Fosco Giachetti
An image from Love and Larceny, one of the productions that also features Fosco Giachetti.
Fosco Giachetti

Fosco Giachetti

March 28, 1900 — Sesto Fiorentino - Tuscany - Italy

Fosco Giachetti (28 March 1900, in Sesto Fiorentino – 22 December 1974, in Rome) was an Italian actor.

Fosco Giachetti was the protagonist of Lo squadrone bianco (1936), directed by Augusto Genina. He became the leading man in Fascist propaganda films such as Tredici uomini e un cannone (1936), Sentinelle di bronzo (1937), Scipione l'Africano, Edgar Neville's Italian Carmen fra i rossi (1939), L'assedio dell'Alcazar (1940) and Bengasi (1942). In 1942, he also co-starred in Goffredo Alessandrini's two part Noi Vivi and Addio Kira!.

Un colpo di pistola (1942) by Renato Castellani and Fari nella nebbia (1942) by Gianni Franciolini were not as successful as his earlier films.

After the war, he returned to the stage. He worked in Spain with Edgar Neville in Nada and in Carne de horca. He had a supporting role in 1959 Dino Risi's successful comedy Il mattatore. In 1964, he appeared in an adaptation of A. J. Cronin's novel, The Citadel.

In 2003, the Galleria Fosco Giachetti in Sesto Fiorentino was opened in his honor.

The Conformist

The Conformist

1970

Love and Larceny

Love and Larceny

1960

The Damned

The Damned

1947

Scipio the African

Scipio the African

1971

Scipio Africanus: The Defeat of Hannibal

Scipio Africanus: The Defeat of Hannibal

1937

The Glass Castle

The Glass Castle

1950

The Virtuous Bigamist

The Virtuous Bigamist

1956

The Siege of the Alcazar

The Siege of the Alcazar

1940