Tullio Pinelli

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Tullio Pinelli (born 28 June 1908) is an award-winning screenwriter best known for his work on the Federico Fellini classics I vitelloni, La strada, La dolce vita and .

[edit] Biography

Born in Turin, Piedmont, Italy, Pinelli began his career as a civil lawyer but spent his free time working in the theatre as a playwright. Descended from a long line of Italian patriots, his great-uncle General Ferdinando Pinelli quashed the bandit revolt in Calabria following Italian unification.[1]

He first met Fellini in a Rome kiosk in 1947 while they were reading opposite pages of the same newspaper. "Meeting each other," explained Pinelli, "was a creative lightning bolt. We spoke the same language from the start... We were fantasizing about a screenplay that would be the exact opposite of what was fashionable then: the story of a very shy and modest office worker who discovered he can fly; so he flaps his arms and escapes out the window. It certainly wasn't Italian neorealism. But the idea never went anywhere either." [2] The anecdote about flying, however, presages their 1963 masterpiece, , where the protagonist, a famous film director, dreams of escape by flying out of his car caught in a traffic jam.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Tullio Kezich, Federico Fellini: His Life and Work, Faber and Faber, Inc., 2006, p. 96.
  2. ^ Kezich, Federico Fellini: His Life and Work, p. 96
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