Johnny Dorelli
Johnny Dorelli | |
---|---|
Dorelli in 1958 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Giorgio Guidi |
Also known as | D.Johnny, Dorellik |
Born | (1937-02-20) 20 February 1937 (age 87) Meda, Milan, Italy |
Genres | Easy listening, jazz, swing, pop |
Occupation(s) | Actor, singer, presenter |
Years active | 1951–present |
Spouse(s) | Catherine Spaak (m. 1972; div. 1979)Gloria Guida (m. 1991) |
Giorgio Guidi (born 20 February 1937), known professionally as Johnny Dorelli, is an Italian actor, singer and television host.
Early life
Dorelli was born in Meda, Italy. In 1946 he moved to New York City with his family, where his father, Nino D'Aurelio (born Aurelio Guidi), found work as opera singer. Dorelli studied double bass and piano at the High School of Music and Art in New York. He took the stage name Dorelli in imitation of how the surname D'Aurelio was pronounced in English.
His show business career began when he was discovered by bandleader Percy Faith, who brought him on The Ken Murray Show. He later appears on the show By Popular Demand conducted by Robert Alda, accompanied by Paul Whiteman. He receive a great success, in fact some American newspapers described Dorelli as a "phenomenal Italian boy". However he returned to Italy in 1955 due to the expiry of his residence permit.
He debuted as singer and pianist in the late 1950s for CGD label with cover of American standards; Lover, What is this thing called love, Love me or leave me and many others.
Career
His first success was an easy listening Latin song, Calypso melody in 1957. In 1958 and in 1959 he won the Sanremo Festival in duo with Domenico Modugno, with the songs "Nel blu dipinto di blu" (also known as "Volare") and "Piove (Ciao ciao bambina)". His most famous songs of the period are : Julia (1958), Boccuccia Di Rosa (Pink Lips) (1958), Love in Portofino (1959), Lettera A Pinocchio (1959), Monte Carlo (1961).
In 1962 he appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show and sang his smooth ballad Love In Portofino and You're the Top with Connie Francis and Johnny Hallyday.
As a (popular and jazz) crooner, he sang numerous songs live on television shows (mainly in the 1960s), in Italian and in English.
In 1967 "L'immensità" earned Dorelli a ninth place at the 1967 edition of the Sanremo Song Festival.[1] In the same year he was the lead actor on the movie How to Kill 400 Duponts, a parody of the comic series Diabolik. With this role, Dorelli had a great success and he inspired the character of Paperinik. Some songs of this periods are Speedy Gonzales (1962), Era Settembre (1964), Probabilmente (1965), Al Buio Sto Sognando (1966), Solo Più Che Mai (Strangers In The Night) (1966), Arriva La Bomba (1967), I Think of You (1972).
His greatest success was the musical Aggiungi un posto a tavola, which was also performed at the Adelphi Theatre in London's West End in an English version entitled Beyond the Rainbow in 1978.
After a period of absence, he returned to success in the 1980s. In 1983, he played St. Philip Neri in Luigi Magni's TV film State buoni se potete. Dorelli's latest feature film role is in Pupi Avati's Ma quando arrivano le ragazze (2004).
In 2007 he returned after 38 years to the stage of Sanremo as a participant with the song "Meglio così", written by Gianni Ferrio and Giorgio Calabrese, and accompanied by jazz pianist Stefano Bollani and the orchestra conducted by Ferrio.
Personal life
Dorelli had a long relationship with actress Lauretta Masiero, which produced a son, Gianluca Guidi. He then married (1972–1979) actress Catherine Spaak, with whom he had another son, Gabriele, and (1991) Gloria Guida, a former model and actress in Italian comedy movies of the 1970s, with whom he had a daughter, Guendalina.
His eyes have two different colors, a condition called heterochromia iridum.
