Milva

Personal Info

Known For Actor

Gender Female

Birthday 1939-07-17

Deathday 2021-04-23 (81 years old)

Place of Birth Goro, Emilia-Romagna, Italy

Also Known As Maria Ilva Biolcati

Milva

Biography

Maria Ilva Biolcati, (17 July 1939 – 23 April 2021), known as Milva, was an Italian singer, stage and film actress, and television personality. She was also known as La Rossa (Italian for "The Redhead"), due to the characteristic colour of her hair, and additionally as La Pantera di Goro ("The Panther of Goro"), which stemmed from the Italian press having nicknamed the three most popular Italian female singers of the 1960s, combining the names of animals and the singers' birth places. The colour also characterised her leftist political beliefs, claimed in numerous statements. Popular in Italy and abroad, she performed on musical and theatrical stages the world over, and received popular acclaim in her native Italy, and particularly in Germany and Japan, where she often participated in musical events and televised musical programmes. She released numerous albums in France, Japan, Korea, Greece, Spain, and South America. She collaborated with European composers and musicians including Ennio Morricone in 1965, Francis Lai in 1973, Mikis Theodorakis in 1978 (Was ich denke became a best selling album in Germany), Enzo Jannacci in 1980, Vangelis in 1981 and 1986, and Franco Battiato in 1982, 1986 and 2010. Her stage productions of Bertolt Brecht's recitals and Luciano Berio's operas toured the world's theatres. She performed at La Scala in Milan, at the Deutsche Oper in Berlin, at the Paris Opera, in the Royal Albert Hall in London and at the Edinburgh Festival, amongst others. Having had success both in Italy and internationally, she remained one of the most popular Italian personalities in the fields of music and theatre. Her artistic stature was officially recognised by the Italian, German and French Republics, each of which bestowed her with the highest honours. She was the only Italian artist in contemporary times who was simultaneously: Chevalier of the National Order of the Legion of Honour of the French Republic (Paris, 11 September 2009), Commander of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic (Rome, 2 June 2007), Officer of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany (Berlin, 2006), and Officier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (Paris, 1995). Maria Ilva Biolcati was born in Goro, Province of Ferrara, Italy, on 17 July 1939. In 1959, when she was twenty, she won a contest for new voices, and was named the overall winner from more than seven thousand six hundred participants. In 1960 she recorded her first 7" single with Cetra Records: Édith Piaf's song "Milord". Her live debut was on the stage of the Sanremo Music Festival in 1961, where she took third place. In 1962 Milva was the first singer to sing Édith Piaf's repertoire at the prestigious Olympia theatre in Paris. In 1983 she performed the repertoire at the venue again and again received an ovation from the audience and the French press, very surprised how a non-French artist could interpret with such feeling and energy the songs of Piaf. Music critics named her singer of the year. ... Source: Article "Milva" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Known For

Actor

2024
2020
TV Story Superstar

as Self (archive footage)

2010
1999
Beckmann

as Self

1999
Show Palast

as Self

1997
Leute heute

as Self

1996
Celluloide

as Countess

1991
Musik liegt in der Luft

as Self - Singer

1988
Women in Prison

as Lucie Germon

1988
Flitterabend

as Self - Singer

1987
Na siehste!

as Self

1983
Street of Mirrors

as Veronica

1983
Bei Bio

as Self

1982
Na sowas!

as Self

1982
1981
Bananas

as Self

1981
1981
1980
Show-Express

as Self

1979
1978
1977
1977
1976
Domenica In

as Self

1975
Feuerabend

as Self

1975
Numéro un

as Self

1974
1972
1972
1972
A Kettle of Colour

as Self - Musician

1971
Dalli Dalli

as Self

1970
1969
1968
Starparade

as Self

1962
1961
1957
1955
Was bin ich?

as self

Sound

2017
Libere

as Original Music Composer

1996
Anni ribelli

as Songs