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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Pino_ColizziPino Colizzi - Wikipedia

    Colizzi was a successful voice-over artist, having regularly dubbed over the voices of Jack Nicholson, James Caan, Richard Dreyfuss, Omar Sharif and Franco Nero, also dubbing Michael Douglas (a role which he shared with Oreste Rizzini) in a select number of his films.

  2. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › Pino_ColizziPino Colizzi - Wikipedia

    Pino Colizzi, all'anagrafe Giuseppe Colizzi, è un attore, doppiatore e direttore del doppiaggio italiano.

  3. Andrea Razza intervista Pino Colizzi, attore, doppiatore, dialoghista, scrittore, e direttore del doppiaggio.Consulenza artistica di Gerardo Di Cola.LA SCHED...

    • 117 min
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    • enciclopediadeldoppiaggio
  4. www.imdb.com › name › nm0171563Pino Colizzi - IMDb

    Pino Colizzi was born on 12 November 1937 in Rome, Lazio, Italy. He is an actor, known for All Dogs Go to Heaven (1989), Tea with Mussolini (1999) and Tom Jones (1960).

    • Additional Crew, Actor
    • November 12, 1937
    • Pino Colizzi
    • Early Life
    • Career
    • Awards
    • Personal Life
    • Selected Filmography
    • Select Television Credits
    • External Links

    Ghostley was born on August 14, 1923 at a train station in Eve, Missouri, to Edna Muriel (née Rooney) and Harry Francis Ghostley, who worked as a telegraph operator. Ghostley grew up in Henryetta, Oklahoma. She attended the University of Oklahoma, but dropped out to pursue a career in theater.

    Stage

    Ghostley first came to Broadway in Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952and in the film version released in 1954.

    Television

    A veteran of early television, Ghostley appeared as Joy, one of the ugly stepsisters in the 1957 musical television production of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein's Cinderella, which starred Julie Andrews in the title role. The other stepsister was played by actress Kaye Ballard. Twelve years later, Ghostley guest-starred as a harried maternity nurse on Ballard's comedy series, The Mothers-in-Law. Ghostley guest-starred on the NBC police comedy, Car 54, Where Are You?, with Joe E. Ross a...

    Film

    Among her roles in motion pictures, Ghostley appeared in To Kill a Mockingbird (1962), playing Stephanie Crawford, the neighborhood gossip. She starred in Gator as Gator's partner in crime who brings her cats along on a burglary. She appeared in the film version of Grease as shop teacher Mrs. Murdock. In 1985, she had a supporting role in the Nancy Allen comedy Not for Publication. Alice played Grandmama in the direct-to-video movie Addams Family Reunion.[citation needed]

    Ghostley received a Tony nomination in 1963 for different roles she played in the Broadway comedy The Beauty Part. She also received a Tony Award for Best Featured Actress for her role in The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window.In 1992, she earned an Emmy nomination for her role in Designing Women.

    Ghostley was married to Felice Orlandi, an Italian-American actor, from 1953 until his death in 2003. Ghostley died at her home in Studio City, California, on September 21, 2007, of colon cancer and a series of strokes.

    Alice Ghostley at the Internet Broadway Database
    Alice Ghostley at IMDb
    Alice Ghostley at the TCM Movie Database
    Alice Ghostley at the Internet Off-Broadway Database
  5. Aug 18, 1978 · Brothers Till We Die: Directed by Umberto Lenzi. With Tomas Milian, Pino Colizzi, Isa Danieli, Guido Leontini. A hunchbacked gangster is betrayed by his gang during a robbery, and plots his revenge with the help of his no-good brother.

  6. Sep 22, 2007 · Alice Ghostley, a Tony Award-winning actress who became known to television viewers for her roles as dizzy sidekicks on “Bewitched” and “Designing Women,” died yesterday at her home in Studio...