Renzo Rossellini (born 24 August 1941), also called Rossellini Jr., is an Italian film producer. He is the second son of costume designer Marcella de Marchis and film director Roberto Rossellini. Since 1964, he has produced 64 films.
From 1977 to 1983 he was President of Gaumont Italy and was instrumental in the modernization of Italian film theaters, introducing multiplex structures. In 1975 he co-founded Radio CittÃÂ Futura in Rome, one of the first "free"not state-ownedradio stations in Italy. In 1981, one year after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, he co-founded Radio Free Kabul. He lives in Rome and Los Angeles.
In 1958, Renzo Rossellini graduated from the Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia with a degree in Visual Arts. After graduation, he began working in the film industry, while studying History and Philosophy at the Sorbonne University in Paris, albeit without graduating. In those years, he began a relationship Katherine L. O'Brien. They had a son named Alessandro.
From 1959 to 1977, Renzo worked with his father Roberto as assistant director, second unit director, and producer. Together, they made a number of movies and TV mini-series, mainly documentaries for Italian state television RAI. He then married Patrizia Mannajuolo, his first wife.
In 1962, he directed a segment of the film Love at Twenty, which was nominated at the 12th Berlin International Film Festival.In the sixties, he filmed and produced newsreels on the birth of several national liberation movements with his San Diego Film Company, ranging from the Algerian National Liberation Front, the Palestine Liberation Organization, and the Mozambican Liberation Front. In 1966, while in Cuba, he took part to the foundation of Tricontinental, the organization built by Ernesto "Che" Guevara to promote national liberation's movements in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, in which he represented the Algerian population.
In the early seventies he became a member of Avanguardia operaia, an organization of the Italian new left-wing political party. At that time, he founded the Italian National Committee against fascism in the Mediterranean with director Cesare Zavattini, actor and Nobel Prize winner Dario Fo, and director Mario Monicelli.
During those years, he lived with Chantal Personè. They had a daughter named Rossa.
In 1975, in Rome with publisher Giulio Savelli and the support from several Feminist groups, militants of Avanguardia operaia and of Partito di UnitÃÂ Proletaria per il Comunismo he established Radio CittÃÂ Futura, RCF, one of the major Italian free radios. In Italy, from the Fascist Thirties up to the Democratic Seventies, the only radios allowed to exist were those owned by the Government. The movement's radios of Italy set up the Federation of Democratic Italian Radios, or FRED. FRED's members, differentiating themselves from purely commercial radios, introduced the talk radio practice to the Italian audience, bringing to the forefront with interviews and live broadcasts, people and their lives' happenings. Rossellini was subsequently elected President of FRED.
In the general political elections of June 1976, like Italian screenwriter Ugo Pirro, he endorsed the Proletarian Democracy party, a coalition representing the major groups of the Italian new left.
Over Christmas 1976, five months before dying, Roberto Rossellini wrote to his son Renzo a letter, which is both a summary of their relationship and a concise spiritual testament. In the letter, Roberto apologized for not having followed his son's inclinations and left him the task to protect and promote his audiovisual encyclopedic project.In 1977, when his father Roberto died, he took care of the large Rossellini family and became President of Gaumont Italy, the newly formed Italian branch of French-based multinational Gaumont film company, which he led until 1983.
In 1978, due to the Aldo Moro Kidnapping, he was accused by the media to have foretold the kidnapping live on Radio CittÃÂ Futura two hours before it actually happened. Rossellini explained that, on the morning of the kidnapping while reviewing and commenting the press, he just advanced an inductive political hypothesis. He pointed out that, on the day in which the Italian Democratic Christian party was forming a government with the explicit back up of the Italian Communist Party, this new event would most certainly lead to an attack from the Red Brigades.
In January 1979, a neofascist commando from the Nuclei Armati Rivoluzionari assaulted with automatic rifles and gunned the headquarters of Radio CittÃÂ Futura, wounding five women and setting fire to their offices and transmitters. This happened just as Renzo finished reading the morning press news.
During his seven years as president of Gaumont Italy, he produced and distributed more than 100 movies.
He produced a few movies with a number of established Italian directors like Federico Fellini, Mario Monicelli, Liliana Cavani, Marco Ferreri, Lina Wertmüller, Carlo Lizzani, Francesco Rosi, Michelangelo Antonioni and Marco Bellocchio. He also promoted new younger talents, such as Nanni Moretti. He encouraged TV directors to try wide screen movies, as with Gianni Amelio. In 1984, he produced Francesca Comencini's first movie.
Following the example of the French Gaumont, he built a company encompassing the movie industry's three main branches: production, distribution, and theaters. From 1979, with the help of French funds, Rossellini bought a part of ECI (Esercizi Cinematografici Italiani), the Italian State-owned movie theater company, which was on the verge of bankruptcy.
