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Variety Lights

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Variety Lights
Film poster
Directed byFederico Fellini
Alberto Lattuada
Screenplay byFederico Fellini
Alberto Lattuada
Tullio Pinelli
Ennio Flaiano
Story byFederico Fellini
Produced byFederico Fellini
Alberto Lattuada
StarringPeppino De Filippo
Carla Del Poggio
Giulietta Masina
CinematographyOtello Martelli
Edited byMario Bonotti
Production
company
Capitolium
Distributed byFincine
Release date
  • 12 January 1951(1951-01-12)
Running time
97 minutes
CountryItaly
LanguageItalian

Variety Lights(Italian:Luci del varietà) is a 1951Italianromantic drama filmproduced, directed and written byFederico FelliniandAlberto Lattuadaand starringPeppino De Filippo,Carla Del Poggio,andGiulietta Masina.The film is about a beautiful and ambitious young woman who joins a traveling troupe of third-rate vaudevillians and inadvertently causes jealousy and emotional crises. A collaboration with Alberto Lattuada in production, direction, and writing,Variety Lightslaunched Fellini's directorial career. Prior to this film, Fellini worked primarily as a screenwriter, most notably working onRoberto Rossellini’sRome, Open City.

In 2008, the film was included on theItalian Ministry of Cultural Heritage’s100 Italian films to be saved,a list of 100 films that "have changed the collective memory of the country between 1942 and 1978."[1]

Plot[edit]

The filmdancers and performers struggle to make money from town to town, playing to minimal crowds, while the ageing manager of the company falls in love with a newcomer, to the chagrin of his faithful mistress Melina Amour, played by Fellini's real-life wife,Giulietta Masina.The movie begins with a sold-out vaudeville show in a small Italian town. A young woman, Liliana, played byCarla Del Poggio,sits in the appreciate crowd, enraptured by the performers. That evening, as the troupe boards a train, with two of the performers forced to sit in the train toilet to evade paying the fare, the young woman also boards the train. During the night, she unsuccessfully requests the head of the group, Checco Dal Monte, played byPeppino De Filippo,to join the group. In the morning when the group realizes it does not have enough money to pay for a carriage, Liliana hires the carriage with the last of her money. This saves the group several miles of walking and leads to them accepting her.

At the performance that evening, a sparse and hostile crowd mocks each performer in turn. When the local promoter notices that the crowd responds approvingly to Liliana, he interrupts the performance and directs the group to feature the newcomer. This leads to repeat performances over the next two days to increasingly larger crowds. After the third and final performance, a local wealthy man invites the group to his mansion for dinner. That night Checco realizes he desires Liliana. In the morning, as the group walks towards the train station, Checco abandons his mistress Melina to walk alone with Liliana.

When the group arrives in Rome, Checco leaves it in order to form his own troupe featuring Liliana. Desperate for money, he visits his old troupe and begs Melina for the funds to launch his show. Stricken, she hands him money and orders him to never contact her again. Checco takes the money triumphantly, but as this new group practices, Liliana arrives to tell him she has signed with a competitor. Checco collapses. Liliana has her debut in a minor role as a featured dancer next to the prima donna star of the show. The movie ends with Liliana, sporting an expensive fur coat, boarding a first-class train carriage en route to Milan. On the adjoining track, Checco and his old troupe board a train for Foggia.

In the final scene, the two trains leave the station as Checco, reunited with Melina, begins to flirt with a young woman who sits across the aisle from him. This suggests he is about to begin the cycle once again.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

The film was shot at theScalera StudiosinRomeandon locationinCapranicainLazio.

References[edit]

  1. ^"Ecco i cento film italiani da salvare Corriere della Sera".www.corriere.it(in Italian).Archivedfrom the original on 11 March 2023.Retrieved2021-03-11.

External links[edit]