Biography
Italian actor Cesare Danova came to prominence in such post-war European films as
La Figlia del Capitano (1947) and
Don Giovanni (1955), playing the title role in the latter film. In the American-made
Man Who Understood Women (1959), Danova managed to be both funny and menacing as a murderous cuckolded husband. Few of his American films took full advantage of Danova's talents, tending to cast him as a "typical" hot-blooded Mediterranean, but there have been a few rewarding assignments along the way. As Appolodorus in the budget-busting
Cleopatra (1963), Danova was one of the few actors whose part wasn't cut to nothing in order to favor the
Elizabeth Taylor-
Richard Burton combo. Danova was one of the stars of the TV pilot-cum-theatrical movie
Chamber of Horrors (1966), and he enjoyed a season's worth of regular TV work as Actor (that was the character's name, not the designation) on the weekly
Dirty Dozen rip-off
Garrison's Gorillas (1967). In the '70s and '80s, Danova seemed to take turns with
Anthony Quinn in portraying Onassis-like Greek tycoons and Mafia bosses; in the latter capacity Danova was hilarious as Carmine DePasto in
National Lampoon's Animal House (1978). In the early years of the '80s, Danova could be seen as a regular on the ABC television daytime drama
Ryan's Hope. Cesare Danova died suddenly during a 1992 meeting of the Motion Picture Academy's Foreign Film Committee. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide