
Palermo, Sicily, Italy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Gerlando Buzzanca (born August 24, 1935 in Palermo) is an Italian comedy actor. He left high school in Palermo when he was 16 years old, and moved to Rome to pursue his dream of becoming an actor. In order to survive, he took many jobs: waiter, furniture mover, and a brief appearance as a slave in the film Ben-Hur. In his long career he often interpreted the role of the average Italian immigrant from southern Italy, who slowly began to enjoy moderate success during the years of the Italian economic miracle. His films showcased all the freshness of the 1960s, the 1970s and the heavier transition to the 1980s, focusing on the common life in several Italian cities such as Rome, Verona or Milan, balanced between personal happiness and professional achievement. Buzzanca often interpreted roles of a subordinate white collar worker, with a heavy vein of machismo, as a frustrated employee who tries to redeem his dull existence with his virility. He became famous for his role in the film Il merlo maschio, (The Male Blackbird), where in a provincial environment of cultural importance, the philharmonic orchestra of the Arena di Verona, he vents out his own frustrations, indulging into candaulism when he induces his bride to expose her naked body in the middle of a bridge in Verona. Some critics, in a lighter vein, have defined Buzzanca as a "Homo eroticus": a human being halfway between Homo erectus and Homo sapiens, who risked extinction in the 1970s because of the harsh struggle with feminism activists. Today, even though much less so, this male type is still found among Italian males. Buzzanca's fame is greater in foreign countries than in his native land, and in countries as France, Japan, Greece, Israel, Spain and Switzerland he is a renowned international stereotype of the Italian provincialotto, elegant, naif, always causing mischief, and not obtaining anything from it. Description above from the Wikipedia article Lando Buzzanca, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

as Jewish Slave in the Desert (uncredited)
1959
2011

1968

as Lino, le barbier
1965

as Roberto Savello (segment "La doccia")
1964

as Rosario 'Sasa' Cabaduni
1974

as Rosario Mulè
1961

as Police Chief
1966

as General Malagridas
2010

as Napoleone
1967

as Carmelo Lo Cascio
1974

as Ospite speciale
2000
as Bernardo Tanlongo
2010

as Reverend
2018

as Claudio
2017
2011

as Bernardo Tanlongo
2010

as Self
2009

as Prince Giacomo
2007

as Pietro di Bernardone
2007

as presentatore
2005

as Self
2004
2003

as Anfitrione
2003

as Marino
2000

as Mazzaro
2000

as Antonio Lombardi
1999

as Mario
1994
as Francisco
1989

1988

as Valeriano
1988

as Giuseppe
1982

1981

as Alex Fortini
1980

as Memé Di Costanzo
1978

as Amalio Badalamenti
1977

as Giuseppe Cicerchia 'Femminaro'
1976
as Don Ippolito
2 ep.

as General Malagridas
8 episodes

as Ospite speciale
1 episodes

as Don Ippolito
2 episodes

as Basilio Corsi
28 episodes

as Federico Vivaldi
12 episodes

as Franco Binasco (2013)
2 episodes

as Bernardo Tanlongo
2 episodes