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  1. Zavattini articulated a range of ideas about programming in two letters sent, respectively, on January. 1959 and February 6, 1961, to writer and television personality Mario Soldati and RAI artistic director Sergio Pugliese. See Archivio Cesare Zavattini, Biblioteca Panizzi, Reggio Emilia, Italy (S622/21 and P691/5).

  2. Jan 1, 2015 · Abstract. Outside of Italy, Cesare Zavattini (1902–1989) is widely known as one of the key screenwriters and theorists of Italian neorealism. This is, however, a most reductive...

  3. Cesare Zavattini’s eldest son, Arturo, granted unlimited and unconditional access to all papers, contained in the vast Zavattini Archive, which his father donated to the Panizzi library of Reggio in Emilia, from the late 1970s on. Arturo also gave me many rare books, a sizeable part of the Zavattini corpus, as well

  4. Cesare Zavattini: A central figure in Italian neorealism, advocating for a truthful representation of reality in cinema, avoiding artificiality found in mainstream films. Key Elements: Non-professional actors, on-location shooting, simple everyday stories, and social issues such as poverty and unemployment.

  5. The Forgotten Lessons of Cesare Zavattini by Giuliana Minghelli Three new books detail the screenwriter’s importance in Italian neorealism and also reveal his influence as a democratic force in cinema in Spain, Cuba, Latin America, and elsewhere throughout the world. 010 ZAVATTINI ARTICLE.qxp_CINEASTE STYLE SHEET 5/1/22 3:00 PM Page 10

  6. Cesare Zavattini was an Italian screenwriter, poet, painter, and novelist, known as a leading exponent of Italian Neorealism. Born into a humble family, Zavattini completed a law degree at the University of Parma and began a career in journalism and publishing.

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  8. Dec 31, 2000 · Some Ideas on the Cinema. Cesare Zavattini. Published 31 December 2000. Art, Philosophy. Cesare Zavattini (1902-89) was the central theoretician of neorealism, although he owes a debt, as do almost all intellectuals of the left, to the Marx­ ist philosopher Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937).