
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Paolo Stoppa (6 June 1906 – 1 May 1988) was an Italian actor and dubber.
Born in Rome, he began as a stage actor in 1927 in the theater in Rome and began acting in films in 1932. As a stage actor, his most celebrated works include those after World War II, when he met director Luchino Visconti: the two, together with Stoppa's wife, actress Rina Morelli, formed a trio whose adaptions of works by authors such as Chekhov, Shakespeare and Goldoni became highly acclaimed.
He debuted in television in 1960 in the drama series Vita col padre e con la madre, reaching the top of the popularity in the 1970s, in particular in the adaption of crime novels by Friedrich Dürrenmatt (Il giudice e il suo boia and Il sospetto) and Augusto De Angelis.
As a film actor, Stoppa made some 194 appearances between 1932 and his retirement in 1983: films he appeared in include popular classics such as Miracolo a Milano (1951), Rocco e i suoi fratelli (1960), Viva l'Italia! (1961), Il Gattopardo (1962), La matriarca (1968), Amici miei atto II (1982). He also had a role in the Sergio Leone epic Once Upon a Time in the West (1968) and cameoed in Becket (1964).
Stoppa was also a renowned dubber of films into Italian. He began this activity in the 1930s as dubber of Fred Astaire. Other actors he dubbed include Richard Widmark, Kirk Douglas and Paul Muni.
Description above from the Wikipedia article Paolo Stoppa, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Sam
Don Michele Miletti
Un bandito
Tonio
Bernardo
Giomo, soldato del Duca Alessandro
Nino Bixio
Padre di Mariangela
Egisto Palmucci
Antonio Trabbi
Giovanni Ricordi
Fabrizio
Bertuccio
Gorini
Marco
Volpino
Peppino Luciani
Giorgio
Nonno
Rag. Alberto Moglie
il nonno
Il medico curante di Napoleone
Console Italiano
Gardunia
Restorer
Rappi
The pope
Il campanaro
Calafatti
Pope Alexander III
don Cosimo
Delegato di polizia Perrone
Doctor Berni
Graziani
Michele
Eugenio Sinibaldi
Giovanni
Emissario Spagnolo
Professor Gaetano
Lo psicanalista
Russo
Rocchetti
Voce (uncredited)
Don Calogero Sedara
Il tenente Guido Landi
Achille
Antiquario Bertrand
Alessandro Raffo
Giocondo
Asdrubale Vanini
Manlio
Alberto
Giuseppe Bardelotti
Felix
Luigi
Ruocco
Manuel, il pittore
Gigetto
Flick
Cecè
Cerri
Filippo
Tottola
Traveling Salesman
Lawyer Alcamo (segment "Il lavoro") (uncredited)
Le Colonel
Amedeo Cini
Don Peppino, the widower (segment Pizza on Credit)
Frank Millstone
Pedro
L'inquilino del piano di sopra
Impiegato
Polio
Doctor
Official
Padre di Dino
Professor Zauri
San Pietro
Papa Pio VII
James
Marchetti
Mingòn
Agusto
Lo Strozzino Serafino
Le marquis
Le Curé
Don Ippolito
Savino Capogreco
Oreste
Mr. Alvaro (segment "L'Avarice et La Colère")
Astarito
Tony Fallone
Avvocato Mancuso
Buby D'Alfia
Il caporale
Frédéric
Direktor der Oper
Prince Alessandro Antoniani
Mastro Titta
Salvatore Esposito
Oreste
Advocate Appicciato
barone Paolo Vareghi
Trifilli
Hairdresser
Nicephore (segment "Lysistrata")
nobile balbuziente
Santarem, Count of Morales
Don Peppino Razzi
Il giudice Benni
Don Salvador
Simon Liakim
Alvaro Montero
Amico di Za-la-mort
der Verleger
L'avvocato Lorenzo Strumillo
Cousin
preside del collegio
Jean Buddenbrook
Zaccaria Poussier
Guido's father (segment "L'Idillio")
Fogliatti, il produttore
Il finto poliziotto
Marco
Filuccio
Sancho
Direttore d'albergo
Arrigo Santucci
Enrico di Bevallan
Signor Ponza
Andry, l'aiutante dell'ispettore
Marchetiello
Haibl
Paolo Bancani
Bobby
Il secondo contadino
Piero
Doctor Sperenzoni
Gastone
Principe di Metternich
Il conte Giuseppe Bardonazzi
Miguel Martinez, l'impresario
Bonaventura
Augusto