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luglio 22 luglio 23 luglio 24 luglio 25

Celebrities born on luglio 23

Movie celebrities, actresses, actors and film producers born on luglio 23
Kjell Nordenskiöld
Born: lug 23, 1917
Malmö, Skåne län, Sweden
Date of death: gen 27, 2008 (90)
Maoni Drolma
Born: lug 23, 1985
Yushu, Qinghai province,
Age: 39
Maoni Drolma is a Chinese Tibetan female singer and model. She graduated from Xi'an Conservatory of Music. She has a wide range of voice, and becoming an all-round entertainer is her dream.
Dorothy Lewis
Born: lug 23, 1937
New York City, New York,
Age: 87
Dorothy Otnow Lewis is an American psychiatrist and author who has been an expert witness at a number of high-profile cases. She specializes in the study of violent individuals and people with dissociative identity disorder, formerly known as multiple personality disorder.
Flávio Venturini
Born: lug 23, 1949
Belo Horizonte, Minas Ger
Age: 75
Bea Urzaiz
Born: lug 23, 1975
Spain
Age: 49
Thelma Post
Born: lug 23, 1920
Age: 104
Sinhué F. Benavides
Born: lug 23, 1977
Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, Me
Age: 47
Prince Kuhlmann
Born: lug 23, 1990
Hamburg, Germany
Age: 34
Yoshinori Horimoto
Born: lug 23, 1970
Date of death: giu 18, 2017 (46)
Roger Leenhardt
Born: lug 23, 1903
Montpellier, Hérault, Fra
Date of death: dic 04, 1985 (82)
Roger Leenhardt (23 July 1903 – 4 December 1985) was a French writer and filmmaker. Born in a bourgeois Protestant family, this brilliant student of philosophy was very soon fascinated by cinema. Through a cousin, he started working for the newsreel program Éclair Journal and in 1934 set up his own production company with René Zuber, "Les Films du Compas," later known as, "Roger Leenhardt Films.” As a critic in the journal Esprit, he was considered one of the most perceptive observers of pre-war France and strongly influenced André Bazin and the entire "Nouvelle Vague.” Thanks to his series of articles known as "La petite école du spectateur," cinema became considered as an art and a language in its own right. Leenhardt also contributed to other journals, such as Fontaine, Les Lettres Françaises, and l'Ecran français, in which in 1948 he delivered his famous cry, "Down with Ford! Long Live Wyler!" In 1949, he fostered the creation of the cinema club Objectif 49 of which he was the co-president with Robert Bresson and Jean Cocteau. Destined to promote a new cinema d'auteur, the club resulted in the creation in Biarritz of the Festival of Cursed Films [Festival des Films Maudits]. Beginning in the 1950s he presided over the French Association for the Promotion of Cinema [Association française pour la diffusion du cinéma] which organized a traveling festival, Cinéma Days [Les Journées du cinéma] (1953–1960). Finally, in 1955 Leenhardt participated in the creation in Tours of the International Days of Film [Journées internationales du film] which became the Festival of Tours. Specialized in short films, the festival brought together the foremost filmmakers, including François Truffaut, Chris Marker, Agnès Varda, Jacques Demy, Roman Polanski, Robert Enrico, and others. His documentary works are numerous and include the creation of more than 60 short films and the production of a similar number. There are two main categories of his work: Portraits of great writers (e.g. François Mauriac, Paul Valéry, Victor Hugo, etc.), and portraits of famous painters (e.g., Monet, Pissarro, Bazile, etc.). He also made a film on the origins of photography (Daguerre ou la Naissance de la photographie, 1964) and another on the invention of cinema (Naissance du cinéma, 1946), a masterpiece of pedagogical and intelligence. Privileging his artist vision, Leenhardt made only three feature-length fiction films: Les Dernières Vacances [fr] (1948), Le Rendez-vous de minuit [fr] (1961), and, for television, Une fille dans la montagne (1964). Moreover, Roger Leenhardt appeared in three films as an actor. In Les Dernières vacances, he is the teacher. Jean-Luc Godard chose him to be the character "Intelligence" in Une femme mariée (1964) and François Truffaut chose him as the publisher in L'Homme qui aimait les femmes (1977).