Franco Zeffirelli, revered Italian director, dies aged 96
Franco Zeffirelli, one of Italy’s most revered
artistic figures, has died at the age of 96.
In a career spanning more than 60 years, Zeffirelli
was staggeringly prolific and equally celebrated as a director of films,
theatre and opera. Several of his stage productions became successes on screen
– most notably a vibrant version of Romeo and Juliet which starred a young Judi
Dench at the Old Vic in London and led to an Oscar-winning box-office smash in
the late 1960s.
Shakespeare inspired other hit movies for
Zeffirelli: The Taming of the Shrew with Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton,
Hamlet with Mel Gibson and Glenn Close, and a film of Verdi’s Otello with
Plácido Domingo. His lavish opera productions brought sensational performances
by Joan Sutherland and Maria Callas; 25 years after the latter’s death he
directed a biopic, Callas Forever, starring Fanny Ardant. His filmed operas
reached large TV audiences and he was celebrated as a great populariser.
Zeffirelli believed he had inherited his passion for
music from his grandfather, a conductor. He was born on 12 February 1923 and
raised in Florence, the illegitimate son of a fashion designer, Alaide Garosi
Cipriani, and wool merchant Ottorino Corsi, both of whom were married to other
people. He was named by his mother after a line about zeffiretti (breezes) in a
Mozart aria. Cipriani, whose career was damaged by the scandal, died when her
son was six and he was taken in by his aunt.
His passion for theatre was sparked as a child
during holidays spent in Tuscany where he saw performances by travelling
players. “I’ve never believed anything at the theatre as much as the fantasies
those storytellers brought us,” he wrote in his autobiography.
He attended a Roman Catholic school in Florence
where he said he was sexually assaulted by a priest. When the second world war
broke out, he joined the partisan effort, twice escaped death by firing squad
and became an interpreter for the Scots Guards. In the postwar years he
switched from plans to be an architect and began a career as an actor in radio
productions, including a role alongside Anna Magnani in L’Onorevole Angelina.
Many years later, he would direct Magnani’s return to the stage in the
long-running show La Lupa.
Zeffirelli credited Luchino Visconti with changing
his life. Visconti directed him in a small role in a stage adaptation of Crime
and Punishment in Rome, then made him assistant director on his 1948
neo-realist classic La Terra Trema, filmed in Sicily using non-professional
actors. Zeffirelli then assisted Salvador Dalí on his designs for As You Like
It, directed by Visconti. His first task, he recalled, was persuading Dalí to
use stuffed goats rather than real ones in the stage production.
In the mid-1950s, Zeffirelli directed Callas for the
first time, at her request, in Rossini’s Il Turco in Italia. He went on to
direct her in a series of spectacular operas including La Traviata in Dallas in
1958, which broke with tradition by opening with her character dying and then unfolding
in flashback. He also directed Bellini’s Norma in Paris in 1964, featuring his
own set designs, and Callas’s final operatic role, Tosca at Covent Garden in
1965.
The other soprano Zeffirelli enjoyed a lengthy
collaboration with was Sutherland whose career exploded into stardom after he
directed her in a blood-soaked version of Lucia di Lammermoor, conducted by
Tullio Serafin, at the Royal Opera House in London in 1959.
Later that year, also at the ROH, Zeffirelli staged
the short operas Cavalleria Rusticana and Pagliacci, giving them both an
authentically realised Sicilian setting. These led to the Old Vic asking him to
stage Romeo and Juliet with a similarly realistic Italian setting. Although
anxious about directing Shakespeare in English and in England, Zeffirelli
launched a youthful production of the tragedy, starring Dench and John Stride.
It was dismissed by many critics but championed by the Observer’s Kenneth
Tynan, who wrote that Zeffirelli: “approached Shakespeare with fresh eyes, quick
wits and no stylistic preconceptions; and what he worked was a miracle … The
director has taken the simple and startling course of treating [the characters]
as if they were real people in a real situation.”
Zeffirelli’s film version of Romeo and Juliet was
also a breath of fresh air. Starring teenagers Leonard Whiting and Olivia
Hussey, it was partly shot outdoors, had an unstagy feel and reached a young
audience. The film helped make Zeffirelli rich. For many years, he claimed, he
had been getting by on freelance director fees and had supplemented his income
by selling off a series of Matisse drawings given to him as a gift by Coco
Chanel.
In between the theatre and film versions of Romeo,
he staged a Sicilian-style Much Ado About Nothing at the Old Vic with Maggie
Smith, Robert Stephens and Albert Finney, and shot The Taming of the Shrew with
the combustible star power of Taylor and Burton. The couple partly funded the
film, which was shot at Dino De Laurentiis’s studios in Rome.
Zeffirelli grew accustomed to stepping from one
grandly ambitious project to the next, juggling theatre, TV and opera
productions. In 1976, he directed Otello at La Scala with Domingo; the
following year his epic TV film Jesus of Nazareth, with Robert Powell as
Christ, Ian McShane as Judas Iscariot and Anne Bancroft as Mary Magdalene, was
broadcast to a large audience. By 1978 he was preparing a remake of the
sentimental drama The Champ, which would star Jon Voight and Faye Dunaway and
become a box-office hit.
Further film projects included the 1981 romance
Endless Love, starring Brooke Shields and released in an edit that upset
Zeffirelli, a 1988 biopic of the conductor Arturo Toscanini and a 1996
adaptation of Jane Eyre with the title role shared by Anna Paquin and Charlotte
Gainsbourg. The semi-autobiographical Tea With Mussolini (1999), starring
Smith, Dench and Joan Plowright, was co-written by Zeffirelli and John
Mortimer. The film followed Luca, a dressmaker’s son in Florence, who, like
Zeffirelli, grows up playing with a toy theatre and has encounters with the partisans
and Scots Guards during the second world war.
In 1994 Zeffirelli became a member of the Italian
senate, representing Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia party for seven years. He
was made a Knight of the British Empire in 2004.