Valeria Golino

























Valeria Golino

Valeria Golino Cannes 2015.jpg
Valeria Golino at 2015 Cannes Film Festival

Born
(1965-10-22) 22 October 1965 (age 53)

Naples, Italy

Occupation Actress
Years active 1983–present
Partner(s)
Peter Del Monte (1985–1987)
Benicio del Toro (1988–1992)
Fabrizio Bentivoglio (1993–2001)
Andrea Di Stefano (2002–2005)
Riccardo Scamarcio (2006–2016)

Valeria Golino (born 22 October 1965)[1][2] is an Italian actress and director. She is best known to English-language audiences for her roles in Rain Man, Big Top Pee-wee, and the two Hot Shots! movies. In addition to the awards David di Donatello, Silver Ribbon, Golden Ciak, and Italian Golden Globe, she is one of three actresses to have won the Best Actress award at the Venice Film Festival twice.




Contents






  • 1 Early life


  • 2 Career


    • 2.1 1983–1987


    • 2.2 1988–present




  • 3 Filmography


    • 3.1 Acting


    • 3.2 Directing


    • 3.3 Music videos




  • 4 Awards and nominations


  • 5 References


  • 6 External links





Early life


Golino was born in Naples, Italy, the daughter of an Italian father who was a Germanist scholar, and a Greek mother, Lalla,[3] who was a painter. One of her grandmothers was Egyptian-French.[4][5] She grew up in an "artistic household"[6] and, after her parents split up, was raised alternating between Athens and Sorrento (Naples).[7] Golino is the niece of the journalist Enzo Golino at L'Espresso, and her brother is a musician. When she was a girl, her mother frequently took her to the cinema houses, and she quickly became interested in films. But in spite of this, she never thought about pursuing a film career until she made her first movie. Instead, she wanted to be a cardiologist.[8]
Valeria was diagnosed with scoliosis at age 11, and she had to have a steel rod implanted in her back for five years.[9] She remained in the care of a surgeon in Chicago for six months, where she learned to speak English.[10] At age 14 she started to work as a model in Athens,[11]Milan, London, and Los Angeles. She was in TV commercials for beer, perfume, and cosmetic, and she modeled swimsuits and blue jeans.[12] Being an unfocused student, she dropped out of high school after acting in her first movie.



Career



1983–1987


Golino never formally studied acting.[13] Her career started by chance when her uncle Enzo received a phone call from director Lina Wertmüller, who was searching for a young girl for her movie, and encouraged Golino to go to Wertmuller's house and meet her.[6]


The two met and Valeria was eventually cast in her film debut A Joke of Destiny (1983), alongside Ugo Tognazzi after an audition where she performed Shakespeare.[14] Despite her parents' reservations and Wertmuller's demanding on-set behavior, she liked the experience so much that she decided to pursue an acting career. She quit modeling, a profession that she never found fulfilling or interesting, and started to study diction and elocution. Among her early auditions were Una spina nel cuore (an audition that she called "distasteful") and The Name of the Rose[15] but was passed over for both films. She was offered roles in Giochi d'estate (1984) and other similarly themed romantic films about teenagers, but she turned them down[15] to focus on smaller and more challenging projects.


She followed up her debut with a string of independent films, including roles in My Dearest Son and Little Flames (both 1985), her first leading role, both of which won her a Golden Globe award for Best Breakthrough Actress. Later that year she was involved in a car accident[16] which displaced the metal bar[citation needed] in her back and had to have surgery in order to fix it: she was bedridden for five months.[3]


Her star-making role came the following year, when she played the life-loving cleaning lady who romances two different men in A Tale of Love by Francesco Maselli. Her performance received rave reviews and garnered her two prizes at the 1986 Venice Film Festival: the official Best Actress award (now called Volpi Cup) and the Golden Ciak award. The same film also won her the oldest and most prestigious critics prize of the Italian cinema: the Silver Ribbon award for Best Actress.[citation needed]


Her following projects were once again independent, auteur-driven films: The Gold Rimmed Glasses and Three Sisters. She was supposed to reunite with Maselli for his following film L'uomo della casa di fronte, co-starring Marcello Mastroianni, but the project never got off the ground.[17] The same director then moved on to another film, Codice privato, and Golino turned down the role that was eventually played by Ornella Muti.[18]



