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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article may be written from a fan's point of view , rather than a neutral point of view . Please clean it up to conform to a higher standard of quality, and to make it neutral in tone. ( February 2012 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification . Please help by adding reliable sources . Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately , especially if potentially libelous or harmful. Find sources: "Sybil Danning" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( August 2013 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )

Komm nur, mein liebstes Vögelein [ de ] (1968) – Lorelei
Liebesmarkt in Dänemark (1971) – Diane
Siegfried und das sagenhafte Liebesleben der Nibelungen [ de ] ( The Long Swift Sword of Siegfried ) (1971) – Kriemhild
Hausfrauen-Report (1971) – Edith Heimann
Ehemänner-Report (1971) – Sybille
Paragraph 218 – Wir haben abgetrieben, Herr Staatsanwalt (1971) – Judge's Wife
Holiday Report (1971) – Ina, die Anhalterin
Das ehrliche Interview ( The Honest Interview ) (1971)
Lover of the Great Bear (1971)
Das Mädchen mit der heißen Masche ( Loves of a French Pussycat ) (1972) – Andrea (uncredited)
Eye in the Labyrinth (1972) – Toni
Gelobt sei, was hart macht (1972) – Phyllilia
The Red Queen Kills Seven Times (1972) – Lulu Palm
Bluebeard (1972) – The Prostitute
Die liebestollen Apothekerstöchter ( Naughty Nymphs ) (1972) – Elizabeth
Little Funny Guy (1973) – Pamela
The Three Musketeers (1973) – Eugenie
Run, Run, Joe! (1974) – Betty Parkintosh
The Four Musketeers (1974) – Eugenie
That Most Important Thing: Love (1975) – (scenes deleted)
Les Noces de porcelaine (1975) – Héléna
Opération Lady Marlène (1975) – Georgetta
The Secret Carrier (1975) - Tanja
God's Gun (1976) – Jenny
Whispering Death (1976) – Sally
The Twist (1976) – La secrétaire / Secretary
Operation Thunderbolt (1977) – Halima
Crossed Swords (1977) – Mother Canty
Cat in the Cage (1978) – Erica Moore (new scenes)
The Concorde ... Airport '79 (1979) – Amy
Meteor (1979) – Girl Skier
Cuba Crossing (1980) – Veronica
The Man with Bogart's Face (1980) – Cynthia
How to Beat the High Cost of Living (1980) – Charlotte
Battle Beyond the Stars (1980) – St. Exmin
Day of the Cobra (1980) – Brenda
Nightkill (1980) – Monika Childs
The Salamander (1981) – Lili Anders
Separate Ways (1981) – Mary
The Seven Magnificent Gladiators (1983) – Julia
S.A.S. à San Salvador (1983) – Countess Alexandra Vogel
Julie Darling (1983) – Susan
Chained Heat (1983) – Ericka
Hercules (1983) – Adriana
They're Playing with Fire (1984) – Diane Stevens
Jungle Warriors (1984) – Angel
Panther Squad (1984) – Ilona / The Panther
Malibu Express (1985) – Contessa Luciana
Howling II: Your Sister Is a Werewolf (1985) – Stirba
Young Lady Chatterley II (1985) – Judith Grimmer
Private Passions (1985) – Kathrine
The Tomb (1986) – Jade
Reform School Girls (1986) – Warden Sutter
Warrior Queen (1987) – Berenice
Talking Walls (1987) – Bathing Beauty
Amazon Women on the Moon (1987) – Queen Lara (segment "Amazon Women on the Moon")
The Phantom Empire (1988) – The Alien Queen
L.A. Bounty (1989) – Ruger
Pale Blood (1990) – People of the Night (uncredited)
Grindhouse (2007) – Gretchen Krupp (segment "Werewolf Women of the SS")
Halloween (2007) – Nurse Wynn
Jump! (2008) – Anna Gruber
Imps* (2009) – Sherry (segment "Long Distances")
Virus X (2010) – Danita Herrington

^ Jump up to: a b c d "New York, New York Passenger and Crew Lists, 1909, 1925-1957" . FamilySearch . Sybille J Danninger, Immigration, 1952, New York City, New York, United States, Female, 5, Austrian

^ Von Dino Reisner (2002-12-30). "Riessersee, der Onkel aus Amerika und das Ziel: Aufstieg in die DEL: – WELT" . Die Welt . Retrieved 2016-10-22 .


Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sybil Danning .
Sybil Danning (born Sybille Johanna Danninger ) [1] is an Austrian-American actress, model, and film producer. She is best known for her frequent appearances in B movies during the 1970s and 1980s.