Selected filmography
- Toto, Peppino and the Fanatics, directed by Mario Mattoli (1958)
- How to Kill 400 Duponts, directed by Steno (1967)
- Bread and Chocolate, directed by Franco Brusati (1973)
- Tell Me You Do Everything for Me (1976)
- Il mostro, directed by Luigi Zampa (1977)
- Odd Squad (film), directed by Enzo Barboni (1981)
- State buoni se potete, directed by Luigi Magni (1983)
- But When Do the Girls Get Here?, directed by Pupi Avati (2005)
Discography
Albums
- 1955 - Songo americano (CGD, MV 203)
- 1958 - Cordialmente (CGD, MV 224)
- 1958 - È arrivato da Sanremo (CGD, MV 225)
- 1958 - Dance with (Liberty, I 8508)
- 1959 - We Like Johnny (CGD, FG 5002)
- 1959 - Sanremo 1959 (CGD, SR 1012)
- 1964 - 30 anni di canzoni d'amore (CGD, FG 5010)
- 1965 - Viaggio Sentimentale (CGD, FG 5017)
- 1965 - Johnny Dorelli (CGD, FG 5024)
- 1967 - L'immensità (CGD, FG 5032)
- 1970 - Promesse Promesse (CGD, FGS 5063, con Catherine Spaak)
- 1973 - Le canzoni che piacciono a lei (CGD, 69030)
- 1975 - Aggiungi un posto a tavola (CGD, 88119)
- 1975 - Toi et Moi (CGD, 69060, con Catherine Spaak)
- 1978 - Giorgio (WEA Italiana, T56588)
- 1980 - Accendiamo la lampada (Cam, ARSAG 29103)
- 1989 - Mi son svegliato e c'eri tu (Five Record, FM 14204)
- 2004 - Swingin' (Carosello, CARSM120-2)
- 2007 - Swingin' - parte seconda (Carosello, CARSM198)
References
- ^ Indice brani (in Italian) at HitParadeItalia site
- v
- t
- e
- Nilla Pizzi ("Grazie dei fiori")
- Nilla Pizzi ("Vola colomba")
- Carla Boni / Flo Sandon's ("Viale d'autunno")
- Giorgio Consolini / Gino Latilla ("Tutte le mamme")
- Claudio Villa / Tullio Pane ("Buongiorno tristezza")
- Franca Raimondi ("Aprite le finestre")
- Claudio Villa / Nunzio Gallo ("Corde della mia chitarra")
- Domenico Modugno / Johnny Dorelli ("Nel blu, dipinto di blu")
- Domenico Modugno / Johnny Dorelli ("Piove (Ciao, ciao bambina)")
- Tony Dallara / Renato Rascel ("Romantica")
- Betty Curtis / Luciano Tajoli ("Al di là")
- Domenico Modugno / Claudio Villa ("Addio, addio")
- Tony Renis / Emilio Pericoli ("Uno per tutte")
- Gigliola Cinquetti / Patricia Carli ("Non ho l'età")
- Bobby Solo / The New Christy Minstrels ("Se piangi, se ridi")
- Domenico Modugno / Gigliola Cinquetti ("Dio, come ti amo")
- Claudio Villa / Iva Zanicchi ("Non pensare a me")
- Sergio Endrigo / Roberto Carlos ("Canzone per te")
- Bobby Solo / Iva Zanicchi ("Zingara")
- Adriano Celentano / Claudia Mori ("Chi non lavora non fa l'amore")
- Nada / Nicola Di Bari ("Il cuore è uno zingaro")
- Nicola Di Bari ("I giorni dell'arcobaleno")
- Peppino di Capri ("Un grande amore e niente più")
- Iva Zanicchi ("Ciao cara come stai?")
- Gilda ("Ragazza del sud")
- Peppino di Capri ("Non lo faccio più")
- Homo Sapiens ("Bella da morire")
- Matia Bazar ("...e dirsi ciao")
- Mino Vergnaghi ("Amare")
- Toto Cutugno ("Solo noi")
- Alice ("Per Elisa")
- Riccardo Fogli ("Storie di tutti i giorni")
- Tiziana Rivale ("Sarà quel che sarà")
- Al Bano and Romina Power ("Ci sarà")
- Ricchi e Poveri ("Se m'innamoro")
- Eros Ramazzotti ("Adesso tu")
- Gianni Morandi, Umberto Tozzi and Enrico Ruggeri ("Si può dare di più")
- Massimo Ranieri ("Perdere l'amore")
- Anna Oxa and Fausto Leali ("Ti lascerò")
- Pooh ("Uomini soli")
- Riccardo Cocciante ("Se stiamo insieme")
- Luca Barbarossa ("Portami a ballare")
- Enrico Ruggeri ("Mistero")
- Aleandro Baldi ("Passerà")
- Giorgia ("Come saprei")
- Ron and Tosca ("Vorrei incontrarti fra cent'anni")
- Jalisse ("Fiumi di parole")
- Annalisa Minetti ("Senza te o con te")
- Anna Oxa ("Senza pietà")
- Piccola Orchestra Avion Travel ("Sentimento")
- Elisa ("Luce (Tramonti a nord est)")
- Matia Bazar ("Messaggio d'amore")
- Alexia ("Per dire di no")
- Marco Masini ("L'uomo volante")
- Francesco Renga ("Angelo")
- Povia ("Vorrei avere il becco")
- Simone Cristicchi ("Ti regalerò una rosa")
- Giò Di Tonno and Lola Ponce ("Colpo di fulmine")
- Marco Carta ("La forza mia")
- Valerio Scanu ("Per tutte le volte che...")
- Roberto Vecchioni ("Chiamami ancora amore")
- Emma Marrone ("Non è l'inferno")
- Marco Mengoni ("L'essenziale")
- Arisa ("Controvento")
- Il Volo ("Grande amore")
- Stadio ("Un giorno mi dirai")
- Francesco Gabbani ("Occidentali's Karma")
- Ermal Meta and Fabrizio Moro ("Non mi avete fatto niente")
- Mahmood ("Soldi")
- Diodato ("Fai rumore")
- Måneskin ("Zitti e buoni")
- Mahmood and Blanco ("Brividi")
- Marco Mengoni ("Due vite")
- Angelina Mango ("La noia")