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  1. Filippo Del Giudice, (26 March 1892 – 1 January 1963), born in Trani, Italy, was an Italian film producer. Giudice was a lawyer, legal advisor and film producer. He worked with people that were already well known in their field of work.

    • 26 March 1892
    • Italian
    • 1 January 1963 (aged 70)
    • Film producer
  2. Filippo Del Giudice. Jump to Edit. Overview. Born. March 26, 1892 · Trani, Puglia, Italy. Died. December 31, 1962 · Florence, Tuscany, Italy (undisclosed) Nickname. Del. Mini Bio. Entrepreneurial Italian producer and administrator, who was responsible for creating some of the most quintessentially British films made in the 1940's.

    • March 26, 1892
    • December 31, 1962
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  4. Filippo Del Giudice. Production Manager: Odd Man Out. Entrepreneurial Italian producer and administrator, who was responsible for creating some of the most quintessentially British films made in the 1940's. Del Guidice came from a legal background, having worked for the Vatican.

    • January 1, 1
    • Trani, Puglia, Italy
    • January 1, 1
    • Florence, Tuscany, Italy
  5. Co-founder of Two-Cities Films. Born: March 26, 1892 in Trani, Puglia, Italy. Died: December 31, 1962 (age 70) in Florence, Tuscany, Italy. Entrepreneurial Italian producer and administrator, who was responsible for creating some of the most quintessentially British films made in the 1940's.

  6. Filippo Del Giudice est un producteur de cinéma italien né le 26 mars 1892 à Trani ( Pouilles) et mort le 31 décembre 1962 à Florence ( Toscane ). Biographie. Filippo Del Giudice fait des études de droit et devient avocat.

  7. Born in Trani, Italy, in 1892 and brought up in Rome, producer Filippo Del Giudice trained as a lawyer and worked for the Vatican. In 1933 he fled fascist Italy for England and entered films four years later when, with Mario Zampi, he founded Two Cities. Early successes included the 1939 film version of Terence Rattigan 's play French without ...

  8. In the mid-1940s Two Cities Films became part of the Rank Organisation. It was raising the finances for the production of Laurence Olivier's patriotic epic Henry V (1944) totalling more than £470,000, which forced Filippo Del Giudice to surrender his controlling interest in the company to the Rank Organisation. [1]

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