Born in Austria, [1] Danning spent most of her childhood on military bases and traveling with her family around the world. After their return to Austria, she landed a job as a dental hygienist to support her family following her parents' divorce. At the age of sixteen, Danning left her home and relocated to Salzburg , where she enrolled at a school of cosmetology. [ citation needed ]

Working as a cosmetician, Danning was soon offered fashion shows and photo layouts. She made her onscreen debut in the German comedy, Komm nur, mein liebstes Vögelein (1968), followed by the role of Kriemhild in the erotic action film, The Long Swift Sword of Siegfried (1971). She continued receiving small parts in films mostly based on her sex symbol image. [ citation needed ]

In 1978, Danning moved to Hollywood to further her career. Roger Corman 's space opera cult classic, Battle Beyond the Stars (1980) helped to established her as a B-movie actress. She appeared in a number of films during the 1980s: Chained Heat (1983), Hercules (1983), Malibu Express (1985), Howling II: Your Sister Is a Werewolf (1985), and Reform School Girls (1986). [ citation needed ]

In 1990, her acting career was disrupted when she suffered a spinal disc herniation while rehearsing a film stunt. [ citation needed ]

In 2003, Danning was invited by Kevin Clement of the Chiller Theatre, New Jersey , to meet her long-time fans. She went and was overwhelmed by fans who told her they wanted to see her on the big screen again. Chiller Theater prominently featured Danning in her first appearance after her hiatus in its 2004 documentary, UnConventional . The year 2007 marked Danning's return to the big screen in a faux trailer directed by Rob Zombie titled Werewolf Women of the SS for Quentin Tarantino 's Grindhouse , and again for Rob Zombie 's 2007 remake of John Carpenter 's original 1978 film, Halloween . [ citation needed ]

Danning returned to Austria in 2008 to play Patrick Swayze 's witness Anna Gruber in the drama film Jump! , loosely based on the real-life Halsman murder case . She also appeared in five episodes of the gay -themed vampire television series The Lair as a sinister vampire out for revenge. In 2010, Danning appeared in the horror film, Virus X . In 2011, she starred in and produced a horror/music video for hard rock band, the Last Vegas . [ citation needed ]

From 2002 to 2003, Danning was a shareholder of the German ice hockey team, SC Riessersee . As the first ever female co-owner of a German hockey team, Danning brought in three American players to the team, and saw the team return to the Vice Championship. [2]


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cardinale filming The Pink Panther (1963)

^ Rocco and His Brothers , The Leopard and 8½ in particular are frequently ranked by directors and critics as among the greatest films ever made . [1] [2] [3]

^ The beauty contest was meant to raise money for charity; Cardinale's mother was on the charity committee. She says she was pushed on stage by someone while she was helping with the arrangements and was declared the winner. [16] At the time, Cardinale had her teacher's certificate and hoped to teach in a Tunisian desert town. [17] Since Cardinale wanted to become a teacher, she was not interested in the many film contracts offered her during her visit to Venice. The offers followed her after her return to Tunisia. [18]

^ Cristaldi offered Cardinale the contract without a screen test. The contract contained many stipulations which Cardinale was expected to adhere to while Cristaldi groomed her. [18]


Brady, Tara (17 February 2016). "Claudia Cardinale: 'Usually you live only one life. But I have lived 154 lives' " . The Irish Times . Retrieved 12 August 2020 . "Italian screen siren Claudia Cardinale turns eighty in style" . The Local IT . 14 April 2018 . Retrieved 12 August 2020 . Gani, Martin (10 April 2012). "Interview with Claudia Cardinale" . Italy Magazine . Retrieved 12 August 2020 .

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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Claudia Cardinale .
Claude Joséphine Rose " Claudia " Cardinale ( French: [klod ʒozefin ʁoz kaʁdinal] ; born 15 April 1938) is an Italian actress. She has starred in European films in the 1960s and 1970s, acting in Italian, French, and English.

Born and raised in La Goulette , a neighbourhood of Tunis , Cardinale won the "Most Beautiful Italian Girl in Tunisia" competition in 1957, the prize being a trip to Italy, which quickly led to film contracts, due above all to the involvement of Franco Cristaldi , who acted as her mentor for a number of years and later married her. After making her debut in a minor role with Omar Sharif in Goha (1958), Cardinale became one of the best-known actresses in Italy with roles in films such as Rocco and His Brothers (1960), Girl with a Suitcase (1961), Cartouche (1962), The Leopard (1963), and Fellini 's 8½ (1963). [a]

From 1963, Cardinale appeared in The Pink Panther opposite David Niven . She went on to appear in the Hollywood films Blindfold (1965), Lost Command (1966), The Professionals (1966), Don't Make Waves (1967) with Tony Curtis, The Hell with Heroes (1968), and the Sergio Leone Western Once Upon a Time in the West (1968), a joint US-Italian production, in which she was praised for her role as a former prostitute opposite Jason Robards , Charles Bronson , and Henry Fonda .

