Nicola Fausto Neroni
Nicola Fausto Neroni (born December 12, 1896 in Rome ; † August 5, 1974 there ) was an Italian film director , screenwriter and dubbing director .
After graduating from the “Istituto Tecnico”, Neroni was called to military service and took part in the First World War as a soldier. After returning home, he pursued a career in film from 1919 and shot two works that were created for short-lived production companies and were quickly forgotten. This failure made him quickly distance himself from his new plans, so that Neroni did not reappear until 1929; Another two films had to struggle this time with the fact that they entered into competition with the new sound film. After another three years and bad experiences with the rental of his 1933 Venere , which he had also written and edited , he switched to directing dubbing and occasionally worked as a screenwriter, dialogue writer and collaborator with other directors. Neroni was responsible for the Italian versions of the Warner Brothers' films until the late 1950s.
Neroni was also the author of volumes of poetry and comedies.
Filmography (selection)
- 1920: La cugina d'Alcantara (published 1924)
- 1929: Maratona
- 1933: Venere
Web links
- Nicola Fausto Neroni in the Internet Movie Database (English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ http://italian_cinema.enacademic.com/121/Dubbing
- ^ Roberto Poppi: Dizionario del cinema italiano, I Registi . Rome, Gremese 2002, p. 308
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Neroni, Nicola Fausto |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Italian film director, screenwriter and dubbing director |
DATE OF BIRTH | December 12, 1896 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Rome |
DATE OF DEATH | 5th August 1974 |
Place of death | Rome |