Tomaso Smith  | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Born | 15 June 1886 | 
| Died | 27 May 1966 (aged 79) | 
| Occupation | Screenwriter | 
| Years active | 1931โ1944 (film) | 
Tomaso Smith (15 June 1886 โ 27 May 1966) was an Italian screenwriter, politician, journalist, translator and newspaper editor active during the Fascist era.[1] He started his career as a stringer for the Roman newspaper Il Messaggero but was forced to resign for his socialist stance. He then embarked on a career as a screenwriter and playwright until the outbreak of the War. Smith was imprisoned in a German detention camp in Italy in 1943 but was able to escape. At the end of the war Il Messaggero offered him the editor's post. In the 1950s he began a career in politics, first as an independent with the Italian Communist Party and then with Adriano Olivetti's Community Movement, where he was involved in attempts to start a newspaper, La Giustizia ("Justice").
Selected filmography
- Figaro and His Great Day (1931)
 - The Blue Fleet (1932)
 - The Last Adventure (1932)
 - The Blind Woman of Sorrento (1934)
 - Loyalty of Love (1934)
 - Port (1934)
 - Red Passport (1935)
 - To Live (1937)
 - The Fornaretto of Venice (1939)
 - The Widow (1939)
 - Father For a Night (1939)
 - Kean (1940)
 - Lucrezia Borgia (1940)
 - The King's Jester (1941)
 - Beatrice Cenci (1941)
 - The Gorgon (1942)
 - The Woman of Sin (1942)
 - Maria Malibran (1943)
 - The Champion (1943)
 - Resurrection (1944)
 
References
- โ Hochkofler p.49
 
Bibliography
- Matilde Hochkofler. Anna Magnani. Gremese Editore, 2001.
 
External links
- Tomaso Smith at IMDb
 
