Andrea Guzon
- Actress
Andrea Guzon is an Italian actress who emerged in European genre cinema during the early 1980s, appearing in several international productions notably directed by Jesús Franco and Joe D'Amato. Her early life and formal training are not publicly documented in major entertainment references. Guzon's career began with roles in Spanish and Italian co-productions, with her most documented performances occurring between 1981 and 1985. In 1981, she appeared in the erotic prison film Sadomania (released internationally as Hellhole Women), directed by Jesús Franco, where she worked alongside Ajita Wilson and Ursula Buchfellner in this women-in-prison exploitation feature that became a notable entry in Franco's extensive filmography. Her most prominent performance came in 1985 in the Italian erotic drama Il piacere (The Pleasure), directed by Joe D'Amato, in which she portrayed Leonora, the deceased lover whose voice recordings serve as a central narrative device for the film's exploration of memory and desire. In this production, she worked alongside established European genre actors including Gabriele Tinti, Marco Mattioli, and Lilli Carati. Set in 1930s Italy, the film follows an aristocrat who listens to intimate recordings of his late mistress while navigating complex relationships with family members who move into his home. Although her documented filmography is brief, with principal activity concentrated in the first half of the 1980s, her work reflects the pan-European erotic cinema of the era that combined Italian production values with international distribution. Andrea Guzon's roles, particularly in Sadomania and Il piacere, are frequently referenced in retrospective genre databases and film archives, marking her as a recognizable figure within European exploitation cinema. Her contribution lies in her participation in the late-period wave of Italian erotic drama and international genre productions, offering a distinctive presence in cult titles that continue to attract attention among aficionados of European genre film from this distinctive era.