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Ottavio "Ugo" Tognazzi (23 March 1922 – 27 October 1990) was an Italian actor, director, and screenwriter. He is considered one of the most important faces of Italian comedy together with Vittorio Gassman, Nino Manfredi, Marcello Mastroianni, and Alberto Sordi. Tognazzi was born in Cremona, in northern Italy but spent his youth in various localities as his father was a travelling clerk for an insurance company. After his return to his native city in 1936, he worked in a cured meats production plant where he achieved the position of accountant. During World War II, he was inducted into the Army and returned home after the Armistice of 8 September 1943, and joined the Black Brigades for a while. His passion for theater and acting dates from his early years, and also during the conflict he organized shows for his fellow soldiers. In 1945, he moved to Milan, where he was enrolled in the theatrical company led by Wanda Osiris. A few years later, he formed his own successful musical revue company. In 1950, Tognazzi made his cinematic debut in The Cadets of Gascony directed by Mario Mattoli. The following year, he met Raimondo Vianello, with whom he formed a successful comedy duo for the new-born RAI TV (1954–1960). Their shows, sometimes containing satirical material, were among the first to be censored on Italian television. After the successful role in The Fascist (Il Federale) (1961), directed by Luciano Salce, Tognazzi became one of the most renowned characters of the so-called Commedia all'Italiana (Italian comedy style). He worked with all the main directors of Italian cinema, including Mario Monicelli (My Friends), Marco Ferreri (La Grande Bouffe), Carlo Lizzani (La vita agra), Dino Risi, Pier Paolo Pasolini (Pigsty), Ettore Scola, Alberto Lattuada, Nanni Loy, Pupi Avati and others. Tognazzi also directed some of his films, including the 1967 film The Seventh Floor. The film was entered into the 17th Berlin International Film Festival. He was a well-known actor in Italy, and starred in several important international films, which brought him fame in other parts of the world. Roger Vadim cast Tognazzi as Mark Hand, the Catchman, in Barbarella (1968). He rescues Barbarella (Jane Fonda) from the biting dolls she encounters, and after her rescue, he requests payment by asking her to make love with him (the "old-fashioned" way, not the psycho-cardiopathic way of their future). In 1981, he won the Best Male Actor Award at the Cannes Film Festival for Tragedy of a Ridiculous Man, directed by Bernardo Bertolucci. While he worked primarily in Italian cinema, Tognazzi is perhaps best remembered for his role as Renato Baldi, the gay owner of a St. Tropez nightclub, in the 1978 French comedy La Cage aux Folles which became the highest grossing foreign film ever released in the U.S. Tognazzi had various relationships during his life, being married to actresses Margarete Robsahm and later Franca Bettoia. He had four children from three different women: his sons Ricky Tognazzi (b. 1955) and Gianmarco Tognazzi (b. 1967) are actors; another son, Thomas Robsahm (b. 1964), is a Norwegian film director and producer; his daughter, Maria Sole Tognazzi (b. 1971), is also a film director. ... Source: Article "Ugo Tognazzi" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.

La voglia matta di vivere
as Self (archive footage)

We Are Cinema
as Self (archive footage)

Morceaux de Cannes

The Incredible Mr. Piccoli
as Self - Actor (archive footage)

Portrait Of My Father
as Self (archive footage)

Drums of Fire
as Carlo di Palma

Tolérance
as Marmant

Days of Inspector Ambrosio
as Giulio Ambrosio

Arrivederci e grazie
as Carlo

The Last Minute
as Walter Ferroni

Sacrée soirée
as Self

Yiddish Connection
as Mosche

La Cage aux Folles 3
as Renato Baldi

My Friends Act III
as Conte Mascetti

Fatto su misura
as Nathan

Sogni e bisogni
as Sig. De Amicis

Bertoldo, Bertoldino, and Cacasenno
as Bertoldo

Good King Dagobert
as La pape Honorius et son sosie

Petomaniac
as Joseph Pujol

The Key
as drunk

A Joke of Destiny, Lying in Wait Around the Corner Like a Street Bandit
as onorevole De Andreis

My Friends Act II
as Il Conte Mascetti - Raffaello "Lello" Mascetti

Unfaithfully Yours
as Carlo Reani

Droit de Réponse
as Self

Tragedy of a Ridiculous Man
as Primo Spaggiari

La Cage aux Folles II
as Renato Baldi

Sunday Lovers
as Armando (sketch 'Le carnet d'Armando')

Arrivano i bersaglieri
as Don Prospero

SuperTotò

I'm Photogenic
as Ugo Tognazzi (uncredited)

The Terrace
as Amedeo

I viaggiatori della sera
as Orso Banti

Traffic Jam
as Professor

Where Are You Going on Holiday?
as Enrico (episodio "Sarò tutta per te")

First Love
as Ugo

La Cage aux Folles
as Renato Baldi

Formula 1 - Speed fever
as Self

The Payoff
as Il Commissario Assenza

The Cat
as Amedeo Pecoraro

The New Monsters
as il marito/il cuoco/il figlio

Beach House
as Alfredo Cerquetti

Nenè
as Barber "Baffo" (uncredited)

The Bishop's Bedroom
as Orimbelli

Goodnight, Ladies and Gentlemen
as Generale / Menelao Guardiaferri

Evil Thoughts
as Mario Marani

The Career of a Chambermaid
as Adelmo

Pleased To See You Again
as Mario Aldara

Duck in Orange Sauce
as Livio

My Friends
as Raffaello Mascetti

E il Casanova di Fellini?
as Self

The Baron's Mazurka
as Barone Anteo Pellacani

Les Rendez-vous du dimanche
as Self

Weak Spot
as Georgis

Come Home and Meet My Wife
as Giulio Blasetti

Il generale dorme in piedi
as Col. Umberto Leone

Spécial cinéma
as Self

Permettete signora che ami vostra figlia?
as Gino Pistone

Don't Touch the White Woman!
as Mitch

Property Is No Longer a Theft
as The Butcher

La Grande Bouffe
as Ugo