1988–present


She moved to Los Angeles and began to work in Hollywood, with the movie Big Top Pee-Wee (1988). She was cast in Rain Man (also 1988), as the girlfriend of Tom Cruise’s's character, and the comedy films Hot Shots! (1991) and Hot Shots! Part Deux (1993), as the girlfriend of the hero. ("Hot Shots" was a direct spoof of "Top Gun".) Her character's nationality in Rain Man was changed from American to Italian-American to accommodate her accent.[18] Even though she was known as a dramatic actress in Italy, most of the offers she received in Hollywood were for comedies.[19]


Golino auditioned for lead roles in Pretty Woman and Flatliners, but both times she lost the part to Julia Roberts during the final audition.[20] She was first runner-up for both roles and, in the case of Pretty Woman, she revealed many years later: "I was in the running until the final audition: it came to down to Julia Roberts and me. The director asked us to walk in the same corridor, wearing the same clothes and makeup. As soon as I saw her [Roberts], I knew that she would have been chosen. And since she knew that, she told me: 'Go and get them, big mama!' I wouldn't have dared to say that to my rival. I would have been good in that film but she was perfect".[11] She also turned down the leading role in the Ken Loach film Hidden Agenda, which she called "an offer that I still regret having declined."[21]


In 1993, she was heavily involved in producing and starring in an independent feature film Cat in the Box, which was never made, and because of that project, she was forced to turn down a role in a movie directed by Carlo Verdone.[22]


During the following year, she was offered the leading role in True Lies, but she had to turn that down because of conflicts in scheduling with I Sfagi tou kokora (1996), an independent film made in Cyprus. She had joined this film project in 1992, while it was still in preproduction, and she fervently wanted to be a part of it.[23] Later on that year, she was supposed to act with Gian Maria Volontè in the film Treni sull'acqua. This project would have marked her third collaboration with the director Peter Del Monte, but it was canceled after the death of Volonté.[24]


In early 1996 she was supposed to play a journalist in the film Bravo Randy, directed by Alessandro D'Alatri and also starring Jovanotti in the titular role of a tramp who falls into a coma after an accident, and Scacchi would have played a doctor.[25]


However, the project fell apart just a few months before shooting was slated to begin: fearing a lack of influence, the Italian production company blocked the funds as the film would have been shot in California.[26]


In January 2001 she was supposed to star with Claudio Amendola in a TV mini-series called Cuore di ghiaccio, directed by Luciano Casciani, produced by Mediaset and set in Cefalù, but the project never took off the ground.[27]


She had a supporting role in the successful French thriller 36, Quai des Orfèvres (2004) and a leading role in Cash (2008), although the producers of the film had wanted Kristin Scott Thomas instead.[23] Her role as Irene in Sacred Heart (2004) had been written specifically for her by director Ferzan Ozpetek, but she was forced to abandon the project for personal reasons.[28] She was replaced by Barbora Bobuľová.


In 2005, she was offered the leading role in Fine pena mai (2008) but she turned it down, considering herself to be too old for the part. The role was eventually played by Valentina Cervi.[29]


In 2006 Theodoros Angelopoulos cast her in The Dust of Time (2008) after being impressed by Golino's work in Respiro. However the many delays in the shooting forced her to drop out of the project in late 2007 for scheduling conflicts.[30] She was replaced by Irène Jacob.


In 2009 she was the subject of the monograph Valeria Golino: Respiro d'attrice by Massimo Causo.[31]


The following year she was offered the chance to direct a short film by the company Pasta Garofalo, Armandino e il Madre, for which she also wrote the script. Her first feature film as director, Honey (2013), was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival and won a commendation from the Ecumenical Jury.[32]


She played Armida Miserere, high security warden in Like the Wind (2013) directed by Marco Simon Puccioni a difficult leading role praised by the critics and awarded in festival.[citation needed]


Despite her self-deprecating reluctance, she also sang in several films, most notably her English-language films Hot Shots! and Big Top Pee-Wee. She recorded two LPs in 1987,[33] the song "Maybe Once More" for L'inverno and 'Piangi Roma' for Giulia Doesn't Date at Night (featuring Baustelle), the latter of which won her a Silver Ribbon award for Best Song.[34]


