It seemed in the early 1990s that every film released in the US had Joe Pesci in it. This diminutive, intense Italian-American character player took a long time to make it to the top: a former child performer and nightclub entertainer, he specialized in impersonations and audience insult. Born in Newark, Pesci spent much of the 1950s and '60s doing stand-up and appearing as one of TV's "Star Time" kids (Dumont, 1950-51). He sang with Frank Vincent and the Aristocrats, and in 1969 the two formed a comedy duo (Vincent later had notable cameo or supporting roles in half a dozen of Pesci films).
When Pesci made his film debut in the low-budget "Death Collector" (1975), he was spotted by Martin Scorsese and cast as Jake La Motta's edgy and long-suffering brother in s "Raging Bull" (1980). His career should have taken off after that triumph, but Pesci disappeared into a series of character turns in uneven "art" films (Nicolas Roeg's "Eureka" 1983), foreign assignments ("Tutti Dentro/Put 'Em All in Jail" 1984), and undistinguished genre pics (the Rodney Dangerfield vehicle, "Easy Money" 1983) with a few bright spots including a starring role in "Dear Mr. Wonderful" (1982), a West German production lensed in New Jersey, and a colorful appearance with Robert De Niro in Sergio Leone's gangster epic, "Once Upon a Time in America" (1984).
Pesci tried his hand at TV, starring as Rocky Nelson, protagonist of the short-lived detective-comedy "Half-Nelson" (NBC, 1985). He achieved far greater small screen success playing the evil drug lord, Mr. Big, in "Moonwalker" (1988), Michael Jackson's lavish and hugely successful music video. The following year, Pesci's feature career got back on track with "Lethal Weapon 2" (1989), in which he provided scene-stealing comic relief as a fast-talking gregarious accountant on the lam after embezzling big bucks from the mob. Pesci enhanced his fame and won a Supporting Actor Oscar with an explosively violent yet often humorous portrayal of a mobster in Scorsese's "GoodFellas" (1990). Later that year, he successfully shifted gears to slapstick comedy to play a bungling burglar victimized by a resourceful Macaulay Culkin in the surprise blockbuster, "Home Alone".
Finally a movie star, Pesci began regularly alternating between leads and showy character parts in high profile comedies, dramas, and action films. His notable credits include a controversial character turn in Oliver Stone's "JFK" (1991); the starring role of an amateurish lawyer who learns on the job in the popular comedy "My Cousin Vinny" (1992); and reprising his characters in two profitable retreads, "Lethal Weapon 3" and "Home Alone 2: Lost in New York" (both 1992). Pesci has had less success as a lead in several recent features: playing a Weegee-like crime photographer in the 40s period pic "The Public Eye" (1992); as an unemployed actor turned crime-fighting activist in failed social satire "Jimmy Hollywood" (1994) ; and as a wily yet good-hearted homeless man who teaches some life lessons to a group of Harvard undergrads in "With Honors" (also 1994). He reteamed with De Niro and Scorsese for "Casino" (1995), a variation on the theme more deeply explored in "GoodFellas". Pesci returned to comedy with "Gone Fishin'" (1996).
After the failure of "Half-Nelson", Pesci did not attempt another series, although he did appear on such specials and series as "Street Scenes: New York on Film" (AMC, 1992), "Tales from the Crypt" (HBO, 1992), and "The John Larroquette Show" (NBC, 1994).
Family
FATHER: Angelo Pesci. Forklift driver, bartender. Held three jobs as a forklift driver for General Motors, at night for Anheuser-Busch, and as a bartender, to pay for son's acting, tap dancing, singing and guitar lessons.
MOTHER: Mary Pesci.
SISTER: Louise Pesci. Older.
DAUGHTER: Tiffany Pesci. Mother is Pesci's first wife.
Companion
WIFE: Martha Haro. Third wife; born c. 1967; met at an Easter brunch c. 1988; divorced in 1992; later married actor-stuntman Garrett Warren and had a daughter; in May 2000, in midst of a custody dispute, Warren was shot in a gangland style attack; at the time, Haro was again living with Pesci.
COMPANION: Christina Busin. Stripper. Pesci denied November 1998 reports in they planned to wed, although he admitted they had dated.
