Ennio de Concini  

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-{{Template}}'''Ennio De Concini''' (born [[9 December]] [[1923]]) is an Italian screenwriter and film director best-knonw for ''[[Divorce, Italian Style]]''. He was the co-screenwriter of ''[[The Red Tent]]'' a 1969 film starring [[Sean Connery]] which was based on [[Umberto Nobile]]'s disastrous 1928 expedition to the North Pole in the airship [[Airship Italia|Italia]]. Among the 60 films to his credit are ''The Four of the Apocalypse'' (1975), ''[[Hitler: The Last Ten Days]]'' (1973), ''[[Battle of the Worlds]]'' (1961), ''[[Il Grido]]'' (1957), ''[[War and Peace (1956 film)|War and Peace]]'' (1956), and ''Mambo'' (1954).+{{Template}}'''Ennio De Concini''' (born [[9 December]] [[1923]]) is an Italian screenwriter and film director best-known for ''[[Divorce, Italian Style]]''. He was the co-screenwriter of ''[[The Red Tent]]'' a 1969 film starring [[Sean Connery]] which was based on [[Umberto Nobile]]'s disastrous 1928 expedition to the North Pole in the airship [[Airship Italia|Italia]]. Among the 60 films to his credit are ''The Four of the Apocalypse'' (1975), ''[[Hitler: The Last Ten Days]]'' (1973), ''[[Battle of the Worlds]]'' (1961), ''[[Il Grido]]'' (1957), ''[[War and Peace (1956 film)|War and Peace]]'' (1956), and ''Mambo'' (1954).
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Ennio De Concini (born 9 December 1923) is an Italian screenwriter and film director best-known for Divorce, Italian Style. He was the co-screenwriter of The Red Tent a 1969 film starring Sean Connery which was based on Umberto Nobile's disastrous 1928 expedition to the North Pole in the airship Italia. Among the 60 films to his credit are The Four of the Apocalypse (1975), Hitler: The Last Ten Days (1973), Battle of the Worlds (1961), Il Grido (1957), War and Peace (1956), and Mambo (1954).




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Ennio de Concini" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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