Franco Abbina (also credited as Franco Abbine or Franco Abbiana, born March 31, 1934, in Rome)[1] is an Italian actor, active until the first half of the 1970s.

Biography

Born into a family of Spanish descent, before entering the acting field, Abbina studied economics and music.[2] After finishing his studies, he joined the film industry in the first half of the 1960s as a supporting actor. He acted several times alongside actor-director Alberto Sordi.

Among his film roles are Dr. Nisticò, one of the doctors featured in the films Be Sick... It's Free (1968) and Il Prof. Dott. Guido Tersilli, primario della clinica Villa Celeste, convenzionata con le mutue (1969).

He also played Prince Filippo Spada in The Conspirators (1969), who undergoes an assassination attempt by the Carbonari Targhini and Montanari.

In 1970, Franco Abbina participates in the film Let's Have a Riot , again directed by director Luigi Zampa, as in some previous films in which he had taken part, but due to the cut caused by censorship of the episode La bomba alla televisione in which he acts together with Vittorio Gassman, who was the protagonist, his role is absent as the film, after its first release in Italian theaters, is withdrawn and reworked, completely removing the entire episode.

Abbina played fifteen characters in cinema, television and prose theater,[3][4] and retired in the first half of the 1970s, started painting, illustrated a book of poems by the poet Alda Merini and was exhibited in Rome.

Filmography

Cinema

Television

References

  1. "Elenco Artisti Settore Audiovisivo Rappresentati da Nuovo IMAIE (al 31/01/2014)" (PDF). nuovoimaie.it. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-17. Retrieved 2023-06-05.
  2. "Franco Abbina".
  3. Gino Nogara (1972). Cronache degli spettacoli nel Teatro Olimpico di Vicenza dal 1585 al 1970. Vicenza: Accademia Olimpica. p. 350.
  4. Giorgio Prosperi, Mario Prosperi, Raffaele La Capria (2004). Sinceramente preoccupato di intendere: sessant'anni de critica teatrale. 1940-1969. Roma: Bulzoni. pp. 199, 446. ISBN 9788878700017.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) Alessandro Fersen, Roberto Cuppone (2009). Alessandro Fersen e la commedia dell'arte. Roma: Aracne. p. 230.
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