
Fosco Giachetti (28 March 1900, in Sesto Fiorentino – 22 December 1974, in Rome) was an Italian actor.
Fosco Giachetti was the protagonist of Lo squadrone bianco (1936), directed by Augusto Genina. He became the leading man in Fascist propaganda films such as Tredici uomini e un cannone (1936), Sentinelle di bronzo (1937), Scipione l'Africano, Edgar Neville's Italian Carmen fra i rossi (1939), L'assedio dell'Alcazar (1940) and Bengasi (1942). In 1942, he also co-starred in Goffredo Alessandrini's two part Noi Vivi and Addio Kira!.
Un colpo di pistola (1942) by Renato Castellani and Fari nella nebbia (1942) by Gianni Franciolini were not as successful as his earlier films.
After the war, he returned to the stage. He worked in Spain with Edgar Neville in Nada and in Carne de horca. He had a supporting role in 1959 Dino Risi's successful comedy Il mattatore. In 1964, he appeared in an adaptation of A. J. Cronin's novel, The Citadel.
In 2003, the Galleria Fosco Giachetti in Sesto Fiorentino was opened in his honor.

The Conformist
1971 · as The Colonel

The Glass Castle
1950 · as Laurent Bertal (Italian version)

Pride
1938 · as Alberto Celoria

The Wastrel
1961 · as Captain Hugh Hardy

Senza cielo
1940 · as Mario

Conqueror of the Orient
1961 · as Omar - Nadir's Father

The Inheritor
1973 · as Luigi Balazzi

Love and Larceny
1960 · as General Benito Mesci

Another Man's Wife
1967 · as Alberto

House of Ricordi
1954 · as Giuseppe Verdi

The Virtuous Bigamist
1956 · as Antonio

The Woman of Monte Carlo
1938 · as Giorgio Duclos

Quattro rose rosse
1952 · as Antonio Berti

The Fury of Achilles
1962 · as Priamos

Life Begins Anew
1945 · as Dr. Paolo Martini

Scipio Africanus: The Defeat of Hannibal
1937 · as Captain Massinissa

Samba
1965 · as João Fernandes de Oliveira

Condemned to Hang
1953 · as Lucero