词条 | Renzo Cesana |
释义 |
| name = Renzo Cesana | image = | alt = | caption = | birth_name = | birth_date = {{Birth date|1907|10|30}} | birth_place = Rome, Italy | death_date = {{Death date and age|1970|11|8|1907|10|30}} | death_place = Hollywood, California, United States | nationality = | other_names = | known_for = | occupation = Actor | years_active = }} Renzo Cesana (30 October 1907, Rome – 8 November 1970, Hollywood, California)[1][2] was an actor, writer, composer, and songwriter most famed for his title role on the American television show The Continental. He was also known as Renato Cesana. BiographyCesana was the grandson of Gian Cesana, publisher of one of Rome's largest daily newspapers.[3] He emigrated to America as a screenwriter in 1929, to adapt Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer "talkies" for Italian audiences.[4][5] After a failed attempt at becoming a film star, he appeared on radio in San Francisco, then became the U.S. advertising director for a prominent Italian wine, eventually opening his own advertising agency.[6] He returned to Italy to co-write and appear in childhood friend Roberto Rossellini's film Stromboli (1950), then returned to America in 1949 to begin a film and television acting career in Hollywood.[7] In an era when advertisers and advertising agencies played major roles in program creation and sponsorship, Cesana created The Continental as a radio program that he produced, wrote, and starred in for a Los Angeles station in 1951, where it directly followed The Lonesome Gal, in which a female disk jockey talked soothingly to male listeners. After a brief and unsuccessful run, Cesana convinced a local television station to broadcast a video version of The Continental, which was picked up by the CBS television network in 1952. The program led to a recording contract with Capitol Records, in which the non-singer Cesana would recite the lyrics of romantic songs to a musical accompaniment. For instance, "Walk The Lonesome Night" was a big hit in which Cesana recited the lyrics along with a piano and a theater organ. It was released on the "Ultra-Lounge Vol. 7: The Crime Scene" as an extra track; but it received massive success when it was originally released. Further reading
References1. ^Social Security Death Index. 2. ^Ancestry.com. California Death Index, 1940-1997 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, US: The Generations Network, Inc., 2000. 3. ^Mark Barron, "They're Asking Continental to Be Wed", The Washington Post, August 9, 1953, p. L5. 4. ^Passenger list, S.S. "Vulcania", Port of New York, 19 February 1929. 5. ^U.S. Census, 1 April 1930, State of California, County of Los Angeles, enumeration district 1253, p. 14A, family 396. 6. ^Mary Desjardins and Mark Williams, "Are You Lonesome Tonight?" In: Susan Merrill Squier (ed.), Communities of the Air, Duke University Press, 2003, p. 272. {{ISBN|978-0-8223-3095-0}}. 7. ^Passenger list, S.S. Queen Elizabeth, Port of New York, 21 November 1949. External links
6 : 1907 births|1970 deaths|Deaths from cancer in California|Deaths from lung cancer|Italian male television actors|American people of Italian descent |
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