Friday, January 2, 2026

“Television Character: Accountant Ugo Fantozzi” - by Maria Teresa De Donato

 

“Television Character: Accountant Ugo Fantozzi”

by Maria Teresa De Donato

 


(Photo: Paolo Villaggio)

(Photo by Luciano Salce / Erico Menczer - Film Fantozzi (1975) Directed by Luciano Salce)

 

Dear friends, today I want you to meet a television character who, for my generation and beyond, represented one of the most famous, beloved, and pitied of the last century: Accountant Ugo Fantozzi.

 

Who was Ugo Fantozzi?

Ugo Fantozzi, although a fictional character created by Paolo Villaggio—a showman, actor, and significant intellectual—well represents the archetype of the average Italian of the 1970s: a middle-class man with a simple lifestyle, filled with the anxieties common to the working class. With the creation of this character, Villaggio achieved an extraordinary blend of Italian comedy and social satire. This character had such an impact on Italian society that the adjective “Fantozzian” entered the common lexicon, referring to anything that, in one way or another, proves unsuccessful.

 

Filmography

Among the numerous films that recount the misadventures of Fantozzi, the best-known are Fantozzi (1975) and The Second Tragic Fantozzi (1976), both directed by Luciano Salce, but many others were produced: Fantozzi Against All (1980), Fantozzi Still Suffers (1983), Superfantozzi (1986), Fantozzi Retires (1988), Fantozzi to the Rescue (1990), Fantozzi in Paradise (1993), Fantozzi – The Return (1996), all by writer and director Neri Parenti, and Fantozzi 2000 – Cloning (1999) by Domenico Saverni.

 

How the "Fantozzi" Character Was Born

Fantozzi was the surname of a colleague Villaggio had worked with at Italimpianti. This colleague mistakenly called Villaggio “Selvaggio” (wild). This would later inspire Villaggio in his films and lead his colleagues and superiors to call Fantozzi himself, satirically and in increasingly humiliating terms, with various nicknames ranging from “Fantocci” to Pupazzi, Bambocci, Bagherozzi, Beccacci, Cagnacci, Mortacci, and Fantozzo. In contrast, the surveyor Calboni nicknamed him “Puccettone” (big puck).

Other characters Villaggio created were the travel organizer Giandomenico Fracchia and the Accountant Filini for the Fantozzi stories and films.

In Villaggio’s stories, two characters, Filini and Fracchia, appear among the characters’ colleagues. In the films, they were later replaced by Filini alone, who would play the protagonist’s best friend and the organizer who thinks he understands everything.

His work experience inspired Villaggio to write some short stories, which were later published in the magazine L’Europeo and collected in the book Fantozzi (1971). The book became a bestseller, selling more than a million copies, was translated into numerous languages, and even won the Gogol Prize for “best humorous work.”

It was precisely the book’s great success that led to a film adaptation in which Villaggio himself played the title role.

 

Particularly significant episodes that reveal the true nature of this character

There are many. Fantozzi, for example, has no real friends. The only people he sees are his colleagues at Megaditta, whom he sees even outside of work hours. He takes time off with them; he celebrates New Year’s Eve with them by attending a party held in a squalid basement where a swindling orchestra conductor advances the clocks and starts the celebrations early so he can play at two parties; He accompanies them on road trips in makeshift campers, on unlikely bike races, in soccer games on muddy suburban fields, or in pathetic tennis matches, like the one at six o’clock on a Sunday morning with accountant Filini, who is actually his best friend. Worth mentioning among his other colleagues at the "Megaditta" is the surveyor Calboni, a social climber and a sycophant towards his superiors, as well as the group’s unrepentant womanizer.

Fantozzi constantly endures harassment and mistreatment from colleagues and superiors without ever complaining. However, in rare instances, he displays open rebellion, as in the film Fantozzi, when he breaks a glass at the Megaditta with a rock, or in The Second Tragic Fantozzi, when he attacks Professor Riccardelli.

 

Why are audiences around the world so fond of this character?

