Giovanni Fusco (10 October 1906, Sant'Agata dei Goti, Benevento – 31 May 1968, Rome) was an Italian composer, pianist and conductor, who has written numerous film scores since 1936, including those of Alain Resnais's Hiroshima mon amour (1959) and La guerre est finie (1966), as well as those of most of the 1948-1964 films directed by Michelangelo Antonioni, from N.U. (Nettezza Urbana) to Il deserto rosso, except for La notte (soundtrack by Giorgio Gaslini) and some of his early short films. Two of his soundtracks, those of Antonioni's Cronaca di un amore and L'avventura, won Silver Ribbon for the best film score from Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists in 1951 and 1961, respectively. His brother Tarcisio Fusco was also a composer. His daughter was the operatic soprano Cecilia Fusco. Source: Article "Giovanni Fusco" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Birthday: October 10, 1906
Death: May 31, 1968
November 19, 1963
May 11, 1966
May 01, 1948
November 18, 1955
February 16, 1954
March 07, 1954
June 09, 1954
September 04, 1964
December 07, 1960
May 16, 1946
March 07, 1940
July 14, 1962
December 10, 1960
March 26, 1960
February 05, 1938
February 24, 1963
November 26, 1961
October 05, 1960
November 01, 1948
April 01, 1950
October 23, 1958
November 28, 1962
February 17, 1968
February 27, 1953
November 03, 1950
March 19, 1963
December 29, 1964
October 08, 1964
April 29, 1970
October 26, 1961
October 22, 1953
October 20, 1940
December 15, 1940
February 04, 1960
September 21, 1945
August 11, 1968
February 16, 2009
October 07, 1953
June 10, 1959
September 14, 1960
December 03, 1963
April 13, 1962
February 24, 1968
February 06, 1952
September 26, 1957
January 01, 1946
September 12, 1965
June 22, 1961
September 05, 1941
February 03, 1942
December 21, 1967
February 28, 1967
May 29, 1969
September 24, 1964
May 01, 1949
October 01, 1948
March 08, 1962
September 07, 1955
October 16, 1964
April 19, 1968
November 22, 1963
February 28, 2005
May 01, 1968
December 12, 1937
January 01, 1961
August 29, 1958
January 01, 1949
May 10, 1962
January 01, 1951