She is a member of AMPAS thanks to the invitation of Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau.[35][36]


In 2016 she was a member of the main competition jury of the 2016 Cannes Film Festival.[37]



Filmography



Acting





  • A Joke of Destiny (1983)


  • Blind Date (1984) – Girl in Bikini


  • My Dearest Son (1985) – Francesca


  • Little Flames (1985) – Mara


  • A Tale of Love (1986) – Bruna Assecondati


  • Detective School Dropouts (1986) – Caterina


  • Dernier été à Tanger (1987) – Claudia Marchetti


  • The Gold Rimmed Glasses (1987) – Nora Treves


  • Three Sisters (1988) – Sandra Parini


  • Big Top Pee-wee (1988) – Gina Piccolapupula


  • Rain Man (1988) – Susanna


  • Torrents of Spring (1989) – Gemma Rosselli


  • Traces of an Amorous Life (1990)


  • The King's Whore (1990) – Jeanne de Luynes


  • Hot Shots! (1991) – Ramada Thompson


  • The Indian Runner (1991) – Maria


  • Year of the Gun (1991) – Lia


  • Puerto Escondido (1992) – Anita


  • Hot Shots! Part Deux (1993) – Ramada Rodham Hayman


  • Clean Slate (1994) – Sarah Novak/Beth Holly


  • Like Two Crocodiles (1994) – Marta


  • Immortal Beloved (1994) – Giulietta Guicciardi


  • Fallen Angels (TV series) – episode Red Wind (1995) – Eugenie Kolchenko


  • Submission (1995 short)


  • Leaving Las Vegas (1995) – Terri


  • Four Rooms (1995) – Athena (segment "The Missing Ingredient")


  • Il fratello minore (1996 short) – Valeria


  • Escoriandoli (1996) – Ida


  • Escape from L.A. (1996) – Taslima


  • I Sfagi tou kokora (1996)


  • An Occasional Hell (1996) – Elizabeth Laughton


  • Le acrobate (1997) – Maria


  • Nostalgia di protezione (1997 short) – Secretary


  • Shooting the Moon (1998) – Silvia


  • Side Streets (1998) – Sylvie Otti


  • Spanish Judges (1999) – Jamie


  • Alexandria Hotel (TV mini-series) – episode L'alibi (1999) – Justine


  • La vita che verrà (1999 TV mini-series) – Nunzia


  • Harem Suare (1999) – Anita


  • Tipota (1999 short) – Actress


  • To Tama (2000)


  • Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her (2000) – Lilly (segment "Goodnight Lilly, Goodnight Christine")


  • Ivans Xtc (2000) – Constanza Vero


  • Controvento (2000) – Nina


  • Hotel (2001) – Italian Actress


  • Winter (2002) – Anna


  • Respiro (2002) – Grazia


  • Frida (2002) – Lupe Marín


  • Julius Caesar (2002 TV movie) – Calpurnia


  • Take Me Away (2003) – Luciana


  • San-Antonio (2004) – The Italian woman


  • Alive (2004) – Elisa


  • 36 Quai des Orfèvres (2004) – Camille Vrinks


  • Mario's War (2005) – Giulia


  • Texas (2005) – Maria


  • Olé! (2005) – Carmen Holgado


  • Solo cinque minuti (2006 short) – Valeria


  • Our Country (2006) – Rita


  • Il Sole nero (2007) – Agata


  • Ma place au soleil (2007)


  • Don't Waste Your Time, Johnny! (2007)


  • Actrices (2007) – Natalia Petrovna


  • The Girl by the Lake (2007) – Chiara Canali


  • Caos calmo (Quiet Chaos) (2008) – Marta


  • Cash (2008) – Julia Molina


  • La Fabbrica dei Tedeschi (2008) – Wife


  • Giulia Doesn't Date at Night (2009) – Giulia


  • The Cézanne Affair (2009) – Franca Rossetti


  • Dark Love (2010) – Psicologa


  • School Is Over (2010) – Daria Quarenghi


  • Come un soffio (2010 short) – Hostess


  • Un Baiser Papillon (2011) – Billie


  • Kryptonite! (2011) – Rosaria


  • Nuts (2013) – Giovanna


  • In Treatment (2013 TV series) – Eleonora


  • Like the Wind (2013) – Armida Miserere


  • Human Capital (2014) – Roberta Morelli


  • Jacky in Women's Kingdom (2014) – Bradi Vune


  • The Invisible Boy (2014)


