Other members of the cast of "Circuito chiuso" include Mario Pisu (Otis Jarrell), Marzia Ubaldi (Trella Jarrell), Romina Power (Lois Jarrell), Umberto D'Orsi (Roger Foote), Pier Luigi Zollo (Wyman Jarrell), Barbara Valmorin (Nora Kent), Luciano Tacconi (Corey Brigham), Laura Tavanti (Susan Jarrell) and Germano Longo (Jim Eber).
Umberto Eco | Umberto Giordano | Umberto I of Italy | Umberto Lenzi | Umberto Boccioni | Umberto Saba | Umberto II of Italy | Umberto Nobile | Umberto D. | Robert A. Orsi | Umberto Tozzi | Umberto Bossi | Umberto Spadaro | Orsi | Arturo Umberto Illia | Umberto Zanotti Bianco | Umberto Smaila | Umberto Pelizzari | Umberto Guidoni | Umberto D'Orsi | Umberto D | Umberto Benigni | Umberto Agnelli | Umberto | Galleria Umberto I | Castell'Umberto |
A Man and His Dog (Un Homme et Son Chien) is a 2009 French film directed by French director Francis Huster, starring Jean-Paul Belmondo, based on the 1952 film Umberto D. directed by Vittorio De Sica, and written by Cesare Zavattini.
After that film, Bauer worked for a Macedonian production company and made Three Girls Named Anna (Tri Ane; 1959), a film which is often compared to Umberto D. by Vittorio de Sica.
Clodomil Orsi, was the Corinthians Chairman, elected in 1 August 2007, winning the elections with 264 votes.
He wrote a children's book La famosa invasione degli orsi in Sicilia (translated by Frances Lobb into English as The Bears' Famous Invasion of Sicily).
In 1488 he was the last of the main Pazzi conspirators left alive, and was himself assassinated in a conspiracy led by two members of the Orsi family from Forlì, supposedly over a financial dispute.
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Having taken part in the 1478 Pazzi Conspiracy against the Medici, 10 years later he was assassinated by members of the Forlesian Orsi family.
Orsi Kocsis (pronounced /ˈorʃɪ ˈkoʧiʃ/; given birth name Orsolya /ˈorʃojɒ/) is a Hungarian fashion, glamour, and art nude model and was 2005's Hungarian Playmate of the Year, which she won by audience election as a special prize.
Paolo Orsi (Rovereto, 1859 – 1935) was an Italian archaeologist and classicist.
This controversy centered on a rather polemical exchange between McCutcheon and Dr. Robert A. Orsi, who held a teaching position at Harvard University and Harvard Divinity School, with Orsi referring to McCutcheon's book, The Discipline of Religion, as "chilling".