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Italian film producer Carlo Ponti (C),
Sophia Loren (R)'s husband, died on Wednesday at the age of 94.
(Xinhua/AFP, File Photo) Photo Gallery
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ROME, Jan. 10 (Xinhua) -- Italian film producer Carlo
Ponti, Sophia Loren's husband, died on Wednesday at the age of 94.
Loren, 72, was at his bedside in a Geneva clinic when
he died, according to Italian News Agency ANSA.
In a 50-year career starting just before World War II
he produced some 200 films including Federico Fellini's La Strada, David Lean's
Doctor Zhivago and Loren's Oscar-winner Two Women, in which she was cast against
type as a tragic wartime mother.
Ponti's fame as a producer held up under the
unrelenting gossip-mag spotlight on his courtship, coaching and marriage to
Loren as Italy's prime movie couple.
He discovered her as a beauty contest winner from a
Naples slum in the early '50s and turned her into one of the world's most
glamorous actresses.
Ponti set up Hollywood vehicles like "The Key" with
William Holden, "Desire Under the Elms" with Anthony Perkins, "Houseboat" with
Cary Grant and "It Started in Naples" with Clark Gable - in which she challenged
sex symbols Marilyn Monroe and Brigitte Bardot.
Loren bore Ponti two sons, music conductor Carlo Jr
and film director Eduardo.
Ponti's French citizenship led to problems with
Italian tax authorities, who secured a four-year jail term and a
26-million-dollar fine in 1979 for taking money out of Italy illegally.
Italy's Supreme Court quashed the verdict in 1987 and freed his frozen assets.