
Director
Giuseppe Patroni Griffi
Born 1921 · Naples, Campania, Italy
Giuseppe Patroni Griffi (26 February 1921 – 15 December 2005) was an Italian playwright, screenwriter, director and author. He was born in Naples in an aristocratic family and moved to Rome immediately after the end of World War II and spent his professional life there. Patroni Griffi is considered one of the most prominent contributors to Italian theater and film in post-war Italy. Roberto Rossellini made a film from his play Anima nera. His first listed film writing credit was on the 1952 musical Canzoni di mezzo secolo. Patroni Griffi would later direct Charlotte Rampling, Elizabeth Taylor, Marcello Mastroianni, Laura Antonelli, Florinda Bolkan, Terence Stamp, Fabio Testi. Patroni Griffi was also involved with numerous television productions of lyric opera, including Verdi's La Traviata. His many theatrical productions include works by Pirandello, Eduardo De Filippo, Jean Cocteau and Tennessee Williams. As a writer, he published a first collection of stories in 1955, Ragazzo di Trastevere. Later, he contributed significantly to the body of Italian gay literature with Scende giù per Toledo and La morte della bellezza, both set in Naples.
Directed
Acting
Writing

Girl with a Suitcase
Screenplay · 1961

The Witches
Story · 1967

Half a Century of Song
Writer · 1952

The Swindlers
Screenplay · 1959

More Than a Miracle
Screenplay · 1967

Cavalcade of Song
Writer · 1953

Love Circle
Theatre Play · 1969

Identikit
Screenplay · 1974

The Eternal Chain
Story · 1952

The Sea
Story · 1962

The Roman
Writer · 1988

The Divine Nymph
Screenplay · 1975