  • An Italian Name (2015)


  • Per amor vostro (2015)


  • The Very Private Life of Mister Sim (2015) – Luigia


  • Il colore nascosto delle cose (2017)


  • The Summer House (2018) - Elena


  • Daughter of Mine (2018)


  • The Invisible Boy - Second Generation (2018)




Directing




  • Armandino e il Madre (2010 short)


  • Honey (2013)


  • Euphoria (2018)



Music videos


She also appeared in several music videos:




  • Bittersweet Me by R.E.M. (1996)


  • Piangi Roma by Baustelle and herself (2009)


  • Va così by Le Vibrazioni (2011)


  • These Boots Are Made for Walkin' by Planet Funk (2011)



Awards and nominations


































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Event
Year
Film
Award
Category
Result

Annecy Italian Film Festival, France
2012

Kryptonite!
Best Actress Award
Won[38]
Athens Panorama of European Cinema, Greece
2009

Giulia Doesn't Date at Night
Special Award for Acting
Won[39]
Barcelona Italian Film Festival, Spain
2013

Honorary CSCI Award
Won[40]
Bari International Film Festival, Italy
2014

Come il vento
Italian Competition Award
Best Actress
Won[41]
Brussels European Film Festival, Belgium
2013

Honey
Euromillions Audience Award
Won[42]
Studio L'Équipe Award
Won[42]
Busto Arsizio Film Festival, Italy
2003

Respiro
Best Actress Award
Won[43]

Cannes Film Festival, France
2013

Honey
Special Mention of the Ecumenical Jury
Won[32]
Golden Camera Award
Nominated[44]
Un Certain Regard Award
Nominated[44]
Capri Hollywood, Italy
2013

Come il vento
Capri European Actress Award
Won[45]
Castle of Precicchie Prize, Italy
2014

Castle of Precicchie Prize
Won[46]
Cervia Spettacoli e Dintorni Festival, Italy
1986

Best Newcomer Award
Won[47]
Cinema Italian Style, USA
2006

Innovator Award
Won[48]

David di Donatello Awards, Italy
2015

The Invisible Boy
David di Donatello

Best Supporting Actress
Nominated
2014

Human Capital
David di Donatello

Best Supporting Actress
Won[49]

Honey
David di Donatello

Best New Director
Nominated[50]

Best Screenplay
Nominated[50]
2012

Kryptonite!
David di Donatello

Best Actress
Nominated[51]
2009

Giulia Doesn't Date at Night
David di Donatello

Best Actress
Nominated[52]
2008

Quiet Chaos
David di Donatello

Best Supporting Actress
Nominated[53]
2006

Mario's War
David di Donatello

Best Actress
Won[54]
2003

Respiro
David di Donatello

Best Actress
Nominated[55]
1998

Le acrobate
David di Donatello

Best Actress
Nominated[56]
1988

The Gold Rimmed Glasses
David di Donatello

Best Actress
Nominated[57]
1987

A Tale of Love
David di Donatello

Best Actress
Nominated[58]
Eolie Film Festival, Italy
1987

Plate of the City of Lipari
Won[59]

European Film Awards
2013

Honey
European Film Award

Discovery of the Year
Nominated[60]
2003

Respiro
Audience Award

Best Actress
Nominated[61]
Federazione Italiana Cinema d'Essai, Italy
2011

Kryptonite!
FICE Award
Best Actress
Won[62]
2006

Our Country
FICE Award
Best Actress
Won[63]
2005

Mario's War
FICE Award
Best Actress
Won[64]
Festival delle Cerase, Italy
2007

Mario's War
Winter Award
Won[65]
Flaiano International Awards, Italy
2013

Honey
Golden Pegasus
Best Director
Won[66]
2006

Mario's War
Golden Pegasus
Best Actress
Won[67]
Gallio Film Festival, Italy
2013

Honey
Best Screenplay Award
Won[68]
Gavoi Film Festival, Italy
2005

Honorary Silver Tumbarinu
Won[69]

