Danny Aiello
About Danny Aiello
A versatile character actor noted for his naturalistic acting style, ordinary Everyman appearance and Bronx accent, Danny Aiello gravitated to entertainment from a varied background that featured a stint as the youngest president of Local 1202 of the Amalgamated Transit Union. (His early training came as a public address announcer calling out bus routes at the old Greyhound Bus Terminal on 50th Street in Manhattan). After losing that position in a dispute with national leadership over a wildcat strike, he became a nightclub bouncer, which lead to his first professional industry job as a substitute emcee at the Improvisation comedy club where he worked. He was nearly 40 when he debuted as a baseball teammate of Robert De Niro and Michael Moriarty in the film "Bang the Drum Slowly" (1973), and his Broadway debut in "Lamppost Reunion" (1975) was even more auspicious, earning him a Theatre World Award.
Aiello first trod the boards in a Chicago production of "That Championship Season" in 1975 and stayed busy on stage during his early career. He won an OBIE Award for his work in Albert Innaurato's "Gemini" (1976) and later re-created his role at the start of its long run on Broadway. He acted in two other Broadway plays by Louis LaRusso (author of "Lamppost Reunion"), "Wheelbarrow Chasers" (1976) and "Knockout" (1979), and in Woody Allen's "The Floating Light Bulb" (1981) and John Guare's "The House of Blue Leaves" (1986). He also won the L.A. Drama Critic's Circle Award for his performance as Phil in the Los Angeles debut of David Rabe's "Hurlyburly" (1987), opposite Sean Penn.
Aiello's tough guy, blue-collar persona lent itself readily to one-dimensional roles--like a Mafia thug in "The Godfather, Part II" (1974), a sadistic policeman in "Fort Apache, the Bronx" (1981), a brutish husband in Woody Allen's "The Purple Rose of Cairo" (1984)--before he moved on to richer parts. His most acclaimed 80s supporting roles were the lovelorn jilted mama's boy Johnny Cammareri in "Moonstruck" (1988) and the sympathetic but insensitive pizzeria owner Sal in Spike Lee's "Do the Right Thing" (1989). The latter garnered him critical acclaim, a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination and a higher profile career. "Once Around" (1991) boasted an impressive ensemble, including Richard Dreyfuss, Holly Hunter, Gena Rowlands and Griffin Dunne, but Aiello, the untrained actor in their midst, walked off with the best notices. That same busy year, he also played the loyal sidekick to Bruce Willis in the ill-fated "Hudson Hawk" and the unlucky father of the lottery-winning Anthony LaPaglia in "29th Street". Aiello had the title role of "Ruby" (1992) in a failed speculative biopic of the man who shot Lee Harvey Oswald. Both Kevin Dowling's "Mojave Moon" (1996) and John Herzfeld's "2 Days in the Valley" offered him top billing in romantic roles where he gets the girls, Anne Archer and Angelina Jolie in the former, Glenne Headly in the latter.
Among Aiello's many television appearances are his Emmy Award-winning (Outstanding Performer in a Children's Program) portrayal in "Family of Strangers" (1980), an "ABC Afterschool Special", and a sublime but unsung turn as a Runyonesque bookie in "The Odds", a 1984 episode of the syndicated "Tales of the Darkside". He played Lieutenant Terry McNichols in ABC's short-lived crime drama "Lady Blue" (1985-86) and the similar part of Detective Mike Sheehan in Herzfeld's "The Preppie Murder" (ABC, 1989). Aiello had been shying from TV work when CBS made him an offer he couldn't refuse, to play Mafia patriarch Don Clericuzio in the miniseries "Mario Puzo's 'The Last Don'" (1997). The network also managed to lure him back to series work as the star and executive producer of "Dellaventura" (1997-98), about a former NYC cop turned private investigator. Knowing Aiello's reticence to work in L.A., CBS entertainment president Leslie Moonves brought the mountain to Mohammed, so to speak, in agreeing to shoot the series entirely in New York City.
