Monica Vitti, ‘queen of Italian cinema’, dies aged 90 | Movies | The Guardian Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Monica Vitti in Antonioni’s L'Eclipse in 1962.
Monica Vitti in Antonioni’s L'Eclipse in 1962. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
Monica Vitti in Antonioni’s L'Eclipse in 1962. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

Monica Vitti, ‘queen of Italian cinema’, dies aged 90

This article is more than 2 years old

Vitti shot to international fame in Michelangelo Antonioni’s drama L’Avventura in 1960

Monica Vitti – a life in pictures


Italian actor Monica Vitti, an icon best known for her starring roles in films by Michelangelo Antonioni, has died aged 90, the country’s culture ministry said on Wednesday.

“Goodbye Monica Vitti, goodbye queen of Italian cinema. Today is a truly sad day, we have lost a great artist and a great Italian,” the culture minister, Dario Franceschini, said in a statement.

Vitti shot to international fame with the 1960 drama L’Avventura (The Adventure) in which she plays a tormented woman who dallies with the lover of her missing friend.

Born in Rome on 3 November 1931, Vitti – whose real name was Maria Luisa Ceciarelli – discovered a passion for the theatre during the second world war, when she entertained her family with puppets to relieve boredom.

“As the bombs fell, when we had to take refuge in the shelters, my little brother and I would improvise little plays to entertain those around us,” she recounted years later.

Vitti in the 1975 film A Mezzonotte Va la Ronda del Piacere. Photograph: Cinetext Bildarchiv/Vides Cinematografica/Allstar

After graduating from Rome’s National Academy of Dramatic Arts in 1953, she began her career in the theatre, where she stood out for her comic talent. She was spotted by Antonioni, with whom she quickly developed an artistic relationship.

“I was lucky enough to start my career with a man of great talent”, but who was also “spiritual, full of life and enthusiasm”, Vitti said in an interview on Italian television in 1982.

Former Italian culture minister Walter Veltroni broke the news of Vitti’s death with a tweet. He said he had been asked to do so by Roberto Russo, Vitti’s husband, and expressed his “pain, affection and regret”.

Vitti, who had been suffering from a degenerative disease, had withdrawn from public life in recent years.


Most viewed

Most viewed