Background
Francesca Braggiotti was born in Florence, her father was an Italian tenor, born in Smyrna. Her mother was an American mezzo-soprano from Boston.
Francesca Braggiotti was born in Florence, her father was an Italian tenor, born in Smyrna. Her mother was an American mezzo-soprano from Boston.
Foreign a public performance sponsored by the exclusive Vincent Club, the Mayor was asked about the limits of public decency, as he had authorized their costumes for some artistic purposes, although too small to be admitted to a public beach. The poet Amy Lowell was so enchanted that she composed an ode in honor of Francesca. Isabella Stewart Gardner asked them to a private performance at Fenway Court.
The dance school of Braggiotti Sisters, as well as being the most expensive and requested, first introduced dance Expressionist movement in Boston and a new vision of health and beauty.
She starred in Rasputin and the Empress (1932), Little Women (1932), Scipio Africanus: The Defeat of Hannibal (1937), Stanotte alle undici (1937). She was the first Italian voice of Greta Garbo and talk the first bar dubbed in Italian film history: "Give me a cigarette!" in the movie Mata Hari by George Fitzmaurice.
She also dubbed the Swedish actress in: Inspiration (Yvonne), Susan Lenox (Her Fall and Rise), Grand Hotel (Grusinskaya), As You Desire Maine (Zadar / Countess Maria Varelli). Francesca married John Davis Lodge in 1929, and worked with him on the set of Stanotte alle undici.
After her husband’s entry into politics, she withdrew from artistic life.
He was a Republican politician, governor of Connecticut from 1951 to 1955 and diplomatic ambassador to Spain, Argentina and Switzerland.