Virna Lisi, Italian film star, dies aged 78 - BBC News

Virna Lisi, Italian film star, dies aged 78

  • Published
Virna LisiImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Virna Lisi, pictured in 2010, was renowned as a screen beauty and character actress

Italian screen actress Virna Lisi, famed in the 1960s for appearing opposite stars including Frank Sinatra, has died at the age of 78.

Lisi, feted for her beauty and blonde locks, carved out a successful career in Hollywood, starring in films such as How To Murder Your Wife.

She was a force in European cinema, winning best actress at Cannes for 1994 French historical epic La Reine Margot.

The last of her movies was made in her native Italy in 2002.

However, Lisi had been due to make a return to the screen in Italian comedy Latin Lover, which is due to be released next year.

Lisi's love affair with Hollywood ended with a fear that she was being typecast as the dumb blonde, leading her to terminate her contract with Paramount film studios in the late 1960s.

Image source, Rex Features
Image caption,

Virna Lisi's famous cake-popping moment in How To Murder Your Wife

Image source, Rex Features
Image caption,

The actress won awards for playing Catherine de Medici in La Reine Margot

Her role in comedy How To Murder Your Wife, opposite Jack Lemmon, saw her pop out of a wedding cake clad in a bikini in one famous scene.

Lisi also appeared in Assault on a Queen opposite Sinatra in 1966 and performed alongside Tony Curtis in Not With My Wife, You Don't in the same year.

She turned down the role in director Roger Vadim's classic Barbarella, eventually filled by Jane Fonda, leading to a break from acting during the early 1970s.

Later on in her career, she was awarded an honorary Italian Golden Globe award in 2004 in recognition of her cinematic achievements.

The actress was regularly lauded in her homeland for her work, winning seven David di Donatella awards in the 1980s and 90s, culminating in a special honour in 2009.

She had begun her film career as a teenager in the early 1950s with a string of roles in Italian movies.

Lisi is survived by a son, Corrado, and three grandchildren. Her husband of 53 years, Italian architect Franco Pesci, died last year.