Milestone
Raised in the Bronx
Appeared in Broadway musicals and Eddie Dowling plays from age five
1950: Became a regular on TV's "Star Time" (Dumont) doing impersonations and singing
Worked as a nightclub singer in the 1960s; cut a few records including an album "Little Joe Sure Can Sing" under the name of Joe Ritchie; played guitar in a road band for Joey Dee and the Starliters while in his early twenties
1961: First film appearance as an extra in Joey Dee film, "Hey, Let's Twist!"
Teamed with partner Frank Vincent (who later played a mafioso in "Raging Bull" and Billy Batts in "GoodFellas") in a nightclub act that played the Jersey shore in late 1960s and early 1970s
Featured with Frank Vincent in short-lived Broadway show, "The New Vaudevillians" (closed after one week)
Appeared in regional theater
1975: Film acting debut (also co-wrote) in "Death Collector," a low budget gangster yarn
1976: Moved to L.A.; held a variety of odd jobs as a barber, a postal clerk, a produce manager in a grocery story, a delivery boy, a letter carrier and drove a pickup truck (date approximate)
1978: Was managing a restaurant in the Bronx when called by Robert De Niro and Martin Scorsese who had seen his work in "Death Collector" to play Jake LaMotta's brother in "Raging Bull"
1982: First feature starring role, "Dear Mr. Wonderful" a German production directed by Peter Lilienthal
1985: Starred as a private investigator in his own short-lived TV series, "Half-Nelson"
1989: Cast as Leo Getz in "Lethal Weapon 2" starring Mel Gibson and Danny Glover
1990: Reunited with Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro to star in "Goodfellas"
1990: Starred opposite Macaulay Culkin in the comedy "Home Alone"
1991: First Hollywood starring role, "The Super"
1991: Starred in Oliver Stone's controversal film "JFK"
1992: Played Brooklyn Lawyer Vincent Gambini in the comedy "My Cousin Vinny" also starring Marisa Tomei
1992: Reprised the role of Leo Getz for "Lethal Weapon 3"
1993: Co-starred in the drama "A Bronx Tale" with Chazz Palminteri and Robert De Niro who also directed
1994: Co-starred with Brendan Fraser in "With Honors"
1995: Again reunited with Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro for "Casino"
1997: Co-starred with Danny Glover in the comedy "Gone Fishin"
1998: Reprised role of Leo Getz for "Lethal Weapon 4"
1998: Released an album, Vincent LaGuardia Gambini Sings Just for You, which spawned the single "Wise Guy"
1999: Announced retirement from acting
2006: Returned to acting with a cameo in De Niro's "The Good Shepherd"
Discography
"Little Joe Sure Can Sing" - Joe Pesci - recorded in the 1960s under the name Joe Ritchie
"Vincent LaGuardia Gambini Sings Just For You" - Joe Pesci - 1998 - comedy and music album recorded in the persona of his character from "My Cousin Vinny"
"I knew there was no other person who could play that part [Tommy DeVito in 'GoodFellas'] than Joe because I knew Joe would bring the humanity and most of all the sense of humor that would emphasize the horror of a man like that. He had the ability to make that character accessible rather than just a cliche, a stereotype."---Martin Scorsese to New York, March 4, 1991.
"I had a lot of trouble getting work for a long time. People were afraid of me because I was the kind of person who told them to go fuck themselves. And they don't want anyone to offer any resistance. After 'Raging Bull,' they wanted me to play neighborhood-type Italian stupes. And I didn't want to play that. And people just come at you from all angles, just ripping at you and clawing at you to get a piece of your success. I made a few pictures. But they were so few and far between that I always used the money and burnt it up and was always broke and borrowing money. I played golf every day to keep my sanity. I couldn't get an agent. I couldn't get a job. My methods of working were nowhere to everyone. Whatever I did as an actor, nobody seemed to appreciate. And then all of a sudden, everybody appreciated it. It's very strange to me."---Joe Pesci quoted in New York, March 4, 1991.
"One of Joe's great strengths is that he is one of the really great improvisational actors, in the style of De Niro. Joe can take an idea and bring a lot of himself to it. He has an ability to suddenly become very violent out of nowhere."---Irwin Winkler, producer of "Raging Bull" and "GoodFellas" in New York, March 4, 1991.
Mike
A favourite actor...and maybe a favourite cousin
Pesci is one of the most underrated actors of his generation. I'm not going to go over his missed opportunites ...
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