Mario Carillo
Mario Carillo (aka Count Mario Caracciolo) was an Italian actor who worked in silent films in Hollywood in the 1920s.[1][2]
Mario Carillo | |
---|---|
Born | Mario Caracciolo 15 May 1883 |
Died | 3 December 1958 75) Rome, Italy | (aged
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1920–1930 |
Spouse(s) | Miriam Crosby (m. 1915) |
Biography
Origins
Mario was allegedly born as Mario Comte Caracciolo di Melito into a wealthy noble family in Naples, Italy, in 1883 (some sources claim his birth year as 1894).[3] His parents were Filippo Caracciolo and Emilia Compagna.
Mario served as an officer in the Italian cavalry before moving to the United States.[4] He worked as an attache at the Italian embassy in Washington, D.C., where he met and married Miriam Crosby in 1915.[5][6] The pair had a son, Ludovico.
Hollywood career
Around 1920, he headed out to Hollywood alone to seek work as an actor. He also worked as a physiotherapist at the Los Angeles Athletic Club, where he met Rudolph Valentino.[7] He also had a fling with a young actress named Lucille LeSueur (better by the stage name she took on later, Joan Crawford). Over the course of the decade, he appeared in several dozen films before returning to Italy with the aim of starting his own production company.[8] (It does not appear that he was successful in this endeavor.)
Later life
Mario died in Rome, Italy, in 1953; he was survived by his wife. P[9]lace and date of death are recorder as Rome, 12/03/1958, in the "Libro d'oro della nobiltà Mediterranea",
There appears to be a case of mistaken identity at the heart of stories in the press that he was the Mario Caracciolo who was given supreme command of the Italian army's technical service by Mussolini during World War II.[8] This man's full name appears to have been named Mario Caracciolo di Feroleto; the two were around the same age.
Selected filmography
- Just Married (1928)
- Hot News (1928)
- How to Handle Women (1928)
- His Tiger Wife (1928)
- The Private Life of Helen of Troy (1927)
- Ladies Beware (1927)
- Time to Love (1927)
- Bigger and Better Blondes (1927)
- Venus of Venice (1927)
- Evening Clothes (1927)
- Perch of the Devil (1927)
- Diplomacy (1926)
- Don Juan's 3 Nights (1926)
- The Barrier (1926)
- Torrent (1926)
- The Girl from Montmartre (1926)
- Dance Madness (1926)
- The Lure of the Wild (1925)
- The Only Thing (1925)
- The Eagle (1925)
- Her Sister from Paris (1925)
- Lost: A Wife (1925)
- Déclassé (1925)
- Eve's Secret (1925)
- His Hour (1924)
- Stepping Lively (1924)
- The Song of Love (1923)
- Rosita (1923)
- The Remittance Woman (1923)
- The Prisoner (1923)
- Queen of the Moulin Rouge (1922)
- Slim Shoulders (1922)
- The Snitching Hour (1922)
- A Stage Romance (1922)
References
- Thorold, W. J.; Hornblow, Arthur; Maxwell, Perriton; Beach, Stewart (1922). Theatre Magazine. Theatre Magazine Company.
- Brownlow, Kevin (1968). The Parade's Gone By. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-03068-8.
- Muscio, Giuliana (30 October 2018). Napoli/New York/Hollywood: Film between Italy and the United States (Critical Studies in Italian America). New York City: Fordham University Press. ISBN 9780823279388.
- S. George Ullman (1926). Valentino: As I Knew Him. Media History Digital Library (3rd ed.). New York, Macy-Masius.
- The Spur. Angus Company. 1922.
- "Becomes Bride of Titled Italian". The Washington Post. 5 July 1915. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
- Bret, David (15 April 2009). Joan Crawford: Hollywood Martyr. Hachette Books. ISBN 978-0-7867-3236-4.
- "Duce Gives High Post to Hollywood Ex-Actor". The Los Angeles Times. 12 January 1940. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
- http://www.genmarenostrum.com/pagine-lettere/letterac/Caracciolo/Caracciolo-castagneto.htm