the West in 1968.

Claudia Cardinale (Photo by Herbert Dorfman/Corbis via Getty Images)
Claudia Cardinale, a screen icon known for playing hot-blooded characters, has died aged 87 (Corbis via Getty Images)

She died in Nemours, France, surrounded by her children, her agent Laurent Savry told AFP. Savry and his agency did not immediately return emailed requests for comment from The Associated Press.

Beginnings

Cardinale began her movie career at the age of 17 after winning a beauty contest in Tunisia, where she was born of Sicilian parents who had emigrated to North Africa.

The contest brought her to the Venice Film Festival, where she came to the attention of the Italian movie industry.

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ITALY - JANUARY 01:  Files Pictures of Italian Actress Claudia Cardinale In Italy In 1950-Young Italian actress Claudia Cardinale.  (Photo by REPORTERS ASSOCIES/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)
Cardinale was touted as Italy’s answer to Brigitte Bardot. (Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)
Claudia Cardinale, Alain Delon, and Paolo Stoppa in The Leopard (1963)
The actress pictured with Alain Delon and Paolo Stoppa in The Leopard (1963) (Titanus/20th Century Fox)

Before entering the beauty contest she had expected to become a school teacher.

“The fact I’m making movies is just an accident,” Cardinale recalled while accepting a lifetime achievement award at the Berlin Film Festival in 2002.

“When they asked me, ‘Do you want to be in the movies?’ I said no and they insisted for six months.”

Her success came in the wake of Sophia Loren’s international stardom and she was touted as Italy’s answer to Brigitte Bardot. While never achieving the level of success of the French actor, Cardinale nonetheless was considered a star and worked with the leading directors in Europe and Hollywood.

Claudia Cardinale, Italian actress, in bed holding a drink with a sleepmask on her head, circa 1960. (Photo by Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images)
“The fact I’m making movies is just an accident,” she once admitted. (Getty)

“They gave me everything,” she once said.

“It’s marvellous to live so many lives. I’ve been living more than 150 lives, totally different women.”

One of her earliest roles was as a black-clad Sicilian girl in the 1958 comedy classic Big Deal on Madonna Street. It was produced by Franco Cristaldi, who managed her early career and to whom she was married from 1966 to 1975.

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A European performer first

The sensuous brunette with enormous eyes was often cast as a hot-blooded woman. As she had a deep voice and spoke Italian with a heavy French accent, her voice was dubbed in her early movies.

Her career in Hollywood brought only partial success because she was not interested in giving up European film.

Nonetheless, she achieved some fame by teaming with Rock Hudson in the 1965 comedy thriller Blindfold and another comedy, Don’t Make Waves with Tony Curtis, two years later.

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Cardinale herself considered the 1966 The Professionals, directed by Richard Brooks, as the best of her Hollywood films, where she starred alongside Burt Lancaster, Jack Palance, Robert Ryan and Lee Marvin.

In a 2002 interview with the Guardian, she explained that the Hollywood studio “wanted me to sign a contract of exclusivity, and I refused. Because I’m a European actress and I was going there for movies.

“And I had a big opportunity with Richard Brooks, The Professionals, which is really a magnificent movie,” she said.

“For me The Professionals is the best I did in Hollywood.”

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Claudia Cardinale walks the red carpet ahead of the 'The Leisure Seeker (Ella & John)' screening during the 74th Venice Film Festival at Sala Grande on September 3, 2017 in Venice, Italy.
Cardinale pictured at the 74th Venice Film Festival in 2017. (Getty)
PARIS, FRANCE - JULY 02: Claudia Cardinale attends the Giorgio Armani Prive Haute Couture Fall/Winter 2019 2020 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on July 02, 2019 in Paris, France. (Photo by Jacopo Raule/Getty Images)
“It’s marvellous to live so many lives. I’ve been living more than 150 lives, totally different women.” (Getty)

Among her industry prizes was a Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement that she received at the Venice Film Festival nearly 40 years after her initial appearance on screen.

In 2000, Cardinale was named a goodwill ambassador for the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization for the defense of women’s rights.

She had two children, one with Cristaldi and a second with her later companion, Italian director Pasquale Squitieri.

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