Dario D'Ambrosi


Dario D'Ambrosi is an Italian actor and filmmaker.

Biography

D'Ambrosi was born in San Giuliano Milanese in Lombardy, Italy.
While still living in Italy, he became interested in theater and in mental illness. He interned for three months at the Paolo Pini psychiatric hospital in Milan, where he was able to study the patient's behaviors. This experience began to inspire his idea of pathological theatre, or .
He then moved to New York City and met Ellen Stewart, founder of La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in the East Village of Manhattan. She encouraged him to perform a monologue titled Tutti non ci sono at the theatre in 1980.
D'Ambrosi was involved in other productions at La MaMa throughout the 1980s. After the February production of Tutti non ci sono, D'Ambrosi's play Statues of Wax was performed by Il Gruppo Dada Internazionale in May 1980. In 1981, Ozzie Rodriguez directed a production of D'Ambrosi's Days of Antonio. He performed in Tutti non ci sono again at La MaMa in 1983. He then performed La Trota, which dealt with themes of mental illness, in 1986. He performed in his play Enemy of Mine with Stefano Abbati in 1988. In 1989, he performed Tutti non ci sono in English and in Italian. Decades later, in 2004, D'Ambrosi performed Nemico Mio at La MaMa.
He also directed Italian theatre festivals at La MaMa in the late 1980s, and again in 1995. The "L'Altra Italia" festival in 1988 featured work and performances by Mario Prosperi, Paolo Frassanito, Antonello Neri, Ro' Rocchi, Nicola Pistoia, and Lorenzo Alessandri. The 1989 festival featured work and performances by Diviana Ingravallo, Marcello Sambati, and Marcello Bartoli, in addition to D'Ambrosi. In 1995, "L'Altra Italia III" featured work and performances by Paolo Porto, Carla Cassola, Max Scaglione, and Marina Suma.
D'Ambrosi continued acting and also started working as a director. He directed his first film, Il Ronzio delle Mosche, in 2003.
Between 2008 and 2010, he starred in the television series Romanzo criminale in the role of assistant commissioner Scialoja. His character was investigating the Banda della Magliana. In 2004, he appeared in Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ.

Partial filmography

As actor

Film