The cast of Un ladro in paradiso - 1952 includes: Fanfulla as Truffatore Salvatore Costa as Don Carmine Eduardo De Filippo Carlo Delle Piane Marisa Finiani as Donna Carmela Amedeo Girardi Francesco Golisano as Gennarino Pina Piovani Carlo Pisacane Luigi Pisano Manfredi Polverosi Filippo Scelzo as Chirurgo Carlo Tamberlani as San Giuseppe Nino Taranto as Vincenzo De Pretore Enzo Turco as Commissario
The cast of Un ettaro di cielo - 1958 includes: Polidor as Pedretti Silvio Bagolini as Germinal Nicola Bongiorno as La donna cannone Salvatore Cafiero as Nicola Marina De Giorgio as Mary II Luigi De Martino as Alfredo Franca Droghetti as La moglie Lia Ferrel as Mary I Ettore Jannetti as Il porchettaro Ignazio Leone as Riccardo Marcello Mastroianni as Severino Balestra Felice Minotti as Omero Leonilde Montesi as Derna Carlo Pisacane as Cleto Rosanna Schiaffino as Marina Aristide Spelta as Bixio Renato Terra as La guardia giovane Nino Vingelli as Impresario
The cast of Dimenticare Lisa - 1976 includes: Franco Angrisano as Il meccanico Maria Capocci as Prima impiegata Emilio Cigoli as Sir Arnold Wyatt Tonino Cuomo as Il fotografo Marino Irma De Simone as Seconda impiegata Carlo Enrici as Claude Goodrich Giovanna Fiorentini as Signorina Schroeder Lucio Flauto as Il commissario Bonetti Paola Gassman as Maddalena Daniela Guzzi as Sarah Marianella Laszlo as Nancy Braitwhite Leopoldo Mastelloni as Il barman Luciano Melani as Max Finney Domenico Messina as Secondo agente Ugo Pagliai as Peter Goodrich Marisa Reichlin as Una ragazza Sergio Rossi as Il colonnello Osborne Margherita Sestito as Maria Yanti Somer as Greta Lehmann Carlo Taranto as Primo agente
The cast of Nicolene - 1978 includes: Emile Aucamp as Braam Spies Klaas de Boer as Wikus Eon de Vos as Law student Pierre de Wet as Law professor Tertia du Toit as Katrien Danie Joubert as Wilhelm de Villiers Elna Krynauw as Tannie Mart Margot Luyt as Santie Vermaak Rina Nienaber as Lazelle de Villiers Elma Potgieter as Monica Marais Leonie Ross as Belle de Villiers Karien Scheepers as Nicolene Steyn Selai Selebe as Salmon Julie Strijdom as Witness Pieter Treurnicht as Mr. Brink Leon van der Walt as Dr. Hans Elize Versfeld as Nurse
The cast of Il flauto magico - 1978 includes: Marcello Barteli as Narrator
The cast of Bloody Mary Christmas - 2010 includes: Silvia Altrui as Mary Riccardo Buffonini as Ambrogio Davide Flauto as Alex Nicola Stravalaci as Zio Arcibaldo Debora Zuin as Zia Petronilla
Lucio Flauto died in 1989, in Busto Arsizio, Lombardy, Italy.
Lucio Flauto was born in August 1930, in Busto Arsizio, Lombardy, Italy.
The cast of Il medico delle donne - 1962 includes: Sivana Bonari Gino Bramieri Daniela Carestia Franca Cattaneo Elio Crovetto Dori Dorika Valeria Fabrizi Lucio Flauto Flora Lillo Licia Lombardi Nuto Navarrini Edda Nives Pirarda Angela Puppo Tino Scotti Marisa Traversi Marzia Ubaldi Roberto Villa
The cast of Vacanze sulla Costa Smeralda - 1968 includes: Ugo Adinolfi Ferruccio Amendola as Nando Nardini Tamara Baroni as Barbara Femi Benussi as Marisa Lucio Flauto as Pippo Sabaudo Giacomo Furia as Accountant Angela Pagano Mirella Pamphili Alberto Sorrentino Giuseppe Terranova as Eolo Little Tony as Tony Martin Toni Ucci as Schiavone
"Flauto 2 muta in flauta piccolo" I believe means "Flute 2 change to piccolo", in other words, at this point in the score the second flute changes to piccolo. -BLS
The cast of Cuore matto... matto da legare - 1967 includes: Ferruccio Amendola Rossella Bergamonti Eleonora Brown as Anna Anna Campori Lucio Flauto Jimmy il Fenomeno as Ballerino scatenato Ignazio Leone Alfredo Marchetti Renato Montalbano Paola Natale Fajda Nicol Maria Pia Casilio Alfredo Rizzo Nino Scardina Alberto Sorrentino Little Tony as Tony Elsa Vazzoler
Generically, the Italians use the term "flauto" for "flute". In the Renaissance, the flute didn't get the title of 'flute' at all, though: the recorder was called "flauto diritto" while the flute proper was called fiffaro. Variants on the recorder included "flauto dolce", and the term 'piffaro' was used throughout the continent in Queen Elizabeth I's time. Generally, in this period, it was more common to play instruments in families, rather than in "broken consort", mixing instruments from other families. By Handel's and Vivaldi's time, in the Baroque period, the recorder and flute were fully used side-by-side, and he was careful to differentiate between the recorder and the flute held 'across' the body, the traversia. Before about 1720, Italians didn't seem to make much clear difference between the transverse flute and the recorder, after this, the flute was generally known for its playing position, or its association with Germany. As the recorder fell out of use, flauto traversie eventually was shortened to flauto, which is retained on modern Italian scores.
Giorgio Foti has written: 'Il flauto di Pan nel bergamasco' -- subject(s): Panpipes, Folk music, Musical instruments
Flauto dolce in terms of music and registratore in terms of equipment are Italian equivalents of the English word "recorder".Specifically, the masculine noun flauto literally means "flute". The feminine/masculine adjective dolce literally means "sweet". The masculine noun registratore refers to a piece of equipment for recording images/sounds.The pronunciation will be "FLOW-to DOL-tche" and "re-DJEE-stra-TO-re" in Italian.
Fiora Vincenti has written: 'Lalla Romano' 'Il sonno del gentiluomo' 'Una Rolls-Royce nera' 'Utopia per flauto solo'