Rockets Redglare


Actor

About

Also Known As
Michael Gennaro Morra
Birth Place
New York City, New York, USA
Born
May 08, 1949
Died
May 28, 2001
Cause of Death
Complications From Drug And Alcohol Abuse

Biography

This tough, eccentric and battered-looking nightclub habitue became a comic and eventually a successful character actor in more than 20 films. He was born Michael Gennaro Morra to a tough Brooklyn family; his father was deported, and his uncle reportedly gunned down a man in front of the boy. Morra became a ruffian himself, losing his teeth in a pistol-whipping and admitting to at least ...

Biography

This tough, eccentric and battered-looking nightclub habitue became a comic and eventually a successful character actor in more than 20 films. He was born Michael Gennaro Morra to a tough Brooklyn family; his father was deported, and his uncle reportedly gunned down a man in front of the boy. Morra became a ruffian himself, losing his teeth in a pistol-whipping and admitting to at least one stick-up. Morra changed his name to 'Rockets Redglare' when he became a nightclub comic in the 1970s.

Popular in the downtown punk scene, he was spotted by director Jim Jarmusch, who cast him as a poker player in the road comedy "Stranger Than Paradise" (1984). Redglare had found a new career and he never slowed down. With his tough, broken face, hulking presence and snaggle-toothed dentures, he was pretty much typed as a hood or lowlife. But his projects have run the gamut from major studio releases to such low-budget experimental films as "The Way It Is, or Eurydice in the Avenue" (1984), "Her Name is Lisa" (1986), "In the Soup" and "What About Me" (both 1992).

Cutting-edge directors are fond of him and Redglare's distinctive presence has graced such major productions as Martin Scorsese's dark comedy "After Hours" (1985, as a mob member), Susan Seidelman's "Desperately Seeking Susan" (1985, as a cab driver) and "Cookie" (1989, as a mobster), Jarmusch's "Down By Law" (1986) and "Mystery Train" (1989), and Penny Marshall's "Big" (1988, as a scary hotel clerk). Additionally, Redglare was the nuttiest caller in Oliver Stone's "Talk Radio" (1988), a denizen of old friend Steve Buscemi's "Trees Lounge" and himself in Julian Schnabel's "Basquiat" (both 1996).

Life Events

1984

Film debut in "Stranger Than Paradise"

1985

First supporting role, as cab driver in "Desperately Seeking Susan"

1987

First foreign film, the multi-national "Candy Mountain"

Bibliography