Franco Zeffirelli
- Birthday
- Feb 12, 1923
Bio: Italian director Franco Zeffirelli started out as an actor in the stage productions of Luchino Visconti, then worked as an assistant on several Visconti-directed films. After World War II, Zeffirelli launched a career designing, costuming, and directing operas, a field of entertainment to which he'd return periodically throughout his life and which led to his first… More Bio: Italian director Franco Zeffirelli started out as an actor in the stage productions of Luchino Visconti, then worked as an assistant on several Visconti-directed films. After World War II, Zeffirelli launched a career designing, costuming, and directing operas, a field of entertainment to which he'd return periodically throughout his life and which led to his first directorial credit, the Swiss-produced filmization La Boheme (1965). Zeffirelli's reputation in the 1960s rested on his boisterous, non-traditional movie versions of Shakespeare. He directed Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor in a lusty adaptation of Taming of the Shrew (1967), then became an icon for the Youth Movement by casting 17-year-old Leonard Whiting and 15-year-old Olivia Hussey in Romeo and Juliet (1968). Zeffirelli's eye for visual richness served him well in the opulent Brother Sun/Sister Moon (1973), a romanticized account of Francis of Assisi. Some of Zeffirelli's later American films were unworthy of his talents, though he made the most of the emotional possibilities of The Champ (1979) and actually helped Brooke Shields pass as an actress in the otherwise lachrymose Endless Love (1981). The director found himself in the center of a controversy upon finishing the expensive Euro-American TV miniseries Jesus of Nazareth; certain religious activists, upset that the ads promised a "human" look at Jesus, forced several sponsors to withdraw their advertising from the telecast. (The "scandal" proved groundless, since Zeffirelli's Jesus was one of the most reverently accurate ever seen in films.) Zeffirelli has been represented by his televised stagings of operas, many of which have shown up on American public television. And in 1990, Franco Zeffirelli returned to Shakespeare for an all-star film version of Hamlet, wherein the "surprise" was not so much Mel Gibson's superb rendition of the title role as the fact that this was the first movie Hamlet that looked like it was actually taking place in 12th century Denmark. He finished out the 20th century be helming the 1996 version of Jane Eyre and 1999's Tea With Mussolini. As the 2000s got under way, Zeffirelli focused primarily on directing opera and many of his stage creations were recorded and released on home video or played briefly in movie theaters. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
Filmography
-
Il giovane Toscanini (Young Toscanini) (2012)
- Director, Screenwriter
-
Aida (2011)
- Director
-
Met Summer Encore: La Boheme (2010)
- Director
-
The Metropolitan Opera: Turandot (2009)
- Producer
-
Sunshine Superman: The Journey of Donovan (2008)
- Actor
- See all 48 films
Franco Zeffirelli Videos
Born Today
- Heather Wahlquist (36 years old)
- Karen Duffy (52 years old)
- Sam Milby (31 years old)
- Jewel (39 years old)
- Joan Collins (80 years old)
- Lane Garrison (33 years old)
- Alexander De Jordy (20 years old)
- Tom Tykwer (48 years old)
- Herbert Marshall (123 years old)
- Zalman King (71 years old)
- Kelly Monaco (37 years old)
- Adam Wylie (29 years old)
- Guinevere Turner (45 years old)
- Linden Ashby (53 years old)
- Felissa Rose (44 years old)
- John Ortiz (45 years old)
- Laurel Holloman (42 years old)
- Kappei Yamaguchi (48 years old)
- Frank McHugh (115 years old)
- Drew Carey (55 years old)
- Mark Arnold (56 years old)
- Nigel Davenport (85 years old)
- Charlie Yeung (39 years old)
- H. Jon Benjamin (47 years old)
- See more (24)













































