Marisa Allasio, born on July fourteenth, nineteen thirty-six, is a celebrated Italian actress known for her captivating performances during the 1950s. With a filmography that includes nearly twenty films from nineteen fifty-two to nineteen fifty-eight, she quickly became a prominent figure in Italian cinema.
During her career, Allasio was often regarded as a quintessential sex symbol, embodying the allure and charm of the era. However, in nineteen fifty-eight, she made the significant decision to step away from the silver screen following her marriage to Count Pier Francesco Calvi di Bergolo, a member of the Italian nobility.
Count Calvi di Bergolo, born on December twenty-second, nineteen thirty-two and who passed away in two thousand twelve, was the son of Princess Iolanda di Savoia, the first-born of King Vittorio Emanuele III and Queen Elena of Montenegro. Together, Marisa and Pier Francesco welcomed two children into their family: Carlo Giorgio Dmitri Drago Maria Laetitia, born in nineteen fifty-nine in Rome, and Anda Federica Angelica Maria, born in nineteen sixty-two, also in Rome.