Beyond Totò’s dual performance, the film features a "who's who" of Italian cinema: as a "scantily clad" Cleopatra. Moira Orfei as Octavia, sister of Augustus. Gianni Agus as the uptight Senator Gaius Octavius. Carlo Delle Piane as a bratty, cowardly Caesarion. Why It Matters Today
The film is packed with twisted dialogues and suggestive gags that play on the era's fascinations with sexuality and historical grandeur. A Star-Studded Italian Cast TotГІ e Cleopatra (1963)
It remains a must-watch for anyone who appreciates or wants to see a master comedian working at the top of his game. Beyond Totò’s dual performance, the film features a
As the brothers alternate, Cleopatra—played by French actress Magali Noël —becomes increasingly bewildered by Antony's wildly contradictory behavior. Carlo Delle Piane as a bratty, cowardly Caesarion
The film's humor centers on a classic case of mistaken identity. Totò pulls double duty as both the Roman General and his scoundrel lookalike brother, Totonno , a slave trader.
Totonno secretly replaces his famous brother during "delicate" political and romantic moments.
While Hollywood’s Cleopatra is remembered for its unprecedented $44 million budget and near-bankruptcy of 20th Century Fox, Totò e Cleopatra stands as a testament to the wit of Italian cinema. It successfully repurposed the lavish aesthetic of the "peplum" genre (epic historical films) to create a zesty, ludricrous satire where "no one really gets hurt"—unlike the tragic history it mocks.