Giffoni Film Festival, Italy
2011

Giffoni Award
Won[70]
2002

Respiro
Bronze Gryphon
Best Actress
Won[71]

Golden Ciak Awards, Italy
2015

The Invisible Boy
Golden Ciak
Best Supporting Actress
Nominated[72]
2014

Honey
Golden Ciak
Best First Feature
Won[73]
Best Screenplay
Nominated[74]
2012

Kryptonite!
Golden Ciak
Best Actress
Won[75]
2011

L'amore buio
Golden Ciak
Best Supporting Actress
Nominated[76]
2008

Quiet Chaos
Golden Ciak
Best Supporting Actress
Nominated[77]
1987

A Tale of Love
Golden Ciak
Best Actress
Won[78]

Golden Globe Awards, Italy
2013

Honey
Golden Globe
Best Debut Feature Film
Won[79]
2012

Kryptonite!
Golden Globe
Best Actress
Nominated[80]
2006

Mario's War
Golden Globe
Best Actress
Won[81]
2004

Take Me Away
Golden Globe
Best Actress
Nominated[82]
2002

L'inverno
Golden Globe
Best Actress
Nominated[83]
1986

Little Flames
Golden Globe
Best Breakthrough Actress
Won[81]

My Dearest Son

Golden Goblet Awards, Italy
1997

Le acrobate
Golden Goblet
Best Actress
Won[84]
Golden Graal Awards, Italy
2009

Quiet Chaos
Golden Graal
Best Dramatic Actress
Nominated[85]
2008

The Girl by the Lake
Golden Graal
Best Dramatic Actress
Won[86]
2007

Mario's War
Golden Graal
Best Dramatic Actress
Nominated[87]
2006

Texas
Golden Graal
Best Dramatic Actress
Nominated[88]
2005

36 Quai des Orfèvres
Golden Graal
Best International Performer
Won[89]
Golden Sacher Awards, Italy
1997

Le acrobate
Golden Sacher
Best Actress
Won[90]

Haifa International Film Festival, Israel
2013

Honey
Special Mention of the Jury
Won[91]
Ischia Global Film and Music Festival, Italy
2013

Honey
Breakout Italian Director of the Year Award
Won[92]
Kinéo Awards, Italy
2013

Honey
Kinéo Award
Won[93]
2012

Kryptonite!
Kinéo Award
Best Actress
Nominated[94]
2009

Giulia Doesn't Date at Night
Kinéo Award
Best Actress
Nominated[95]
2008

The Girl by the Lake
Kinéo Award
Best Supporting Actress
Nominated[96]

Quiet Chaos
Kinéo Award
Best Supporting Actress
Nominated[96]
2003

Respiro
Kinéo Award
Best Actress
Won[97]
Lecce European Film Festival, Italy
2007

Honorary Award
Won[98]

Ljubljana International Film Festival, Slovenia
2013

Honey
Kingfisher Award
Won[99]
Los Angeles Italia, USA
2014

Excellence Award
Won[100]
Lux Prize
2013

Honey
Lux Prize
2nd place[101]
Magna Graecia Film Festival, Italy
2013

Honey
Best First Feature Award
Won[102]
Mantova Film Festival, Italy
2013

Honey
Golden Laurel
Won[103]
Maremetraggio International Festival, Italy
2012

Kryptonite!
Ippocampo Competition Award
Best Actress
Won[104]
Marzamemi Border Film Festival, Italy
2007

WindJet Award
Won[105]
Mons International Love Film Festival, Belgium
2003

Respiro
Best Actress Award
Won[106]
New Italian Cinema Events Festival, Italy
2012

Kryptonite!
Susan Batson Award
Best Acting Performance
Won[107]
Nice Italian Film Festival, France
1985

My Dearest Son
Best Newcomer Award
Won[108]
Primavera del Cinema Italiano Festival, Italy
2009

Giulia Doesn't Date at Night
Federico II Award
Best Actress
Won[109]

