Vitaliano Brancati

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Template:Short description

Template:Expand Italian Template:Infobox person Vitaliano Brancati (Template:IPA; 24 July 1907 – 25 September 1954) was an Italian novelist, dramatist, poet and screenwriter.

Biography

Born in Pachino, Syracuse, Brancati studied in Catania, where he graduated in letters and where he spent most of his life.<ref name=bio>Template:Cite news</ref> While he started writing at a young age and at 25 years old he was already the author of six books, which were largely influenced by fascist ideals and which were later rejected by the same Brancati, critics tend to set the starting point of his career in 1935, when he released the collection of short stories In search of a cause.<ref name="bio"/> Brancati got his first and probably major success in 1941, with the novel Don Giovanni in Sicilia, a vibrant and humorous portrait of the Sicilian temperament.<ref name="bio"/>

In 1944, he wrote the novel Gli anni perduti (The Lost Years), a bold satire of Benito Mussolini’s megalomania. Two years later, in 1946, he published Vecchio con gli stivali (Old Man in Boots), a satirical short story inspired by the trials of Italian fascism, which won the Vendemmia Award and which was adapted into a successful film, Difficult Years by Luigi Zampa.<ref name="bio"/> In 1950 he won the Bagutta Prize with one another well-known novel, Il bell'Antonio ("Beautiful Antonio").<ref name="bio"/> He was one of the contributors of a cultural magazine, Omnibus.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

He died in a clinic in Turin after a major surgery.<ref name="bio"/> He was married to actress Anna Proclemer and the couple had a daughter together.<ref name="bio"/>

Selected works

Novels and short stories

Screenplays

References

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Further reading

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