Daniela Doria
- Actress
Daniela Doria carved a lasting niche in Italian horror cinema during the late 1970s and early 1980s, though acting was never her original ambition. Hailing from Milan, Italy, she first chased a passion for classical dance, honing her craft at the renowned Teatro alla Scala until family demands altered her path. A serendipitous meeting with director Stefano Rolla on a Milan film set ignited her acting career, landing her small parts in Italian comedies and risqué fare like Classe Mista (1976) and Le Seminariste (1976). Her defining moment came under the wing of horror icon Lucio Fulci, who cast her in chilling roles across City of the Living Dead (1980), The Black Cat (1981), The House by the Cemetery (1981), and The New York Ripper (1982). Doria's willingness to endure grueling special effects, from vomiting animal organs to simulated eye injuries, cemented her as a staple in Fulci's gruesome tableaux, though she later confessed unease with the genre's explicit demands. After marrying and moving to Rome, she stepped away from the screen in 1982 following I Camionisti, choosing personal life over stardom. She briefly modeled before settling into a dental practice, fully embracing a quieter existence. Despite shunning horror as a viewer and skipping fan conventions, Doria fondly recalls Fulci's professionalism and their playful antics, like sneaking Airedale puppies onto The Black Cat's set.