Rome Film Festival, Italy
2013

Come il vento
L.A.R.A. Award
Won[110]
Sergio Amidei Prize
2013

Honey
Sergio Amidei Prize
Won[111]

Silver Ribbon Awards, Italy
2014

Come il vento
Silver Ribbon

Best Actress
Nominated[112]
2013

Honey
Silver Ribbon

Best Debut Feature Film
Won[113]
2012

Kryptonite!
Silver Ribbon

Best Actress
Nominated[114]
2011

Armandino e il Madre
Silver Ribbon
Best Debut Short Film
Won[115]
Best Short Film
Nominated[116]
2010

The Cézanne Affair
Silver Ribbon

Best Actress
Nominated[117]
2009

Giulia Doesn't Date at Night
Silver Ribbon
Best Original Song
Won[34]

Best Actress
Nominated[118]
2007

Mario's War
Silver Ribbon

Best Actress
Nominated[119]
2006

Texas
Silver Ribbon

Best Actress
Nominated[120]
2004

Take Me Away
Silver Ribbon

Best Actress
Nominated[121]
2002

Respiro
Silver Ribbon

Best Actress
Won[122]
1999

Shooting the Moon
Silver Ribbon

Best Actress
Nominated[123]
1989

Rain Man
Silver Ribbon

Best Supporting Actress
Nominated[124]
1988

Three Sisters
Silver Ribbon

Best Actress
Nominated[125]
1987

A Tale of Love
Silver Ribbon

Best Actress
Won[126]
1986

Little Flames
Silver Ribbon

Best Actress
Nominated[127]
Sulmona Film Festival, Italy
2002

Respiro
Best Actress Award
Won[128]

Taormina Film Festival, Italy
2006

Mario's War
Best Actress Award
Won[129]

Taormina Arte Award for Cinematic Excellence
Won[130]
Terra di Siena Film Festival, Italy
2009

Honorary Award
Won[131]
Tétouan International Mediterranean Festival, Morocco
2014

Honey
Best First Work Award
Won[132]

Thessaloniki International Film Festival, Greece
2006

Honorary Golden Alexander
Won[133]
1996

I sfagi tou kokora
Greek Competition Award
Best Actress
Won[134]
Trani Film Festival, Italy
2002

Stupor Mundi Award
Won[135]
Valenciennes Festival 2 Cinéma, France
2014

Come il vento
Best Actress Award
Won[136]
Vasto Film Festival, Italy
2012

Honorary Award
Won[137]

Venice Film Festival, Italy
2015

For Your Love
Volpi Cup

Best Actress
Won[138]
Pasinetti Award
Best Actress
Won[139]
1986

A Tale of Love

Best Actress Award
Won[140]
Golden Ciak
Best Actress
Won[141]
Viareggio EuropaCinema Festival, Italy
2003

Take Me Away
EuropaCinema Award
Best Actress
Won[142]
Vittorio De Sica Awards, Italy
2013

Honey
Vittorio De Sica Award
Won[143]
1986

Vittorio De Sica Award
Won[144]


References





  1. ^ Especially now that I have turned forty, I am worried about showing my body. "Valeria Golino: "A quarant'anni mi vergogno a recitare nuda"". ilgiornale.it. 23 June 2006. Retrieved 2013-09-05..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ So is she, Valeria Golino, a forty-year-old. Not quite: she doesn't take advantage of the Internet's inaccuracy which says she is a year younger – Lord knows how many women would have – and instead specifies having turned forty-one on October 22nd. "Valeria Golino". ricerca.repubblica.it. 5 November 2006. Retrieved 2013-09-05.


  3. ^ ab "Valeria Golino: "Voglio fare la Magnani"" (PDF). archiviostorico.unita.it. 4 September 1986. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 21 July 2013.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)


  4. ^ Marin, Rick (6 June 1993). "UP AND COMING: Valeria Golino; She Made Her Name Popping an Olive". The New York Times.


  5. ^ "Valeria Golino Biography (1966–)". Filmreference.com. 22 October 1966. Retrieved 2010-10-08.


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External links








  • Valeria Golino on IMDb


  • Valeria Golino at Rotten Tomatoes










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