Sophia Loren still glamorous at age 79
"Beauty is not important," the actress said Wednesday. "You have to be interesting and different from others." Svelte 79-year-old siren Sophia Loren has outshone women half her age at the Cannes film festival in head-to-toe red.
She is one of the most beautiful actresses in the history of cinema, but it
appears Sophia Loren's looks were not always appreciated by hard-nosed film
executives.
The award-winning actress, who has worked with Hollywood's greatest male
leads, said she nearly gave up her career after being told she must change
her face.
Claiming she was "never beautiful", Loren disclosed she is "still
shy" about appearing in public, as she launches her new film at the
Cannes Film Festival.
The actress, who is approaching her 80th birthday, said she had been told to
alter her unusual looks at the beginning of her career.
She told an audience her nose had been considered too long, her mouth too big
and her teeth not straight enough and her face totally unphotogenic.
"Otherwise you just turn up and look beautiful, and there's nothing more
to you.
She disclosed she resolved to give up acting in the early Fifties, after being
told she must change her appearance.
Shortly afterwards, she confided her difficulties in the director Vittorio De Sica, who resolved to cast her without an audition.
"I have never been beautiful. I've never been a beautiful doll. In fact when I started, people didn't want to hire me because I wasn't photogenic.
"People thought my mouth was too big, they wanted me to make my nose shorter, to have straighter teeth.
"It would have been too hard. I said, well I'll go back home to Pozzuoli then, I don't want to change my face.
"Then I suffered a lot because people said that I wasn't photogenic at all
"But things have got better and better thanks to photographers and others, who know how to portray my face better on the screen.
That year, 1954, she went on to make The Gold of Naples with Di Sica; widely considered to be her big breakthrough.
She has since gone to to work on some of Hollywood's most iconic films, starring alongside Frank Sinatra, Cary Grant, Gregory Peck, Marlon Brando, Charlton Heston, Clark Gable, and Paul Newman.
In 1991, she received an honorary Oscar for her contribution to world cinema,
and has starred in nearly 100 films including Arabesque, Prêt-a-Porter, and
The Pride and the Passion.
Shortly afterwards, she confided her difficulties in the director Vittorio De Sica, who resolved to cast her without an audition.
Loren was speaking in Cannes, where she has appeared in a short film directed
by her son; her first project in five years, entitled La voce umana.
The actress has a long-standing relationship with the festival after serving
as president of the jury in 1966, and gave a "masterclass" to fans
and industry figures on Wednesday.
"Beauty is not important," she said. "You have to be
interesting, someone who is different to other people.
"I have never been beautiful. I've never been a beautiful doll. In fact when I started, people didn't want to hire me because I wasn't photogenic.
"People thought my mouth was too big, they wanted me to make my nose shorter, to have straighter teeth.
"It would have been too hard. I said, well I'll go back home to Pozzuoli then, I don't want to change my face.
"Then I suffered a lot because people said that I wasn't photogenic at all
.
"In the film industry, if you're not photogenic it means you can't became
an actress or actor.
"But things have got better and better thanks to photographers and others, who know how to portray my face better on the screen.
"I didn't change my face at all, they just got better at it."
Loren, who had no formal acting training, disclosed her fortunes had changed
when she met director Di Sica, and told him she had never been offered a job
after going for auditions.
"I said to him, every time I am auditioning, people never hire me because
I'm shy. They think my mouth is too wide, nose too long, there's something
wrong with my face.
"He told me he didn't want me to audition, this conversation was just
fine. I didn't know what to say to this wonderful man. I nearly fainted on
the spot."
That year, 1954, she went on to make The Gold of Naples with Di Sica; widely considered to be her big breakthrough.
She has since gone to to work on some of Hollywood's most iconic films, starring alongside Frank Sinatra, Cary Grant, Gregory Peck, Marlon Brando, Charlton Heston, Clark Gable, and Paul Newman.
In 1960, she won the best actress Oscar for La ciociara, staying at home
during the ceremony because she was too nervous and being told the result
over the phone by Cary Grant.
Her latest role, in La voce umana, tells the story of an older woman who has a
final telephone conversation with the man she loves.
She received a standing ovation in Cannes for her masterclass, after being
interviewed on stage.
"My life has not been easy," she said. "But I'm surrounded by
people who like me, who love me, and I have to be very proud of my 80 years.
"I'm starting to count the hours, count the seconds; everything is
important when you reach my age. Every so often you have to explode back
into life."
Sophia Loren, the Italian Icon is still as glamorous as ever.
Ms. Loren wowed crowds with her beauty and sophistication this week at Cannes. She is the guest of honor at this year's Cannes Film Festival, and delivered a masterclass in addition to attending events.
She donned a scarlet top, pants and scarf Wednesday for the premiere of her new movie, The Human Voice. The 25-minute short film is based on the Jean Cocteau play of the same name, and is directed by her son, Edoadro Ponti.
Loren's iconic 1964 film "Marriage Italian Style" is being shown at the festival.
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