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poster

Gigliola Cinquetti

Known ForActing
Birthday1947-12-20
Age78 years old
Place of BirthVerona, Veneto, Italy

Biography

Gigliola Cinquetti (born Giliola Cinquetti on 20 December 1947) is an Italian singer, songwriter, and television presenter. Gigliola Cinquetti was born into a wealthy family in Verona. From the ages of 9 to 13, she studied and took piano lessons, taking exams in music theory. She loves painting and art. Her career as a professional singer began when she was 16. At the age of 16 she won the Sanremo Music Festival in 1964 singing "Non ho l'età" ("I'm not old enough"), with music composed by Mario Panzeri and lyrics by Nicola Salerno. Her win enabled her to represent Italy in the Eurovision Song Contest 1964 in Copenhagen with the same song, where she claimed her country's first ever victory in the event. Cinquetti became the youngest winner of the contest, aged 16 years and 92 days. Only one younger artist has triumphed since: Sandra Kim in 1986. The song became an international success, even spending 17 weeks in the UK Singles Chart and ending the year as the 88th best-selling single in the U.K. in 1964, something highly unusual for Italian-language material. It sold over three million copies, and was awarded a platinum disc in August 1964. In 1966, she recorded "Dio, come ti amo" ("God, How I Love You"), which became another international hit. One of her other songs, "Alle porte del sole" (released in 1973), was re-recorded in both English (as "To the Door of the Sun") and Italian by Al Martino, two years after its initial release; "To the Door of the Sun" reached No. 17 on Billboard's Hot 100 in the United States. Cinquetti's own English version of the song was released as a single by CBS Records in August 1974, with her original 1973 Italian version on the B-side. Cinquetti returned in the Eurovision Song Contest 1974, held in Brighton, where she again represented Italy. Performing the song "Sì" ("Yes"), the music and lyrics of which were written by Mario Panzeri, Daniele Pace, Lorenzo Pilat and Carrado Conti, she came second with 18 points after "Waterloo", sung by Sweden's ABBA, who won with 24 points. The live telecast of her song was banned in her home country by the Italian national broadcaster RAI, as the event partially coincided with the campaigning for the 1974 Italian divorce referendum which was to be held a month later in May. RAI censored the song because of concerns that the name and lyrics of the song (which constantly repeated the word 'Sì') could be accused of being a subliminal message and a form of propaganda to influence the Italian voting public to vote 'Yes' in the referendum. The song remained censored on most Italian state TV and radio stations for over a month. Cinquetti later recorded versions of the song in English ("Go (Before You Break My Heart)"), French ("Lui"), German ("Ja") and Spanish ("Si"). The English-language version reached number 8 in the UK Singles Chart in June 1974. She graduated from the art school of Salerno, also obtaining the qualification to teach. She married Luciano Teodori in 1979, and they have two children together — Giovanni and Costantino. She has a sister named Rosabianca. Her parents are Luigi and Sara. ... Source: Article "Gigliola Cinquetti" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Filmography

poster
2001
4.7
Drama
History

Knights Of The Quest

poster
2020
2.0
Documentary
Comedy

The A-Z of Eurovision

poster
1966
6.2
Drama
Romance

How Do I Love You?

poster
1965
Music

Show - Charme - Chansons

poster
1964
5.7
Comedy

Songs, Bullies and Chicks

poster
2023
6.6
Comedy

The Right Age

poster
1966
Comedy

Testadirapa

poster
1968
Music

Il professor Matusa e i suoi hippies

poster
2024
Documentary

Milva, diva per sempre

poster
1965
Music
Comedy

Questi pazzi, pazzi italiani

poster
Music

Congratulations: 50 Years Of The Eurovision Song Contest (1956 - 1980)

poster
1956
7.2
Reality
Talk

Eurovision Song Contest

poster
1956
7.2
Reality
Talk

Eurovision Song Contest

poster
1956
7.2
Reality
Talk

Eurovision Song Contest

poster
1987
5.1
Talk

Sacrée Soirée

poster
1982
6.3
Talk

Champs-Elysées

poster
1975
6.0
Talk

Les Rendez-vous du dimanche

poster
1972
6.0
Reality

Midi trente

poster
1951
7.8
Family
Reality

Sanremo Music Festival

poster
1971
6.0
Talk

Samedi soir

poster
1961
Reality

Musik aus Studio B

poster
1984
4.0
Reality

La Chance aux chansons

poster
1959
Talk

Discorama

poster
1964
6.0
Talk

Die Drehscheibe

poster
1957
6.0
News
Talk

Aktuelle Schaubude

poster
1976
Talk

Domenica In

poster
1969
News

Die ZDF-Hitparade

poster
1975
Reality

Système 2

poster
1968
Talk

Starparade

poster
1965
7.5
Talk

Die Rudi Carrell Show

poster
1969

Peter Alexander präsentiert Spezialitäten

poster
2018
9.1
Documentary

Wonders - The Peninsula of Treasures

poster
1968
Reality

Spotlight

poster
1999
5.7
Comedy

Shopgirls

poster
1972

Hätten Sie heut’ Zeit für mich?

poster
1990
Comedy
Talk

The Sanremo Case

poster
1964
Reality

Musikauktion

poster
1976
Reality

Rendezvous bei Caterina Valente