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Alida Valli

Biography

Alida Valli

Edit

Overview

  • Born
    May 31, 1921 · Pola, Istria, Italy [now Pula, Istria, Croatia]
  • Died
    April 22, 2006 · Rome, Lazio, Italy (undisclosed causes)
  • Birth name
    Alida Maria Laura von Altenburger
  • Height
    1.69 m

Biography

    • Enigmatic, dark-haired foreign import Alida Valli was dubbed "The Next Garbo" but didn't live up to postwar expectations despite her cool, patrician beauty, remote allure and significant talent. Born in Pola, Italy (now Croatia), on May 3, 1921, the daughter of a Tridentine journalist and professor and an Istrian homemaker, she studied dramatics as a teen at the Motion Picture Academy of Rome and Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia before snaring bit roles in such films as Le Tricorne (1935) ["The Three-Cornered Hat"] and Les deux sergents (1936) ["The Two Sergeants"]. She made a name for herself in Italy during WWII playing the title role in Manon Lescaut (1940), won a Venice Film Festival award for Le mariage de minuit (1941) ["Little Old World"] and was a critical sensation in Nous, les vivants (1942) ["We the Living"]. She briefly abandoned her career, however, in 1943, refusing to appear in what she considered fascist propaganda, and was forced into hiding. The next year she married surrealist painter/pianist/composer Oscar De Mejo. They had two children, and one of them, Carlo De Mejo, became an actor. She divorced in 1955, then she came back to Italy,

      Following her potent, award-winning work in the title role of Eugenia Grandet (1946), she was discovered and contracted by David O. Selznick to play the murder suspect Maddalena Paradine in Alfred Hitchcock's Le procès Paradine (1947). She was billed during her Hollywood years simply as "Valli," and Selznick also gave her top femme female billing in Carol Reed's classic film noir Le Troisième Homme (1949), but for every successful film--such as the ones previously mentioned--she experienced such failures as Le miracle des cloches (1948), and audiences stayed away. In 1951 she bid farewell to Hollywood and returned to her beloved Italy. In Europe again, she was sought after by the best directors. Her countess in Luchino Visconti's Senso (1954) was widely heralded, and she moved easily from ingénue to vivid character roles. Later standout films encompassed costume dramas as well as shockers and had her playing everything from baronesses to grandmothers in such films as Les yeux sans visage (1960) ["Eyes Without a Face"], Le gigolo (1960), Oedipe Roi (1967) ["Oedipus Rex"], Tendre Dracula (1974), 1900 (1976), Suspiria (1977), La luna (1979), Inferno (1980), Aspern (1982), Amours et jalousies (1995) and, her most recent, Semana Santa (2001).
      - IMDb mini biography by: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net

Family

  • Spouse
      Oscar De Mejo(1944 - 1952) (divorced, 2 children)
  • Children
      Larry De Mejo
      Carlo De Mejo
  • Parents
      Gino Altenburger von Marckenstein und Frauenberg
      Silvia Oberecker della Martina

Trivia

  • Gregory Peck, who worked with Alida in Le procès Paradine (1947), said of her, "Not only are her shapes and features perfect: from her eyes radiates an irresistible flashing of love."
  • Involved in an infamous drug, sex and murder scandal in 1954.
  • Her name Alida means "flies like a bird."
  • Voiced the character of "Dr. Constance Petersen" in a 1940s radio broadcast of Alfred Hitchcock's classic, La maison du docteur Edwardes (1945).
  • Alida Valli was fluent in several languages,i.e. English, French, Italian and her primary language was Serbo-Croatian.

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