Jump to content

Roberto Accornero

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Roberto Accornero
Roberto Accornero in 2020
Born
Ivrea, Italy
OccupationsActor, voice actor
Years active1981–present
Height1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)

Roberto Accornero is an Italian television, film and voice actor.[1]

He played father Angelo Dell'Acqua in the miniseries John XXIII: The Pope of Peace, and Captain Aloisi in the series Il maresciallo Rocca.[2]

Early life

[edit]

Accornero entered theater as a youth. He didn't finish university, but accepted a job from his professor, Gian Renzo Morteo.[citation needed]

Career

[edit]

In 1981 he began an intense activity in radio prose which led him to a lasting partnership with Alberto Gozzi and with the Barlumen Institute. He portrayed Pieretto in Pavia's film Il diavolo sulle colline. He worked with Fellini (Ginger and Fred), Soldini (L'aria serena dell'Ovest), Giannarelli, Calopresti, Ferrario, Argento, Verdone, Faenza, Saura, and Martone.

In the theater he worked for two seasons with Carlo Cecchi, then with Ronconi, Missiroli and many others. On television he appeared in national-popular dramas, as a guard, a thief, in productions directed by Gregoretti, Perelli, Di Carlo, Questi, Capitani, Giordana, Zaccaro, Dayan, Cavani, Frazzi and others.

In 2010 he was recognized at three festivals as best actor for Cribari's Diario di un disagiato. He played Monsignor Angelo Dell'Acqua in the miniseries Pap Giovanni, Captain then Major Aloisi in the series Il Maresciallo Rocca and Guido Geller in the sitcom Camera Café [it].

Film

[edit]
Year Title Director Reference
1985 Il diavolo sulle colline Vittorio Cottafavi
The Two Lives of Mattia Pascal Mario Monicelli
1987 Remake Ansano Giannarelli
1990 The Peaceful Air of the West Silvio Soldini
1995 Who Killed Pasolini? Marco Tullio Giordana
1997 We All Fall Down Davide Ferrario
2000 L'educazione di Giulio Claudio Bondi
2001 Sleepless Dario Argento
2003 It Can't Be All Our Fault Carlo Verdone
The Best of Youth Marco Tullio Giordana
2004 The Voyage Home Claudio Bondi
2005 The Days of Abandonment Roberto Faenza
2009 The Double Hour Giuseppe Capotondi
I, Don Giovanni Carlos Saura
2010 We Believed Mario Martone
2014 The Dinner Ivano De Matteo

Dubbing roles

[edit]

Animation

[edit]

Live action

[edit]

Radio

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Roberto Accornero". ge-agency.com. Archived from the original on 20 March 2020. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  2. ^ "Roberto Accornero – Artists United for Animals". artistsunitedforanimals.org. Archived from the original on 20 March 2020. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
[edit]