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==Selected filmography==
==Selected filmography==
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* ''[[Barrier to the North]]'' (1950)
*''[[The Lion of Amalfi]]'' (''Il Leone di Amalfi'') - 1950
*''[[The Lion of Amalfi]]'' (''Il Leone di Amalfi'') - 1950
* ''[[The Crossroads (1951 film)|The Crossroads]]'' (1951)
* ''[[The Crossroads (1951 film)|The Crossroads]]'' (1951)
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*''[[La commare secca]]'' - 1962
*''[[La commare secca]]'' - 1962
*''[[La ragazza di Bube (film)|La ragazza di Bube]]'' - 1963
*''[[La ragazza di Bube (film)|La ragazza di Bube]]'' - 1963
*''[[The Organizer]]'' - 1963
* ''[[Coriolanus: Hero without a Country]]'' (''Coriolano: eroe senza patria'') - 1963
* ''[[Coriolanus: Hero without a Country]]'' (''Coriolano: eroe senza patria'') - 1963
*''[[Ro.Go.Pa.G.]]'' - 1963
*''[[Ro.Go.Pa.G.]]'' - 1963

Revision as of 23:03, 8 March 2017

Carlo Rustichelli (24 December 1916 – 13 November 2004) was an Italian film composer whose career spanned the 1940s to about 1990. His prolific output included about 250 film compositions, as well as arrangements for other films, and music for television.

Life

Born in Carpi, Emilia-Romagna to a family of music lovers,[1] he gained a diploma in piano at the Bologna conservatory, going on to Rome where he studied composition at the Santa Cecilia Academy.

He had a wife (Evi), a son (Paolo, also a composer), and a daughter (Alida).

Career

He met Fellini in postwar Rome, and probably through him met Pietro Germi, for whom he composed his first major film score for Gioventù perduta (Lost Youth), and with whom he was most associated.[1] He composed music for many Germi films in the 1940s, 50s and 60s.

In 1972 he was commissioned by Billy Wilder to compose the music for Avanti!.[1]

Selected filmography

Notes

  1. ^ a b c "Prolific and versatile father of Italian cinema"

References

  • "Prolific and versatile father of Italian cinema music: Carlo Rustichelli, Film composer, 1916-2004", The Sydney Morning Herald, Weekend edition, December 4–5, 2004, p. 60