Filippo Scotti (Gravedona, 22 December 1999) is an Italian actor, protagonist of the film It was the hand of God presented at the Venice Film Festival 2021, with which he won the Marcello Mastroianni Award as best emerging actor. He began his acting career in 2010, when he enrolled in various theatrical courses and workshops in Naples. After the theater, where he made his debut as a protagonist in the show Il Marchese di Collino directed by Patrizia Di Martino, he began acting in several short films by directors such as Gabriele Russo and Francesca Macrì. In the same year he gets a small role in the 1994 television series and then two years later in the series produced by Netflix Black Moon and in the film The King dies. The first leading role comes in 2021 in It was the hand of God, directed by Paolo Sorrentino, where he plays the role of the alter ego of Sorrentino himself as a young man. For this interpretation he won the Marcello Mastroianni Prize at the 78th Venice International Exhibition.
Filippo Timi was born on February 27, 1974 in Perugia, Umbria, Italy. He is an actor and writer, known for Vincere (2009), La doppia ora (2009) and The American (2010). He has been married to Sebastiano Mauri since 2016.
Filippo Tirabassi is known for Don Matteo (2000), Come Quando Fuori Piove (2018) and Umami. Il quinto sapore (2021).
Filippo Trojano is an actor and producer, known for Copie conforme (2010), Samara (2012) and Tickets (2005).
Filippo Valese is known for The Invisible Boy (2014), Il Ragazzo Invisibile: Seconda Generazione (2018) and Bettiol: Il Deserto nella Cattedrale (2018).
Filippo Valle was born on January 24, 1974 in Rome, Lazio, Italy. He is an actor, known for Finale, Looking for Clarissa (2013) and Days of Our Lives (1965).
Filippos Filoglou is an actor, known for The Two Faces of January (2014), Eftyhia (2019) and Peta ti friteza (2018).
Filippos Ioannidis is known for Beckett (2021) and Martyries (1991).
Filippov Daniil is an actor, known for Yaga. Koshmar tyomnogo lesa (2020).
Filiz Ahmet (born 15 April 1981) is a Macedonian-born Turkish stage and screen actress. She is best known for her roles as Zarife in the Turkish TV series Farewell Rumelia and Nigar Kalfa in the TV series Muhtesem Yüzyil. Filiz Ahmet was born in Skopje, SR Macedonia. She is of Turkish descent. Filiz Ahmet has dual Macedonian and Turkish citizenship. Her mother works as a prompter, while her grandfather, Lüftü Seyfullah, was a Macedonian stage actor and co-founder of the Macedonian-Turkish Theatre. The first play she watched in the theater was The Idiot, based on the novel by the same name written by Fyodor Dostoevsky. She developed a lifelong passion for theater, and was 6 when she first appeared on stage. Ahmet's childhood coincided with the Yugoslav Wars. Due to the conflict, her family decided to go to Sweden, and later returned to Macedonia when she was 15. Filiz Ahmet graduated from medical school and then the Academy of Fine Arts in Skopje in 2003. Ahmet is multilingual and is able to speak Macedonian, Albanian, Turkish, Swedish, English, Serbian, and Bulgarian. She began as a stage actress and received several performance awards. She did not plan to act on-screen, and her busy theater schedule allowed little time for anything else. However, her breakthrough performance occurred in 2007 when she appeared in the role of Zarife in the series Farewell Rumelia. To make her character more expressive, Ahmet spoke her role in the Macedonian Turkish dialect. After this series, she received offers in various television series. Her next project was Balkan Wedding, where she took the role of Galina in 2009. In 2010, Ahmet received the role of Nigar Kalfa in a prime-time historical Turkish television series, Muhtesem Yüzyil (The Magnificent Century). The show is very successful in the Balkan region and Turkey, and is broadcast in 45 countries. The series has 204 million viewers worldwide. Her work with Muhtesem Yüzyil brought her positive responses and acclaim from critics.