Cesare Zavattini

Cesare Zavattini (20 September 1902 – 13 October 1989) was an Italian screenwriter and one of the first theorists and proponents of the Neorealist movement in Italian cinema.

Biography
Born in Luzzara near Reggio Emilia in northern Italy, on 20 September 1902, Zavattini studied law at the University of Parma, but devoted himself to writing. He started his career in Gazzetta di Parma. In 1930 he relocated to Milan, and worked for the book and magazine publisher Angelo Rizzoli. After Rizzoli began producing films in 1934, Zavattini received his first screenplay and story credits in 1936. At the same time he was writing the plot for the comic strip Saturn against the Earth with Federico Pedrocchi (script) and Giovanni Scolari (art) for I tre porcellini (1936–1937) and Topolino (1937–1946).

In 1935, he met Vittorio De Sica, beginning a partnership that produced some twenty films, including such masterpieces of Italian neorealism as Sciuscià (1946), Ladri di biciclette (1948), Miracolo a Milano (1951), and Umberto D. (1952).

In 1952, Zavattini gave an interview to The Italian Film Magazine 2, republished in English as "Some Ideas on the Cinema". The thirteen points Zavattini outlined are widely regarded as his manifesto to Italian neorealism.

In his only experience in Hollywood, Zavattini wrote the screenplay for The Children of Sanchez (1978) based on Oscar Lewis's book of the same title, a classic study of a Mexican family. At the 11th Moscow International Film Festival in 1979, he was awarded the Honorable Prize for the contribution to cinema. In 1983 he was a member of the jury at the 13th Moscow International Film Festival.

Zavattini died in Rome on 13 October 1989.

Directors
Among the many celebrated directors of Italian and international cinema Zavattini worked with in his more than 80 films are:
 * Vittorio De Sica,
 * Michelangelo Antonioni,
 * Hall Bartlett,
 * Alessandro Blasetti,
 * Mauro Bolognini,
 * Mario Camerini,
 * René Clément,
 * Federico Fellini,
 * Pietro Germi,
 * Alberto Lattuada,
 * Mario Monicelli,
 * Elio Petri,
 * Dino Risi,
 * Roberto Rossellini,
 * Mario Soldati
 * Paolo and Vittorio Taviani
 * Luchino Visconti.

Also, In the short story "La Santa", by Nobel Prize winner Gabriel García Márquez a character is named after Zavattini. In the story, the character is a teacher of cinema.

Selected filmography

 * I'll Give a Million (1936)
 * The Dance of Time (1936)
 * Saint John, the Beheaded (1940)
 * A Woman Has Fallen (1941)
 * Don Cesare di Bazan (1942)
 * Before the Postman (1942)
 * Fourth Page (1942)
 * The Children Are Watching Us (1943)
 * Piruetas Juveniles / Romanzo a passo di danza (1943)
 * The Gates of Heaven (1945)
 * Rome, Free City (1946)
 * Biraghin (1946)
 * Un giorno nella vita (1946)
 * The Testimony (1946)
 * Sciuscià (1946)
 * The Unknown Man of San Marino (1946)
 * Crime News (1947)
 * The Great Dawn (1947)
 * Sperduti nel buio (1947)
 * Ladri di biciclette (1948)
 * Twenty Years (1949)
 * Miracolo a Milano (1951)
 * Mamma Mia, What an Impression! (1951)
 * Umberto D. (1952)
 * Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves (1954)
 * L'oro di Napoli ("The Gold of Naples", 1954)
 * La Ciociara ("Two Women", 1960)
 * I sequestrati di Altona ("The Condemned of Altona", 1962)
 * L'isola di Arturo ("Arturo's Island", 1962)
 * Ieri, oggi e domani ("Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow", 1963)
 * Un monde nouveau (1966)
 * Caprice Italian Style (1968)
 * I girasoli ("Sunflower", 1970)
 * Il giardino dei Finzi-Contini ("The Garden of the Finzi-Continis", 1970)
 * Una breve vacanza ("A Brief Vacation", 1973)
 * Lo chiameremo Andrea (1975)