Claudio_Camaso

Claudio Camaso

Claudio Camaso

Italian actor (1939–1977)


Claudio Camaso (born Claudio Volonté; 3 February 1939 – 16 September 1977) was an Italian actor, noted as much for his troubled, violent life as for his performances. He was the younger brother of Gian Maria Volonté.[2]

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Early life and career

Claudio Volonté was born in Turin in 1939, in the days leading up to the Second World War. His father, Mario, was a committed fascist who commanded a unit of the paramilitary Black Brigades (Brigate Nera) at Chivasso during the final months of the Italian Social Republic, while his mother Carolina (née Bianchi) was a scion of the Milanese haute bourgeoisie.[3] In the aftermath of the war, Mario Volonté was sentenced to thirty years in prison upon being found guilty of aiding the military operations of the enemy "by ordering and participating in rounding up elements of the resistance movement in which many murders and robberies were committed".[4] Although excluded from the general amnesty pronounced by the then justice minister, Palmiro Togliatti, he only served eight years of his sentence.[3] His absence nevertheless led to a life of privations and hardships for the rest of the Volonté family.

Following in the footsteps of his elder brother Gian Maria, Claudio decided to become an actor, and at some point in the early 1960s he adopted the pseudonym of Claudio Camaso. From 1964 to 1976 Camaso appeared in more than twenty films, again emulating his brother by starring in Spaghetti Westerns such as Antonio Margheriti's film Vengeance (1968). Latterly he reverted back to his real name, maintaining a career as a supporting actor by participating in Westerns, gialli movies and lurid, low-budget mondo productions, of which CIA Secret Story (Faccia di spia; 1975) – his last film, in which he played Che Guevara – is perhaps a prime example.

Controversies

Unlike his brother, who was noted for his attachment to radical left-wing causes, Camaso's youth was marked by clear neo-fascist sympathies. While still a minor he was acquitted on a charge of taking part in a demonstration that damaged property owned by the Italian Communist Party (PCI), and he was later accused of being involved in a bomb attack on another Communist Party building.[5] In February 1965, Camaso was arrested while performing as an SS officer in the controversial Rolf Hochhuth play The Deputy – a production that had already been subject to attempts by the authorities to close it down – and he was subsequently charged with planting a bomb that had damaged a side entrance to the Vatican City.[6] The Baltimore Sun reported that the police based their suspicions of Camaso on his past record and the fact that he sported a beard, which matched the description of one of the perpetrators given by an eyewitness; the newspaper also noted, however, that Camaso had by this time apparently renounced his earlier extreme-right opinions and joined the Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity (PSIUP).[5] Maintaining that he should not be judged by "my old judiciary errors", Camaso denied the charge made against him, claiming that he was in the company of his girlfriend on the evening when the crime took place.[6] Nine months on, in October, he was cleared by a magistrate on the grounds that he had "no case to answer".[7]

Murder of Vincenzo Mazza and suicide

In August 1977 Camaso was arrested for stabbing a man to death in a street brawl. Hank Werba, Rome bureau chief for the film industry magazine Variety, reported the situation thus:

Actor Claudio Volonte [sic], younger brother of Italo thesp Gian Maria Volonte, gave himself up to the police after he stabbed a friend to death in old Rome early this month. As he turned himself in, Volonte said the fatal stabbing of film gaffer Vincenzo Mazza was involuntary. The incident took place after Mazza intervened during a personal altercation between Volonte, under the influence of alcohol, and his ex-wife, a shopkeeper in Campo de' Fiori.[8]

The Italian communist daily l'Unità further reported that the incident had occurred on 26 July, not August as the Variety article had suggested, and that Camaso's young daughter Saba had witnessed the attack.[9]

On 16 September 1977, while in police custody, Camaso committed suicide by hanging himself in his cell in Regina Coeli prison.

Filmography

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References

  1. Mirko Capozzoli (9 March 2020), "Gian Maria Volonté - Biografia", www.mirkocapozzoli.it. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  2. Fabio Melelli (2002). Altre storie del cinema italiano. Morlacchi, 2002. ISBN 8887716900.
  3. Editorial staff (15 April 2019), "Gian Maria Volonte: Un attore contro", L'Intellettualle Dissidente. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  4. Archivio di Stato di Torino, Corte d'Assise di Torino, Sezione Speciale, Fascicolo 191, Salone U, Scaffale 21 e seguenti - Sentenza contro Mario Volonté, 27 November 1946.
  5. Weldon Wallace, 'Vatican Bombing is Laid to Actor: Performer In 'The Deputy' Linked By Beard', Baltimore Sun, 19 February 1965, p. 1.
  6. 'Brother of Director of 'Deputy' Linked to Bombing', New York Times, 19 February 1965, p. 18.
  7. 'Cleared of Vatican Bomb Charge', Times, 29 October 1965, p. 11.
  8. Hank Werba, 'Chatter: Rome', Variety, 17 August 1977, p. 61.
  9. Fulvio Casali, 'Si consegna in tribunale l'attore Claudio Volonté', l'Unità, 6 August 1977, p. 10.

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