Child prodigy who rejected Hollywood to become Broadway star
Anna Maria Alberghetti's good looks made her attractive to movie studios |
She moved with her family to the United States in her teens
and became a Broadway star, winning a Tony Award in 1962 as best actress in a
musical for her performance in Bob Merrill’s Carnival, directed by Gower
Champion.
Alberghetti was a child prodigy with music in her blood. Her
father was an accomplished musician, an opera singer and concert master of the
Rome Opera Company, who also played the cello. Her mother was a pianist.
They influenced the direction in which her talent developed and
by the age of six she was singing with symphony orchestras with her father as
her vocal instructor.
After success touring Europe, Anna Maria was invited to
perform in the United States and made her debut at Carnegie Hall in New
York at the age of 14. Given the state of Italy after the Second World War, the
idea of settling permanently in America became too attractive for the family to
resist.
Alberghetti in an early publicity shot for the MGM studios |
Paramount was the studio that showed the most interest,
foreseeing a bright future for her on screen.
She made her debut in the hypnotic Gian Carlo Menotti's chamber opera
The Medium in 1951. It was an art-house movie that was well appreciated by the
devotees of that genre but Paramount had bigger plans for their new discovery.
However, her talent was used strangely used. After an extended
operatic solo in the Bing Crosby comedy Here Comes the Groom (1951), she played
a Polish émigré befriended by a singer (played by Rosemary Clooney) who
discovers the girl has musical talent of her own in The Stars Are Singing
(1953).
But thereafter, her vocals were required less and less as
Paramount pushed her towards mainstream parts, casting her in adventure stories
and comedies. It was not a path she wanted to follow and after being cast in
the Jerry Lewis farce Cinderfella (1960), in which all the songs were sung by
Lewis and none by her, she became disillusioned and quit cinema to seek
expression on the Broadway stage.
Alberghetti in the Broadway hit Carnival which established her stardom |
Via the Ed Sullivan TV show, she became a familiar face –
and voice - to millions of American households and appearances in other TV
shows followed, as well as a recording career.
She often figured in the gossip pages of newspapers and
magazines after romantic associations with a number of famous figures in the
entertainment world, including the singer Vic Damone, the actors Bob
Wagner and Dick Contino and Count
Alberto Mochiand, a 30-year-old Italian doctor who bought her a pearl
and diamond engagement ring.
She was briefly engaged to the producer-composer Buddy
Bregman but cancelled the wedding plans and began dating Claudio Guzman, the
Chile-born television director, whom she married in September 1964. They had two
children, Alexander, Pilar, but divorced in 1972.
Pesaro, in the Marche region on Italy's Adriatic coast, is a
traditional seaside resort blessed with sandy beaches, particularly popular
with Italians. Situated to the north of the region, it is around 40km (25
miles) south of the better known resort of Rimini and represents an interesting
alternative, although with a population of 95,000 it is by no means a quiet
backwater. A feature, too, is its many cycle paths, which earned Pesaro the
nickname City of Bicycles.
The older part of Pesaro, inland from the grid of streets parallel
with the shoreline where most of the hotels and holiday apartments are
situated, has no shortage of history.
Look out for the Ducal Palace and Rocca Costanza, the palace and castle
built by the Sforza family in the 15th century and the 16th
century Villa Imperiale, built in the 16th century for Duke
Francesco Maria della Rovere and his wife.
The Piazza del Popolo is a pleasant main square where there is a regular
market. The town’s most famous son, the opera composer Gioachino Rossini, is
commemorated in many ways, in particular with the a museum at his birthplace in
what is now Via Rossini and the Conservatorio Statale di Musica in Piazza
Oliveri.
More reading:
Rossini's legacy to Pesaro
Pier Angeli - talented actress who died tragically young
How screen siren Virna Lisi turned her back on glamour roles