In 1980, while arguing about a new rise in ticket prices favored by Italian movie distributors, Rossellini proposed instead to increase the number of spectators through introducing discounted prices for youth and elderly people to the introduction of multiplex theaters, like in France and the United States. During Rossellini's leadership of Gaumont Italy, in autumn of 1982, the historical Fiamma theatre was split in two screens of 800 and 250 seats respectively. Restructuring of the Odeon theater in Milan into eight screens proved to be much more difficult and lengthy. It begun in 1980 and was completed six years later, three years after Rossellini's resignation as president of Gaumont Italy.
Another noteworthy Rossellini's initiative was the creation of the Gaumont Film School in 1981. Notable alumni include directors Daniele Luchetti, Carlo Carlei, Antonello Grimaldi, as well as producer Domenico Procacci.
While serving as President of Gaumont Italy, Rossellini continued his political activism. In the summer of 1981, a group of French and defected East European intellectuals consisting of Bernard-Henri Lévy, Marek Halter, and Vladimir Bukovsky decided to organize a non-armed operation to oppose the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. The project of the Paris based group was to help the Afghan partisans to build their radio, Radio Free Kabul, RFK.Rossellini was the operating arm of the RFK committee. In August 1981, he secretly travelled to Afghanistan, bringing with him three FM transmitters and the experience gained with Radio CittàFutura. His reference in Afghanistan was the partisan commander Ahmad Shah Massoud. When Rossellini left Afghanistan, all resistance groups but one have their united radio, reaching through repeaters the Afghan capital Kabul. Radio programs are in Pashto and in Dari, with a ten minutes prerecorded part in Russian. "The radio you have brought us is worth more than a thousand Kalashnikovs", is the comment of an anonymous partisan commander to French human rights activists.
Radio Free Kabul remained on air for more than two years. It was closed at the end of 1983 and followed by two different AM radio stations. Nonetheless, the radio survived the fourth, fifth and sixth Soviet Panjshir offensives, with her score of wounded and killed technicians. One of the most popular parts of RFK programs is a 15-minute letter box, where queries from listeners in Kabul, the resistance-held areas, and the refugee camps in Pakistan were answered.
Some months after the disclosure of Rossellini's role in establishing RFK in Afghanistan, the Italian Red Brigades plan to kidnap Rossellini, for his role as one of the leaders of French multinational Gaumont. Germano Maccari, member of the Roman column of the Red Brigades, told Rossellini years later that he followed him for two months and that the operation was canceled because the manager carried a weapon.
In November 1983, Rossellini resigned as president and general manager of Gaumont Italy. In the previous two years the company had suffered significant losses. Of the fourteen movies produced in the last two years, only a handful generated revenues. In an interview, Rossellini declared: "I'm the president of a company that, in a year, suffered a dozen failures by promoting a policy of film d'auteur. Of course I feel responsible. Resigning from president was the obvious and right thing to do". Part of the problem came from the majority shareholder, French Gaumont, which decided to stop financing the Italian experiment as it wanted only to retain Gaumont Italy's theater chain or to sell it to get back the initial investment.
In spring 1984, Rossellini established Artisti Associati, a movie production and distribution company, whose major success is co-production and distribution of 9ý Weeks by Adrian Lyne.
On December 8, 1984, a day before leaving for the United States, Rossellini and his wife Elisabetta Caracciolo suffer a car accident. At the outskirts of Rome, the couple's car was pushed by two other cars out of the road and off of a cliff. Rossellini suffered multiple femur ruptures, and his wife Elisabetta ended up in a coma.
In the following months, Rossellini devoted much of his time to recover and to take care of Elisabetta. She died on the 14th of April, 1985.
From 1987 to 2000, he took care of international marketing for movie production companies, as Phyllis Carlyle Productions, HKM Films, and Shadow Hill Productions.
In Los Angeles, California on June 7, 1989, Renzo met and married Victoria Kifferstein, his third wife. Victoria Rossellini is a lawyer and joined 20th Century Fox in 1992. In 2016, she was promoted to Senior Executive Vice President of the company.
In the second millennium, he devotes time to teaching movie and TV production for Rome's Nuova UniversitÃÂ del Cinema e della Televisione; History of European Cinema at UCLA, at Salerno's Fisciano University, and at Naples Federico II University; Cinema History at Cuba's EICTV, and at Santo Domingo University; Movie aesthetics at Montreal's Quebec University.
In 2006 he directed Diritto di sognare, a documentary on the Italian Mafia. In 2010 he co-produced Born in U.S.E., directed by Michele DiomÃÂ . The movie is dedicated to the 120 years of the movie industry, and features Francesco Rosi, Giuseppe Tornatore and Luis Bacalov.
He works with the help of Gabriella Boccardo in maintaining, valorizing and distributing in the new media the memory of his father Roberto and his works.