
Age: 83
male
Giancarlo Giannini (Italian: [dʒaŋˈkarlo dʒanˈniːni]; born 1 August 1942) is an Italian actor. He won the Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Actor for his performance in Love and Anarchy (1973) and received an Academy Award nomination for Seven Beauties (1975). He is also a four-time recipient of the David di Donatello Award for Best Actor. Giannini began his career on stage, starring in Franco Zeffirelli's productions of Romeo and Juliet and A Midsummer Night's Dream. After appearing predominantly on television throughout the early 1960s, he had his first lead role in a film in Rita the Mosquito (1965), the first of many collaborations with filmmaker Lina Wertmüller. He rose to international stardom through Wertmüller's The Seduction of Mimi (1972), Love and Anarchy (1973), Swept Away (1974), culminating in his Oscar-nominated turn in Seven Beauties (1975). His other films include The Innocent (1976), Lili Marleen (1980), New York Stories (1990), A Walk in the Clouds (1995), Hannibal (2001), Man on Fire (2004), and the James Bond films Casino Royale (2006) and Quantum of Solace (2008). He is also a dubbing artist, contributing voice work to the Italian-language versions of dozens of films since the 1960s. He has been the main Italian dubber of Al Pacino since 1975, and has also dubbed Jack Nicholson, Michael Douglas, and Helmut Berger. Description above from the Wikipedia article Giancarlo Giannini, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Giancarlo Giannini

Antonio Foscarelli
for Antonio Foscarelli in Murder On The Orient Express
Suggested by jakubduda

The Orient Express, a luxury train traveling across Europe - from Istanbul to Calais - one December night in 1930 becomes the scene of a case, to solve which Hercule Poirot, who happened to be among its passengers, must use all his wit and genius to solve it. He has enough time for this, because the train, trapped by a snow calamity somewhere in the interior of Yugoslavia, has no choice but to wait patiently for release from the snowdrifts. Meanwhile, the famous Belgian detective tries to find out who is the perpetrator of the unusual murder of an American millionaire - and what was the motive... What begins as a luxury train ride from Istanbul to London quickly turns into one of the most exciting and mysterious detective stories, that was ever told. The subject of this novel provided Agatha Christie with a real case - a kidnapping in the family of the world-famous aviator and American national hero Charles Lindbergh.