Fabiola
0 sources
Fabiola
Summary
Fabiola is a film[1]. Fabiola ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (24 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Fabiola's image is recorded as Fabiola (film 1949) Michèle Morgan.png[3].
- Fabiola's instance of is recorded as film[4].
- Fabiola's director is recorded as Alessandro Blasetti[5].
- Fabiola's screenwriter is recorded as Alessandro Blasetti[6].
- Fabiola's screenwriter is recorded as Antonio Pietrangeli[7].
- Fabiola's screenwriter is recorded as Diego Fabbri[8].
- Fabiola's screenwriter is recorded as Cesare Zavattini[9].
- Fabiola's screenwriter is recorded as Emilio Cecchi[10].
- Fabiola's screenwriter is recorded as Vitaliano Brancati[11].
- Fabiola's screenwriter is recorded as Corrado Pavolini[12].
- Fabiola's screenwriter is recorded as Lionello De Felice[13].
- Fabiola's screenwriter is recorded as Umberto Barbaro[14].
- Fabiola's screenwriter is recorded as Suso Cecchi d'Amico[15].
- Fabiola's screenwriter is recorded as Mario Chiari[16].
- Fabiola's screenwriter is recorded as Renato Castellani[17].
- Fabiola's composer is recorded as Enzo Masetti[18].
- Fabiola's genre is recorded as sword-and-sandal film[19].
- Fabiola's genre is recorded as drama film[20].
- Fabiola's based on is recorded as Fabiola[21].
- Fabiola's cast member is recorded as Michèle Morgan[22].
- Fabiola's cast member is recorded as Henri Vidal[23].
- Fabiola's cast member is recorded as Michel Simon[24].
- Fabiola's cast member is recorded as Elisa Cegani[25].
- Fabiola's cast member is recorded as Massimo Girotti[26].
- Fabiola's cast member is recorded as Gino Cervi[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Fabiola's producer is recorded as Salvo D'Angelo[28]. Fabiola's director is recorded as Alessandro Blasetti[5]. Screenwriters include Alessandro Blasetti[6], Antonio Pietrangeli[7], Diego Fabbri[8], Cesare Zavattini[9], Emilio Cecchi[10], and Vitaliano Brancati[11]. Cast members include Michèle Morgan[22], Henri Vidal[23], Michel Simon[24], Elisa Cegani[25], Massimo Girotti[26], and Gino Cervi[27].
Publication
Fabiola's publication date is recorded as +1949-00-00T00:00:00Z[29]. Fabiola's original language of film or TV show is recorded as Italian[30]. Genres include sword-and-sandal film[19] and drama film[20].
Why It Matters
Fabiola ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (24 views/month).[2] Fabiola has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[31]