Jaded with the Hollywood film industry and not wanting to become a cliché, Cardinale returned to Italian and French cinema, and garnered the David di Donatello for Best Actress award for her roles in Il giorno della civetta (1968) and as a prostitute alongside Alberto Sordi in A Girl in Australia (1971). In 1974, Cardinale met director Pasquale Squitieri , who would become her partner, and she frequently featured in his films, including I guappi (1974), Corleone (1978) and Claretta (1984), the last of which won her the Nastro d'Argento Award for Best Actress . In 1982, she starred in Werner Herzog 's Fitzcarraldo as the love interest of Klaus Kinski , who raises the funds to buy a steamship in Peru . In 2010, Cardinale received the Best Actress Award at the 47th Antalya "Golden Orange" International Film Festival for her performance as an elderly Italian woman who takes in a young Turkish exchange student in Signora Enrica .

Outspoken on women's rights causes over the years, Cardinale has been a UNESCO goodwill ambassador for the Defense of Women's Rights since March 2000. In February 2011, the Los Angeles Times Magazine named Cardinale among the 50 most beautiful women in film history.

Claudia Cardinale was born Claude Joséphine Rose Cardinale in La Goulette , a neighbourhood of Tunis , French Tunisia , on 15 April 1938. [4] [5] Her mother, Yolande Greco, was born in Tunisia to Sicilian emigrants from Trapani . [6] Her maternal grandparents had a small shipbuilding firm in Trapani, but later settled in La Goulette, where a large Italian community existed. Her father, Francesco Cardinale, was a railway worker, born in Gela , Sicily. [6] Her native languages were French, Tunisian Arabic , and the Sicilian language of her parents. She did not learn to speak Italian until she had already begun to be cast for Italian films. [7]

Cardinale was educated at the Saint-Joseph-de-l'Apparition school of Carthage , which she attended along with her younger sister Blanche. [8] She then studied at the Paul Cambon School, where she graduated with the intention of becoming a teacher. [9] As a teenager, she was described as "silent, weird, and wild", and like other girls of her generation, was fascinated by Brigitte Bardot , who came to prominence in the 1956 film And God Created Woman , directed by Roger Vadim . [10]

Cardinale's first film work was participating, along with classmates, in a short film by French director René Vautier , Anneaux d'or , successfully presented at the Berlin Film Festival . The film made her a minor local celebrity, [11] and led to her being spotted by Jacques Baratier , who offered her a minor role in Goha . She accepted it reluctantly after Baratier explained he wanted a Tunisian actress rather than an Italian to star in the main role opposite the Egyptian actor Omar Sharif . The appearance nonetheless marked her feature-film debut. [12] The turning point came in 1957 during the Italian Cinema Week in Tunis, when she won a competition for the "Most Beautiful Italian Girl in Tunisia", [13] with a trip to the Venice Film Festival as first prize. After being spotted by several film producers at the event, she was invited to study at the Experimental Cinematography Center in Rome under Tina Lattanzi . She attended briefly as, despite her extremely photogenic looks, she had trouble with her acting assignments (partly owing to her difficulties with the Italian language). [14] She left at the end of her first term and decided to return home, earning herself a cover story in the popular weekly Epoca triggered by her unexpected decision to turn her back on a career as a film star. [15] [b]

Back in Tunis, however, Cardinale discovered unexpectedly that she was pregnant, the result of what she later described as a "terrible" relationship with a Frenchman, some 10 years her senior, which began when she was only 17 and lasted for about a year. On this discovery, he wanted her to have an abortion, but she decided to keep the child. [19] She solved her problems by signing a seven-year exclusive contract with Franco Cristaldi 's production company Vides. [20] [21] [c] Cristaldi largely managed her early career, and she was married to him from 1966 until 1975. [22]

Under the new contract, in 1958, Cardinale was given a minor role with Italian actors Vittorio Gassman , Totò , Marcello Mastroianni , and Renato Salvatori in Mario Monicelli 's internationally successful criminal comedy Big Deal on Madonna Street ( I soliti ignoti ). [23] She portrayed Carmelita, a Sicilian girl virtually imprisoned in her home by her overpowering brother. The comedy was a huge success, ma
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