Is actress Virna Lisi still alive?

Deceased (1936–2014)
Virna Lisi/Living or Deceased

How old is Virna Lisi?

78 years (1936–2014)
Virna Lisi/Age at death

Virna Lisi, who first captivated Italian moviegoers with her smoldering eyes, sulky smile and stunning beauty before sweeping into Hollywood in the 1960s to star opposite such leading men as Frank Sinatra and Tony Curtis, died on Wednesday. She was 78.

When was Virna Lisi born?

November 8, 1936
Virna Lisi/Date of birth

What happened Virna Lisi?

Virna Lisi, a multifaceted Italian actress who found herself hostage to the sultry looks that sparked her career, quitting Hollywood in the 1960s after being typecast in bombshell roles, died Dec. 18 in Rome. She was 78. The cause was cancer, according to Italian media reports.

Where is Verna Lisa now?

On 18 December 2014, Lisi died of lung cancer in Rome at age 78.

Who is Virna Lisi married to?

Franco Pescim. 1960–2013
Virna Lisi/Spouse

Is Lisi a Tongan?

Lisi was born in New Zealand, moved to Sydney at age 3 and eventually onto Goodna, Queensland. It’s the place that made him the artist he is today and a hometown he reps with pride — the 4300 you’ll see in his Instagram handle or scrawled on his t-shirt in video clips is the district’s postcode.

How do you murder your W?

Quine also directed Lemmon in My Sister Eileen, It Happened to Jane, Operation Mad Ball, The Notorious Landlady, and Bell, Book and Candle….

How to Murder Your Wife
Directed by Richard Quine
Written by George Axelrod
Produced by George Axelrod
Starring Jack Lemmon Virna Lisi Terry-Thomas Claire Trevor

Who wrote how do you murder your wife?

George Axelrod
How to Murder Your Wife/Screenplay

Is Lisi a driller?

Yeah, because [on ‘Say Less’] I came across as a driller — “oh, he’s the best in Aussie drill” — I was like, nah, that’s not even me. So I did ‘The Come Up’ which is a more R&B feel beat.

Is Lisi a name?

Italian: patronymic from a reduced form of the personal name Aloisio.

Is how do you murder your wife a true story?

A melodramatic black comedy presenting the true story of Alfred Benning’s murder of his wife, Betty, in 1970s Wellington. The film follows a passive-aggressive man (Simon O’Conner) spiraling toward psychosis as his emotionally abusive wife (Geraldine Brophy) threatens to cast his beloved dog out of the house.