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Fabbri
Fabbri is an Italian surname. Notable people with the name include: * Adriana Bisi Fabbri (1881–1918), Italian painter * Agenore Fabbri (1911–1998), Italian sculptor and painter * Alan Fabbri (born 1979), Italian politician * Alejandro Fabbri (born 1982), Argentine tennis player * Alessandro Fabbri (1877–1922), commander of the Otter Cliffs Radio Station * Alessandro Fabbri (footballer) (born 1990), Italian footballer * Alex Fabbri (born 1998), Sammarinese motorcycle racer * Alicia Fabbri (born 2003), Candian ice dancer * Andrea Fabbri (born 1992), Italian ice dancer * Camila Fabbri (born 1989), Argentine writer, playwright and actress * Cora Fabbri (1871–1892), American poet * Daniele Fabbri or Daniele Luttazzi (born 1961), Italian comedian, writer, satirist, illustrator and singer/songwriter * Davidé Fabbri, Italian comic book artist * Diego Fabbri (1911–1980), Italian playwright * Edda Fabbri (born 1949), Uruguayan writer * Edmondo Fabbri (1921–1995), Italia ...
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Agenore Fabbri
Agenore Fabbri (20 May 1911 – 7 November 1998) was an Italian sculptor and painter. He moved between a rigorous expressionism and experimental informalism. Biography Fabbri was born in Quarrata (Tuscany). At the age of 12, he attended the Scuola d'Arte in Pistoia and then, under the instruction of the painter Fabio Casanova, he decided to embark on an artistic career and created his first sculptures, mainly using the wax and plaster. In 1932 Fabbri, in order to continue his education at the Accademia di Belle Arti, moved to Florence where he frequented the artists' Caffè Giubbe Rosse, meeting point for the intellectuals known as the Ermetici Group (Eugenio Montale, Carlo Bo, etc.) and also came into contact with the painter Ottone Rosai and the poet Mario Luzi. At the end of the year he moved to Albisola (Savona), where he worked in the ''La Fiamma'' (The Flame) ceramic workshop and created his first terracotta sculptures, mainly biblical figures. In 1933 he made friends ...
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Alicia Fabbri
Alicia Fabbri (born February 16, 2003) is a Canadian ice dancer. With her skating partner, Paul Ayer, she is the 2019 Canadian national junior silver medalist and the 2019 Bavarian Open junior silver medalist. They placed in the top nine at the 2019 World Junior Championships. Personal life Fabbri was born on February 16, 2003, in Laval, Quebec. Outside of skating, she enjoys boating and being outdoors. Her favorite subject in school is mathematics. Career Early career Fabbri began competing with Claudio Pietrantonio in the 2014–15 season. Together, they were the 2016 Canadian national novice silver medalists. They were coached by Julien Lalonde, Mylène Girard, and Lynn McKay in La Prairie, Quebec and Saint-Hubert, Quebec. 2016–2017 season: Junior debut Fabbri/Pietrantonio opened their season with a fourth-place finish at the 2016 Lake Placid Ice Dance International. They were assigned to their first Junior Grand Prix events. Fabbri/Pietrantonio placed fourth at 2016 ...
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Edmondo Fabbri
Edmondo Fabbri (16 November 1921 – 8 July 1995) was an Italian football player and coach; a fast player, he mainly played as a winger. Playing career Fabbri was born in Castel Bolognese. During his club career, he played for several teams. He made his career debut with Imola in 1938, and he moved to Forlì (1939–40) the next season, later playing for Atalanta (1940–42, 1947–50) for two seasons, and subsequently with Inter (1942–43, 1945–46), and Faenza (1944), returning to Inter for a season in 1945. He moved to play with Sampdoria during the 1946–47 season, before returning to Atalanta for three seasons. He also later played for Brescia (1950–51), and Parma (1951–55), also winning the 1953–54 Serie C title. He ended his career with Mantova F.C. (1955–57). He also made one appearance for the Italian youth side in 1942. Managerial career After retiring from football, Fabbri began a coaching career with Mantova in 1957, in Serie D, the team with which he h ...
