
Actor
Fosco Giachetti
Born 1900 · Sesto Fiorentino - Tuscany - Italy
Fosco Giachetti (28 March 1900, in Sesto Fiorentino – 22 December 1974, in Rome) was an Italian actor. Fosco Giachetti was the protagonist of Lo squadrone bianco (1936), directed by Augusto Genina. He became the leading man in Fascist propaganda films such as Tredici uomini e un cannone (1936), Sentinelle di bronzo (1937), Scipione l'Africano, Edgar Neville's Italian Carmen fra i rossi (1939), L'assedio dell'Alcazar (1940) and Bengasi (1942). In 1942, he also co-starred in Goffredo Alessandrini's two part Noi Vivi and Addio Kira!. Un colpo di pistola (1942) by Renato Castellani and Fari nella nebbia (1942) by Gianni Franciolini were not as successful as his earlier films. After the war, he returned to the stage. He worked in Spain with Edgar Neville in Nada and in Carne de horca. He had a supporting role in 1959 Dino Risi's successful comedy Il mattatore. In 1964, he appeared in an adaptation of A. J. Cronin's novel, The Citadel. In 2003, the Galleria Fosco Giachetti in Sesto Fiorentino was opened in his honor.
Acting

The Conformist
The Colonel · 1971

Love and Larceny
General Benito Mesci · 1960

The Inheritor
Luigi Balazzi · 1973

Romanticismo
Tito Ansperti · 1949

Senza cielo
Mario · 1940

Plains of Battle
Voivode · 1962

L'abito nero da sposa
il cardinal Giovanni de' Medici · 1945

The Damned
Garosi · 1947

The Life of Giuseppe Verdi
Giuseppe Verdi · 1938

We the Living, Part One
Andrei Taganov · 1942

Scipio the African
Aulio Gellio · 1971

Il Conte di Montecristo
Bertuccio · 1966

We the Living, Part Two
Andrej Taganov · 1942

A Pistol Shot
Andrea Anickoff · 1942

Life Begins Anew
Dr. Paolo Martini · 1945

David Copperfield
Daniel Peggotty · 1965

Un uomo facile
Doctor boxing · 1959
Pride
Alberto Celoria · 1938

Una lettera all'alba
Carlo Marini · 1948

L'altra
Pianista Marco de Santis · 1947

Crossroads of Passion
Toniani · 1948
Il trattato scomparso
Raythan · 1933

Conqueror of the Orient
Omar - Nadir's Father · 1961

Notte di tempesta
Domenico · 1946