Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Femi_BenussiFemi Benussi - Wikipedia

    Eufemia "Femi" Benussi (born 4 March 1945) is a Yugoslav-Italian film actress. She appeared in 82 films between 1965 and 1983. Benussi was born in Rovigno, Italy (now Rovinj, Croatia). She debuted on stage at the Teatro del Popolo of Rijeka, then she moved to Rome and made her film debut at 19 in Il boia scarlatto, with the stage name Femy Martin.

  2. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › Femi_BenussiFemi Benussi - Wikipedia

    Eufemia Benussi, meglio conosciuta come Femi Benussi, è un'attrice italiana con cittadinanza jugoslava. Formatasi artisticamente nel teatro in Jugoslavia, suo Paese d'origine, ed esordiente nel cinema italiano d'autore con Uccellacci e uccellini di Pasolini, divenne nota per le sue interpretazioni erotiche e le sue numerose scene di nudo; la ...

  3. Femi Benussi (eigentlich Eufemia Benussi, * 4. März 1945 in Rovigno, Istrien (heute: Kroatien)) ist eine italienische Schauspielerin

  4. Femi Benussi was born on 4 March 1945 in Rovigno, Istria, Italy [now Rovinj, Istria, Croatia]. She is an actress, known for Poppea... una prostituta al servizio dell'impero (1972), Bloody Pit of Horror (1965) and La commessa (1975).

    • March 4, 1945
  5. Eufemia „Femi“ Benussi , g. 1945 m. kovo 4 d.) – italų kino aktorė, nusifilmavusi daugiau kaip 80-yje juostų 1962-83 m. Ji gimė Rovinyje, kuris tuo metu priklausė Italijai. Vėliau šeima gyveno Fiumėje, čia Femė ėmė vaidinti vietiniame teatre, o vėliau persikėlė į Romą, kur 19-os debiutavo kine.

  6. Tarzana, the Wild Girl (Italian: Tarzana, sesso selvaggio) is a 1969 Italian adventure film written and directed by Guido Malatesta (using the pseudonym James Reed).

  7. Femi Benussi, née Eufemia Benussi le 4 mars 1945 à Rovigno dans le royaume d'Italie (aujourd'hui Rovinj en Croatie), est une actrice italo-yougoslave. Elle débute sur scène au Teatro del Popolo de Rijeka, puis s'installe à Rome et fait ses débuts dans le cinéma d'auteur italien avec Des oiseaux, petits et gros (1966) de Pier Paolo Pasolini.