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Diego Fabbri
Diego Fabbri (July 2, 1911 – August 14, 1980) was an Italian playwright whose plays centered on religious (Catholic) themes. Early career Fabbri graduated from the University of Bologna in 1936 with a degree in economics and business. But his writing career had begun well before that. His first play, ''The Flowers of Pain'', was published in 1928. He followed it with ''The Node'', which was banned by the fascist government. In 1938, he collaborated with Guido Chiesa to write the play ''Absent''. In 1939 Fabbri received an invitation to Rome, to become director of the Publisher Avenue. Then, in 1940, he was appointed secretary of the Catholic Film Center. He held the post until 1959. During this time, Fabbri began work on ''The Literary Fair''. His co-director on this project was the poet Vincenzo Cardarelli. The project could not be completed until 1966, and Vincenzo Cardarelli did not live to see it. Fabbri was particularly prolific in 1940. In that year, he wrote three plays ...
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Marcello Fabbri
Marcello Fabbri (1923-2015) was an Italian writer and poet born in Florence, Italy, where he lived and wrote. Fabbri graduated with a degree in jurisprudence. He fought in World War II and recorded much of his war experiences, which affected him deeply, in his work. In 1970, Fabbri lost his sight in an auto accident. Much of his verse is dedicated to the transcendence of the experience. In 1998, Fabbri was appointed President of the Florentine Chamber of Poets (Camerata dei Poeti) in the tradition of the Florentine Camerata. He was the successor of Otello Pagliai. He is an Academic of the MUSE. Giorgio Bàrberi Squarotti is among Fabbri's colleagues to reference his works. With Florentine council members Anna Balsamo, Duccia Camiciotti and others, Fabbri organized literary salons and presentations to honor his contemporaries, poets such as Mario Luzi Mario Luzi (20 October 1914 – 28 February 2005) was an Italian poet. Biography Born in Castello, near Sesto Fiorentino, ...
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Alessandro Fabbri
Alessandro Fabbri (1877–1922) was both the builder and the commanding officer of the Otter Cliffs Radio Station, a United States Navy facility that was important during World War I. He was awarded the Navy Cross for exceptionally meritorious service. Before the US entered the war, the ''New York Times'' reported that Alessandro and his brother Ernesto Giuseppi Fabbri Jr. were under investigation by the US government, suspected of using radio equipment to assist German spies. Upon publication of a vigorous response from Ernesto, the Times clarified that the government had been investigating radio operators in general, not targeting the Fabbris specifically. Alessandro's brother Ernesto and uncle were associate and partner respectively of J.P. Morgan & Co. Ernesto Jr. and family owned the Bar Harbor "cottage" Buonriposo. Alessandro Fabbri was remembered as a scientist who also "achieved distinction as a naturalist, hunter, yachtsman, explorer and inventor." Fabbri Memori ...
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Andrea Fabbri
Andrea Fabbri (born 5 October 1992) is an Italian former ice dancer, who competed with Carolina Moscheni for Italy. Moscheni/Fabbri are the 2019 Italian national bronze medalists. With his previous partner Misato Komatsubara, he won five international medals, including silver at the 2015 CS Ice Challenge. Personal life Andrea Fabbri was born on 5 October 1992 in Milan. He is the brother of Marco Fabbri. Career Early years Fabbri began learning to skate in 1999. With partner Alessia Busi, he won the junior silver medal at the 2012 and 2013 Italian Championships. The duo finished 17th at the 2013 World Junior Championships. Partnership with Komatsubara Fabbri and Japan's Misato Komatsubara represented Italy on the senior level. Their international debut came in October 2014 at the Ondrej Nepela Trophy, a Challenger Series (CS) event where they finished 6th. After winning bronze medals at the Santa Claus Cup and Italian Championships, they were sent to the 2015 E ...
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Luigi Fabbri
Luigi Fabbri (1877–1935) was an Italian anarchist, writer, and educator, who was charged with defeatism during World War I. He was the father of Luce Fabbri. Selected works *''Life of Malatesta'', translated by Adam Wight (originally published 1936). This book was published again with expanded content in 1945. *''Malatesta: L'Uomo e il Pensiero'' *''Letters to a Woman on Anarchy'', 1905 *''Workers' Organisation and Anarchy'', 1906 pamphlet *''Anarchist Organisation'', 1907 pamphlet *''The School and the Revolution'', 1912 *''Letters to a Socialist'', 1913 *''The Aware Generation'', 1913 *''Bourgeois Influences on Anarchism'', 1914 *''Dictatorship and Revolution'', 1921 *''Preventive Counter-revolution'', 1922 Further reading * * * * * * * * External links * Luigi Fabbri Papersat the International Institute of Social History The International Institute of Social History (IISH/IISG) is one of the largest archives of labor and social history in the worl ...
