Film at Lincoln Center and Cinecittà announce a 13-film retrospective celebrating the beloved Italian star

07/06/2024 — 13/06/2024

Walter Reade Theater, New York

Sophia Loren: La Signora di Napoli

07 — 13 June 2024

Film at Lincoln Center and Cinecittà announce a 13-film retrospective celebrating the beloved Italian star

07/06/2024 — 13/06/2024

Walter Reade Theater, New York

This first-ever New York retrospective dedicated to Sophia Loren’s films will feature many brand-new restorations of her most enduring works, as well as an appearance by filmmaker Edoardo Ponti.

The retrospective will open with “The Life Ahead”, directed by Edoardo Ponti. The film has been nominated for an academy award as well as a Golden Globe in the category of best foreign film. It was also a top ten Netflix film in 37 countries. It further earned 40 additional award nominations and 18 wins including a David di Donatello for Sophia Loren’s performance.

Sophia Loren’s eternal beauty, undeniable charisma, and naturalism of ever-surprising depth and sophistication have made her one of the greatest treasures of world cinema. Launched to global fame with her vividly embodied turn in Vittorio De Sica’s Two Women (1960)—for which she won a Cannes Best Actress prize, the British Academy Award, and the Oscar for Best Actress (making history as the first actress to win for a foreign-language film)—Loren represented something startlingly fresh and alluring to audiences from all over: here was perhaps the first international movie star. Moving freely between major Hollywood films and European productions, equally skilled at drama or comedy, she harnessed her versatile charm and earthy intensity for a range of directors—from Altman, Donen, and Chaplin, to Risi, Scola, and, on many occasions, De Sica (up to his final film)—and in indelible roles opposite the likes of Gregory Peck, Marlon Brando, Omar Sharif, and Marcello Mastroianni, with whom she fostered, across 14 features, one of cinema’s greatest on-screen duos.

“Sophia Loren: La Signora di Napoli” highlights the trajectory of Loren’s remarkable career, featuring new restorations of films rarely screened in the United States, from her ascendant roles for Mario Mattoli (Poverty and Nobility) and Dino Risi (The Sign of Venus) to her powerhouse, Oscar-winning turn in Two Women, to her quintessential collaborations with Mastroianni and De Sica (such as Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow; Marriage Italian Style; and A Special Day), and her most recent starring role in Edoardo Ponti’s The Life Ahead. The series will also include ​​the world premiere of a 4K restoration by Cinecittà of Too Bad She’s Bad by Alessandro Blasetti, who gave Loren her first major role in a feature film and features Loren and Mastroianni’s first appearance together as an artistic couple.

Highlights of Loren’s illustrious international career featured in the series include the world premiere of a 4K restoration of Stanley Donen’s Arabesque (1966), starring Loren and Gregory Peck in a deliriously mod comic-thriller; the New York premiere of the 4K restoration of Charlie Chaplin’s A Countess From Hong Kong (1967), his final film and his only film in color, which stars Loren as the titular countess and Marlon Brando as an American diplomat; and Robert Altman’s Ready to Wear (1994) presented on 35mm, starring Loren among a sprawling cast of international luminaries that includes Marcello Mastroianni, Anouk Aimée, Kim Basinger, Lauren Bacall, Julia Roberts, Tim Robbins, and Forest Whita