Rita the American Girl (Italian: Rita, la figlia americana) is a 1965 Italian "musicarello" film directed by Piero Vivarelli with Totò and Rita Pavone.[1]
Rita the American Girl | |
---|---|
Directed by | Piero Vivarelli |
Written by | Tito Carpi Bruno Corbucci |
Produced by | Fabrizio Capucci |
Starring | Totò, Rita Pavone |
Cinematography | Emanuele Di Cora |
Edited by | Enzo Micarelli |
Music by | The Rokes: David Norman Shapiro |
Distributed by | Titanus |
Release date |
|
Running time | 101 minutes |
Country | Italy |
Language | Italian |
Plot
editProfessor Serafino Benvenuti is a master of classical music who has the passion of the orchestra director. However, the young audience of the 60 does not appreciate classical composers like Mozart or Beethoven, and so Serafino is likely to have compromised his image as a director. One day Serafino receives the news that his adopted daughter Rita is about to return to Italy from America, where she is studying. Serafino is very happy, because at least he can teach her the real music. However, Rita is deeply grown and changed: she follows the musical patterns of her time: the rock music and blues. Serafino gets very angry, especially when he discovers that his daughter falls in love with a young man, a member of a band called "The Rockets."
Cast
edit- Totò as Serafino Benvenuti
- Rita Pavone as Rita D'Angelo
- Fabrizio Capucci as Fabrizio Carli
- Lina Volonghi as Greta Wagner
- Umberto D'Orsi as Orazio
- Veronica as Diana
- Shel Shapiro (credited as David Norman Shapiro)
- Mike Shepstone
- Bobby Posner
- Johnny Charlton
References
edit- ^ Fehrenbach & Poiger p.159
Bibliography
edit- Heide Fehrenbach & Uta G. Poiger. Transactions, Transgressions, Transformations: American Culture in Western Europe and Japan. Berghahn Books, 2000.
External links
edit