Sylva Koscina


Sylva Koscina was a Yugoslav-born Italian actress, maybe best remembered for her role as Iole, the bride of Hercules in Hercules and Hercules Unchained. She also played Paul Newman's romantic interest in The Secret War of Harry Frigg.

Early life

She was born Silvija Košćina to a Greek father, who had a hotel in the "West Coast" section of Split, Dalmatia, and a Polish mother.
During World War II, as a teenager, she moved to Italy to live with her sister, who had married an Italian citizen.
After winning beauty contests as a teenager, she was offered modelling work. In 1954, while studying physics at the University of Naples, and living in a boarding school of nuns, she was asked to be Miss di Tappa, who presents flowers to the winner of a stage of the 1954 Giro d'Italia bicycle race, then at Naples. She was convinced, but with difficulty because of her shyness, then a picture of her, kissing the winner, was published in newspapers all over Europe.

Career

noticed her and decided to cast her in a small role for the movie Questi fantasmi that was about to be filmed. This did not eventually happen, but it did lead to a small part, of an aspiring actress, alongside Totò in Are We Men or Corporals? by Camillo Mastrocinque, leading to her breakout role, portraying Giulia, daughter of the train engineer Andrea, in Pietro Germi's The Railroad Man. Koscina returned in Guendalina, playing the part of a young mother.
A lead player in popular comedies, such as Nonna Sabella, Ladro lui, ladra lei, and Poveri milionari, Koscina alternated cleverly between roles as vamp and ingenue. She represented women in search of social upward mobility, the image of an Italy that had left its worst problems behind.
, Milena Dravić, and Bata Živojinović at the Battle of Neretva premiere in Sarajevo in November 1969.
Koscina was suited to sophisticated comedies like Mogli pericolose, where she made a direct sentimental challenge to poor Giorgia Moll. She played Hercules' fiancée in Le fatiche di Ercole, a prototype of this kind of film. In Italy, a police officer let her go without issuing a traffic ticket. Later, as a guest on a television program, she thanked the policeman, thus getting him into trouble with the police department. The incident and its aftermath inspired the movie Il vigile, in which she played herself.
In the first half of the 1960s, she married her lover, Raimondo Castelli, a small producer connected with Minerva Films. She managed to keep well afloat with roles in Damiano Damiani's . In La lepre e la tartaruga, an episode in Le quattro verita , the director Blasetti constructed a duel between Koscina and Monica Vitti. In 1965, Koscina appeared in Giulietta degli spiriti. She was also a television personality and often made special guest appearances on variety shows. She also co-starred in Jesus Franco's Marquis de Sade: Justine, as well as Mario Bava's 1972 film Lisa and the Devil.
From the early 1960s, she invested most of her considerable earnings in a luxurious villa, in the well-to-do district of Marino, Rome, complete with 16th-century furniture and artistic paintings. That lasted until her spending overcame her dwindling income, and she had to face a tax evasion inquest, when she was forced to sell her house in 1976. Living with Raimondo Castelli since 1960, they did not marry due to then Italian law and because his wife Marinella refused him an annulment. Castelli and Koscina married in Mexico in 1967, but that marriage was not recognized in Italy.
photographed Koscina for the American edition of Playboy in May 1967.
After passing 30, she partnered with actors such as Kirk Douglas in A Lovely Way to Die and Paul Newman in The Secret War of Harry Frigg, but without any luck. Her career was given a boost in the second half of the 1960s when she was photographed bare-breasted in the Italian edition of Playboy magazine. Mauro Bolognini's L'assoluto naturale was released, complete with a "chaste" full nude shot.
She also starred in the 1967 comedy caper Three Bites of the Apple with David McCallum, and Deadlier Than the Male, in which Elke Sommer and she portrayed sophisticated professional killers dueling with Bulldog Drummond. She also played Danica in the Yugoslavian movie The Battle of Neretva, in 1969. She played a German doctor, Bianca, in Hornets' Nest with Rock Hudson.

Personal quotes

Sylva Koscina died in Rome in 1994, aged 61, from breast cancer.

Selected filmography