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Inez Fabbri
Inez Fabbri (26 January 1831 – 30 August 1909), ''née'' Agnes Schmidt, was an Austrian American soprano, voice teacher and impresaria. She sang in Austria, Germany, England, South America and the Caribbean, making her home in San Francisco where, in the 1870s, she was the most important musical personality and '' prima donna assoluta'' of her time, performing in more than 150 concerts and operas from 1872 to 1879, producing operas, and teaching voice to up-and-coming singers. Early career She was the daughter of an impoverished Viennese textile manufacturer. She made a successful operatic debut in Kassa, Hungary, (now Košice, Slovakia) in Donizetti's ''Lucrezia Borgia'' in 1847. After a few years on the road singing in Königsberg (1856–1857) and Potsdam (1857), she arrived at the Hamburgischerer Stadttheater where, among other roles, she received recognition for Valentine in Meyerbeer's ''Les Huguenots'' which became one of her starring roles.''Österreichisches Biograph ...
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Davidé Fabbri
Davidé Fabbri is an Italian comic book artist. He has worked mainly for Dark Horse Comics on various Star Wars series. Also worked for Dynamite and recently for DC Comics. In 2010, he worked on Victorian Undead, written by Ian Edginton for Wildstorm. This series pitted Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson against a legion of undead zombies. It was nominated for a Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Awards in 2010. "Being a fan of science fiction, and doing my work almost entirely abroad, I found it enjoyable the idea of returning from Italian readers with a publication of this kind".Davidé Fabbri talking to 'Marcello "Mars" During' about 'Kepher', an Italian comic series he illustrated all the covers for, published by Star Comics in 2012. Published work Writer * 9-11: Artists Respond, Volume One (2002) Penciller and Inker *'' Batman: Arkham Unhinged'' #15 (for DC Comics) Jun 12 2013 Written by * Operation Overlord #1-4 (2014-2015) #1 Written by Michaël Le Galli, #2-4 Written by Bruno ...
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Adriana Bisi Fabbri
Adriana Bisi Fabbri (1881–1918) was an Italian painter. Biography Adriana Fabbri was born in Ferrara, where she met her future husband, journalist Giannetto Bisi, and she spent part of her youth in Padua as a guest of Umberto Boccioni’s mother. In Padua, and later in Milan, where she moved with the family in 1905, she produced numerous painting studies and, a self-taught artist, she developed further by frequenting the studios of Gaetano Previati and Luigi Conconi. In 1907, she moved to Bergamo with her husband and the following year she made her debut with two drawings at the 2nd Quadriennale in Turin. In 1911, she participated in ''Frigidarium'', the international humour exhibition organised at Castello di Rivoli, where she won the bronze medal; in the same year she took part in the 1st Esposizione Libera organised in Milan by Boccioni and other Futurist intellectuals. In later years she participated in other group exhibitions, including those at the Ca’ Pesaro in Ven ...
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Cora Fabbri
Cora Randall Fabbri ( – ) was an American poet. She died at the age of twenty, shortly before her only book of poetry, ''Lyrics'' (1892), was published. Cora Fabbri was born on in New York City. She was one of eight children of a wealthy Italian-American businessman, Ernesto Giuseppe Fabbri, and an American woman, Sara Randall, daughter of his business partner. Ernesto Fabbri died in 1883, and the family moved to Florence under the care of Ernesto's brother, Egisto Paolo Fabbri'','' another wealthy businessman and early partner of J. P. Morgan''.'' Fabbri began writing and publishing poetry in magazines in her teenage years. A collection of her work, ''Lyrics,'' was published by Harper & Brothers in 1892. A number of poems by Fabbri were set to music by Amy Beach and Liza Lehmann Liza Lehmann (11 July 1862 – 19 September 1918) was an English soprano and composer, known for her vocal compositions.Banfield, Stephen. Grove Music Online' After vocal studies with Al ...
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