The Day

Award-winning Italian film director Ermanno Olmi, 86

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Rome (AP) — Ermanno Olmi, an Italian cinematic giant who won the top award at the Cannes Film Festival for his depiction of 19th-century Italian farm life in “The Tree of Wooden Clogs,” has died at age 86.

Olmi died Monday in the northern Italian city of Asiago, where a day of mourning has been planned for his funeral, Mayor Roberto Rigoni Stern told the ANSA news agency.

Condolence­s poured in from across Italy’s political and cultural spectrum for the director, with President Sergio Mattarella praising Olmi’s exploratio­n of simple folk and Italy’s transition from a poor agrarian country to a post-war industrial power.

“Olmi gave voice to a peasant civilizati­on by going back to its origins, honoring the feelings of simple people and places where nature meets man,” Mattarella said.

Culture Minister Dario Franceschi­ni praised Olmi’s career as one of “poetry,” that explored the relation between man and nature, work and spirituali­ty.

Olmi’s “L’Albero degli Zoccoli” (“The Tree of Wooden Clogs”), about life on a Lombardy farm at the end of the 19th century, won the 1978 Palme d’Or prize at the Cannes Film Festival. In 2008, he was honored with a Career Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival.

Born in 1931 in the throes of fascism, Olmi watched firsthand with dismay as Italy’s countrysid­e emptied out and Italians flocked to growing cities. He chronicled his own life in his 2013 autobiogra­phy “The Apocalypse and a Happy Ending.”

Olmi didn’t only work behind the camera — he also directed several operas for the La Scala opera house in Milan, which mourned him on Monday.

“The figure of a complete artist and intellectu­al disappears with Olmi’s passing,” La Scala said.

Olmi is survived by his wife, Loredana, and children. The funeral was expected to be private.

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