Two of Aiello's four children, Ricky and Danny III, followed him into the business and have worked with him in numerous vehicles. "Dellaventura" included both on the team with Ricky acting the part of Teddy Naples and Danny III producing alongside his father, making the series a real family affair. Aiello also starred in Christine Lahti's Academy Award-winning (Best Live Action Short Film) "Lieberman in Love" (1995), which aired on Showtime.
| Name: | Relation: | Notes: |
|---|---|---|
| Sandy Aiello | wife | married on January 8, 1955 |
| Rick Aiello | son | born on September 21, 1955 |
| Jaime Aiello | son | born c. 1966 |
| Stacey Aiello | daughter | born c. 1969 |
| Danny Aiello III | son | born in 1957 |
| Daniel Louis Aiello | father | mostly absent from children's upbrining; reconciled with Aiello in 1993; died in April 1999 at age 96 |
| Frances Pietrocova Aiello | mother | native of Naples, Italy; married at age 15; died in 1988 |
| Before age of eight, worked as shoeshine boy and newspaper hawker in Grand Central Station | |
| Joined the National Guard at age 13 | |
| TV series debut as regular, "Lady Blue" (ABC) | |
| 1951 | Faked identity papers and joined Army for three years; served in Germany |
| 1957 - 1967 | After Army, worked at Greyhound terminal in New York; elected youngest president of Local 1202 of the Amalgamated Transit Union; fired from union post after dispute with national leadership over wildcat strike |
| 1972 | First professional industry job as substitute emcee at the Improvisation comedy club in NYC where he also worked as bouncer |
| 1973 | Feature film debut, "Bang the Drum Slowly" |
| 1975 | Broadway debut, "Lamppost Reunion" |
| 1975 | Stage debut in Chicago production of "That Championship Season" |
| 1978 | Early TV-movie credit, "The Last Tenant" (ABC) |
| 1981 | Played sadistic cop who pushed a kid off the roof of a tenement building in "Fort Apache, the Bronx" |
| 1985 | Cast as a worthy foil to Hong Kong action superstar Jackie Chan in cop thriller "The Protector" |
| 1987 | Played Cher's fiance in "Moonstruck" |
| 1988 | Appeared in Madonna's music video "Papa Don't Preach" |
| 1989 | Cast as the detective investigating "The Preppie Murder" in the ABC TV-movie based on real-life events |
| 1989 | Portrayed Sal, the owner of a Brooklyn pizza parlor, in Spike Lee's "Do the Right Thing"; earned Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination |
| 1990 | Made strong impression as avuncular, possibly angelic chiropractor in Adrian Lyne's "Jacob's Ladder" |
| 1991 | Played sidekick to Bruce Willis in the disaterous "Hudson Hawk" |
| 1992 | Had title role in the biopic "Ruby", about Oswald assassin Jack Ruby |
| 1995 | Starred as Lieberman in "Lieberman in Love", Christine Lahti's Academy Award-winning Best Live Action Short Film (film later played on Showtime) |
| 1997 | Executive produced and starred in CBS drama series "Dellaventura" |
| 1997 | Had title role in the CBS miniseries "Mario Puzo's 'The Last Don'" |
| 2003 | Featured in the comedy "Mail Order Bride" |
| 2005 | Starred in director Kevin Jordan's family-inspired drama, "Brooklyn Lobster" |
| 2006 | Played a gambling victim in the thriller, "Lucky Number Slevin" |
Notes
"I want to bring something, I hope, that the American people would love. And I think they will love honesty, and I think that's what I'm going to bring to my character." --Danny Aiello about his role in "Dellaventura" to New York Post, July 7, 1997.
"I want to play a character that people can attach themselves to, that side where you could eat 'em up and say, 'God I'd love him to be my father, the image I'd love to follow the rest of my life.'" --Danny Aiello in The New York Times Magazine, January 21, 1990.
"When it got to the point where I couldn't get anything at all to pay the rent, I got a little hysterical and robbed produce stores and warehouses. I took the safes home, then out into the yard with a sledgehammer to open them. I had four kids and I was unable to support them. What was I going to do? I should have been put away for what I did." --From The New York Times Magazine, January 21, 1990.
Aiello launched the Web site Revolution Earth in fall 2000.
Some sources list Mr. Aiello's birth year as 1936.
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Quick Facts
Also known as
Birth Name : Danny Louis Aiello, Jr
Born
June, 20 1933 in New York, New York
Education
- James Monroe High School, New York, New York dropped out one day into ninth grade
Professions
actor, producer, bouncer, pool hustler, shoe-shine boy, station bus announcer, truck loader, union president