Clara Calamai


Clara Calamai was an Italian actress.
She was one of the most famous and popular Italian actresses in the 1930s and 1940s, sharing the limelight with actresses such as Alida Valli, Valentina Cortese, and rivals, Doris Duranti, Luisa Ferida and Isa Miranda. She was a charming and versatile actress who starred in both dramas and comedies of the telefoni bianchi style.

Career

Calamai's first acting role was in the 1938 war film Pietro Micca, directed by Aldo Vergano.
In The Jester's Supper Calamai caused a sensation by appearing in a very brief topless scene. The scene is commonly credited with being the first time that an actress had appeared topless in an Italian sound film, although Vittoria Carpi showed a bare breast for a moment in the 1941 film La corona di ferro, which was also directed by Blasetti. Calamai stated in a later interview that the original script did not have the character revealing herself this way and did not want to do the scene, but felt compelled by the director to do it and gave in when she was promised a closed set. Nevertheless, many people reportedly saw the film many times because of the topless scene.
Her most remembered role was in the film Luchino Visconti's Ossessione, in which she played Giovanna, the ill-fated female protagonist.
Calamai was offered the role in L'adultera, after Anna Magnani had to turn it down, and Calamai was awarded the Nastro d'Argento in 1946 for best actress for her performance in the film.
She played a prostitute in Luchino Visconti's Le notti bianche and appeared in Le streghe.
After years of retirement, she returned in 1975 to appear in the horror film Profondo rosso as the eccentric matriarch, Marta.

Personal life

On 19 May 1945 she married explorer, and documentary film maker Count Leonardo Bonzi with whom she had two daughters. The marriage was annulled in November 1959, and she lived with Captain of Aviation Valerio Andreoli. Calamai died of a stroke in Rimini on 21 September 1998.

Partial filmography