6 Nominations

3 Wins

Marcello Mastroianni

Marcello Mastroianni (born in Fontana Liri, Italy September 26, 1924, died December 19, 1996) was directed by Luchino Visconti in Le notti bianche (1957), by Mauro Bolognini in Il bell’Antonio (1960), and by Federico Fellini in five films: La Dolce Vita (1960), 8 1/2 (Otto e mezzo, 1963), City of Women (La città delle donne, 1980), Ginger and Fred (1986) and Intervista (1987). He was directed by Michelangelo Antonioni in La Notte (1961), by Pietro Germi in Divorce, Italian Style (Divorzio all’Italiana, 1961), by Vittorio de Sica in Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow (Ieri, oggi, domani) and Marriage Italian Style (Matrimonio all’Italiana, 1964), and by Elio Petri in The 10th Victim (La decima vittima, 1965). Other films include Marco Ferreri’s La Grande Bouffe (La grande abbuffata, 1973), Ettore Scola’s Dramma della gelosia (1970), A Special Day (Una giornata particolare, 1977), Maccheroni (1985) and Che ora è (1989). Other credits include  Luigi Comencini’s La donna della domenica (1975), by Ettore Scola;  Francesca Archibugi’s Verso sera (1990), Giuseppe Tornatore’s in Everybody’s Fine (Stanno tutti bene, 1990), and Roberto Faenza’s Sostiene Pereira (1995). He acted in Dark Eyes (Oci ciornie, 1987) directed by Nikita Mikhalkov, Used People (1992) by Beeban Kidron with Shirley MacLaine, Un, deux, trois, soleil (1993) by Bertrand Blier. He was nominated for four Golden Globes as best actor, for “Divorce, Italian Style” (which he won), “Marriage, Italian Style,” “A Special Day” and “Used People,” in addition to being twice nominated for the now-discontinued world-film favorite award.

Golden Globe Awards