That year, Rome was a movie set, and Sophia Loren was its brightest star. She embodied the city’s duality: ancient and modern, tragic and comic, vulgar and sublime. To say "Sophia Loren in Rome 1964" is to evoke a lost golden hour—when cigarettes were chic, sunglasses were a shield, and one woman’s smoldering glance could sum up an entire era of cinema.
That year, Loren wasn't just in Rome; she was Rome. She was the undisputed queen of Cinecittà Studios, the "Hollywood on the Tiber." While the world was falling in love with her international successes (including her historic 1962 Best Actress Oscar for Two Women ), 1964 saw her firmly rooted in the Italian capital, working on a film that would become another classic: Marriage Italian-Style ( Matrimonio all'italiana ). sophia loren in rome 1964
Rome’s streets doubled for post-war Naples, but the off-screen action was pure 1960s Roman glamour. That year, Rome was a movie set, and