Franca in the movie What Scoundrels Men Are! (1932)
Born
Livia Caterina Petra Penso
1912
Trieste, Kingdom of Italy
Died
1 January 1988(1988-01-01) (aged 75–76)
Rome, Italy
Other names
Lya Franca Libia Franca
Occupation
Actress
Lia Franca (1912 – 1 January 1988) was an Italian film actress. She was sometimes credited as Lya Franca and Libia Franca.[1]
^Pietro Spirito (5 August 2010). "È a lei che un giovanissimo Vittorio De Sica canta la canzone "Parlami d'amore Mariù"". Il Piccolo. Retrieved 9 August 2014.
LiaFranca (1912 – 1 January 1988) was an Italian film actress. She was sometimes credited as Lya Franca and Libia Franca. Born Livia Caterina Petra Penso...
Francesca Lia Block (born 1962), American fantasy writer Lia Block (Born 2006), American racing driver and Williams Racing Junior driver LiaFranca (1912-1988)...
and screenwriter. A Sardinian by birth, he was married to the actress LiaFranca. He began his career in the 1930s as a production manager in the 1930s...
Foglietta (born 1979) Iaia Forte (born 1962) Anna Fougez (1894–1966) LiaFranca (1912–1988) Rina Franchetti (1907–2010) Teresa Franchini (1877–1972) Chiara...
Italian crime film directed by Guido Brignone and starring Marcella Albani, LiaFranca and Carlo Ninchi. It was made at the Cines Studios in Rome. The film is...
Enzo Cannavale as Peppino Franca Valeri as Giulia Nascimbeni Didi Perego as Monica Gigi Ballista as Gervasio Caminata Lia Tanzi as Marisa Enzo Andronico...
Pola Musical What Scoundrels Men Are! Mario Camerini Vittorio De Sica, LiaFranca, Cesare Zoppetti Comedy Great success Your Money or Your Life Carlo Ludovico...
(See Timor–Flores languages and Timor–Alor–Pantar languages.) The lingua franca and national language of East Timor is Tetum, an Austronesian language influenced...
regional lingua francas, foreign and additional languages, heritage languages, languages in the religious domain, English as a lingua franca, and sign languages...
as Judith Lia Angeleri as Lori's stepmother Carlo Palmucci as Giorgio Produced by Pasquale Festa Campanile and Massimo Franciosa for Franca Film (Rome)...
in the late 19th century and due to the fact French used to be a lingua franca for intellectual Brazilians and Brazilian international diplomacy in the...
'sun' and sa'e 'to rise, to go up'. The noun for 'word' is liafuan, from lia 'voice' and fuan 'fruit'. Some more words in Tetum: aas – 'high' aat – 'bad'...
melodrama film directed by Pino Mercanti. Paul Muller as Count Franco Sampieri Franca Marzi as Elsa Di Lauro Otello Toso as Carlo Mattei Evi Maltagliati as Giulia...
Turkic, languages; however, Russian is the primary language and the lingua franca in the republic. The word Dagestan is of Turkish and Persian origin, directly...
Nazzari Tomas Milian Romolo Valli Renato Salvatori Paolo Stoppa Walter Chiari Franca Valeri Anouk Aimée Franco Citti Sylva Koscina Virna Lisi Carlo Pisacane...
ISBN 978-0-0606-4166-5. Allen, Charlotte (February 1995). "Away with the Manger". Lingua Franca: 27. "Fondslijst Uitgeverij Bijleveld". bijleveldbooks.nl (in Dutch). Archived...
1991 Hot Shots! Ramada Thompson The Indian Runner Maria Year of the Gun Lia 1992 Puerto Escondido Anita 1993 Hot Shots! Part Deux Ramada Thompson 1994...
Castelvecchio". London ; Boston : Butterworth Architecture, 1990. Camerlengo, Lia (1984). "Negozio Olivetti, Procuratie vecchie, piazza S. Marco, Venezia,...
into a multilingual city with French as the majority language and lingua franca. Since the independence of Belgium in 1830, the constitutional title of...
as well as in overseas communities. In mainland China, it is the lingua franca of the province of Guangdong (being the majority language of the Pearl River...
Series XCO Ispaster 2024 Results sani2c Race Results XVIII BTT XCO de Vila Franca Results CIMTB Araxá 20 Years: XCC Class 3 - Araxá Results City Mountainbike...
Enrico Viarisio as Evaristo Federica Ranchi as Luisa Sandra Milo as Silvana Lia Di Leo as Gemma Vilma Viani as Amica di Luisa Eva Vanicek as Patrizia Cristina...
from the original (PDF) on 14 May 2021. Retrieved 7 August 2020. Calabre, Lia (2008). No tempo do rádio: Radiodifusão e cotidiano no Brasil (1923–1960)...