In my opinion, for three reasons:

1) because his misadventures are hilarious, even if they’re actually dramatic, and therefore, they’re sharp and cutting humor, not true comedy;

2) because his constant victimhood inspires compassion; and

3) because each of us can identify with the adverse circumstances he faces and his failures, and therefore relate to him with empathy and human solidarity. It’s like being in the company of a friend and understanding their suffering because we’ve experienced it ourselves.

 

Who exactly does Fantozzi represent?

Fantozzi is the emblem of the “loser,” that is, the inept and unfortunate man, a victim of bullying, who has entered the collective imagination for his grotesque attitude of psychological submission to power and as an example of the average man oppressed by society and constantly seeking redemption. To sum it all up in the words of Paolo Villaggio himself, Fantozzi is “the prototype of the miserable, or the quintessence of nothingness.”

His mediocrity inevitably leads to his portrayal as a vulgar figure, with burps, swear words, and negative attitudes, such as servility, that make him both comical and tragic. When faced with the character, his misadventures, and his punctual failures, we laugh when in reality we should cry, because both the events that unfold before him and his behavioral responses represent true tragedies.

Another characteristic of Fantozzi is his constant need to apologize and submit to everyone. The common denominator of all the characters’ experiences is their complete surrender to what is perceived as an adverse fate.

A striking example is the famous “Fantozzi cloud” that haunts him everywhere: even when the weather is clear everywhere and the sun is shinining, a cloud rises above the Accountant's head, promising nothing good and waiting for Fantozzi to be out in the open before pouring down a torrent of rain on him, which perfectly represents the character’s life.

His family, which should be his only refuge and consolation from a society that neither respects nor recognizes him as a full member but exploits and mocks him, consists of his insignificant and ugly wife, Pina Fantozzi, who doesn’t love him but, when explicitly asked by her husband, replies that she has “great esteem” for him. Pina respects and pities him, and feels condescending towards him.

The two have a narrow-minded and ape-like daughter, Mariangela Fantozzi, a role actually played by the actor Plinio Fernando.

As for Fantozzi’s wife, in the first films, the role was played by actress Liù Bosisio (Luigia Bosisio Mauri) and later by Milena Vukotic. The latter, despite having worked with the most outstanding international film directors, including Federico Fellini, Luis Buñuel, Andrei Tarkovsky, and Nagisa Oshima, achieved worldwide fame thanks to her portrayal of Pina Fantozzi.

 

What lesson can we learn from the character Fantozzi?

What Fantozzi lacks is self-awareness and self-esteem. Fantozzi feels like a victim of everything and everyone, and as such, he behaves in life and reacts to the events that come his way. He’s a drifting raft tossed about by the waves. He has no control over his existence. The few times he tries to react, he does so clumsily and unfocusedly, precisely because his reaction is visceral, animalistic, and therefore lacks the strength and effectiveness that could allow him to succeed and, consequently, redeem himself.

The main lesson we can draw from observing and analyzing this character is that, depending on the circumstances, each of us can behave like Fantozzi— or even transform into him—if we lack self-esteem, awareness, and knowledge of ourselves and our potential.

Another key aspect we want to highlight is that the Fantozzi films, albeit ironically, anticipated the problem of mobbing that would become widespread in large companies. This led to expressions like “Quanto sei umano!” (How human you are!), as well as the adjective mentioned above “Fantozziano,” which has been recorded in all Italian dictionaries for decades, becoming widely used to indicate experiences, attitudes, or situations imbued with the character’s tragicomic air. And this is without mentioning the incorrect use of the subjunctives “dichi, venghi, and facci” instead of “dica, venga, and faccia”.

It goes without saying that Villaggio, thanks precisely to the social issues addressed through his films and the public response he received, has been recognized as a great intellectual. In July 2021, in his honor, the City of Rome approved the installation of a commemorative plaque on the Grande Raccordo Anulare, where the famous scene in which Ugo Fantozzi takes the bus to work was filmed.

 

Would this character have the same impact today?

I don’t think so, because the historical moment of the 1970s was very different from today. There were other values, a distinct moral ethic, a different vision of work and social classes, and a strong presence of unions that fiercely defended workers’ rights. This reality allowed, at that moment, the social and labor issues emerging to be brought to light, and the public, once aware of them, demonstrated its willingness to sympathize with those who suffered and became victims of certain abuses.

Much of this has been lost over the past few decades...