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On the death of »Sopranos« star Tony Sirico: scammers, thugs, actors from hell

2022-07-09T14:30:36.582Z


Whence this violence? Tony Sirico spent a long time in prison - only to become one of Hollywood's biggest mafia actors after his incarceration. The "Sopranos" star sought the origin of Italian-American machismo.


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Tony Sirico (right) with The Sopranos co-star Steve Van Zandt: The Golden Age of Television

Photo: ddp images / ddp

What is life, what is invention?

The stories that ex-mob henchman Tony Sirico told about his life often trumped those he portrayed as mob henchman Paulie Walnuts in The Sopranos.

In a previous interview, Sirico, who grew up in Brooklyn, New York, shared his life story - a never-ending series of fights, cons and robberies in the Colombo clan's sphere of influence.

The most brutal part, however, was about love: Tony Sirico was obsessed with a "girl" at a young age, for whom he left his wife and child.

When he was alone with her, Sirico was a little lamb.

If another man was standing nearby, he freaked out.

He first beat up a sailor who had spoken to his lover in a bar and then threw him over the quay wall.

His girlfriend kissed and hugged him and they escaped in a taxi.

It is not known whether the sailor survived.

The violence may have been unleashed by the young woman, but Tony Sirico says it was always inside him.

He couldn't say why in the interview either.

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Tony Sirico was imprisoned several times, not for the allegedly beaten and sunk sailor, but for a number of other crimes.

From there he also brought the most important signature move for his film character Peter Paul Gualtieri, called Paulie Walnuts, into the mafia series that started in 1999: the hands held in front of the stomach, which alertly bang on each other.

A prison habit to quickly initiate defensive measures in the event of an unexpected knife attack.

The violence seemed inexhaustible

Sirico starred alongside James Gandolfini, who played self-doubting New Jersey mob boss Tony Soprano.

As Paulie Walnuts, he wore hand-sewn two-tone leather shoes and elegant white sportswear that made every Brioni three-piece suit look like a rag outfit.

A heavy crucifix adorned the graying hair on his chest.

In the interview mentioned, Sirico was also asked if he believed in God.

His answer: someone must have been there to take care of him, otherwise he would have been dead long ago.

It was this self-confidence that distinguished his Paulie Walnuts from Tony Soprano.

While Gandolfini's godfather, dressed in crumpled jogging suits, carried all the self-doubt about his murderous actions like a walking, seared salciccia, Sirico's Walnuts was always identical to himself and the violent deeds demanded of him: his character never showed the slightest self-doubt.

Often people were sunk by him in water bodies and on garbage dumps.

The violence in the character seemed inexhaustible;

the fact that you remained loyal to her for six seasons was probably also due to the passion and the (occasionally very fragile) loyalty with which he committed the slaughter for his pitiful boss.

"The Sopranos" was one of the first major serial stories of the era called the Golden Age of television.

Character profiles, which often remained one-dimensional in the past, developed new facets over a long period of time.

This also applied to Sirico as Paulie Walnuts, who developed a complex life of his own behind the violent facade.

The worst fear: loss of meaning and identity.

Sirico's performances have always been a search for the origins of Italo-American machismo.

The Eternal Godfather

In a lovely early scene in the first season of "Sopranos," Paulie Walnuts walks into a large chain coffee shop and, with a disgusted face, moans that the corporate asses stole her Italian coffee culture.

An early case of cultural appropriation!

Ultimately, Sirico's whole work was a fight against such cultural appropriations: If a film needs an Italian-born jailbird, then the Italian jailbird can play him himself and not some Hollywood actor with an accent and fake chest hair.

Sirico had already taken part in the theater group while in prison.

After his final release from prison, he landed minor roles in film and television.

He had his first major appearance in 1977 in James Toback's »Fingers« alongside the young Harvey Keitel.

Sirico's part: mafia godfather.

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He then varied the role of the violent Italian-American in countless films.

His characters had names like Tommy Gambino, Carmines soldo or Toy Torillo.

It was seen in Martin Scorsese's gangster epic »GoodFellas« (1990) as well as in Woody Allen's 1920s homage »Bullets Over Broadway« (1994).

Mostly he played the mobster with incredible energy, sometimes bordering on caricature.

The "Sopranos" were Sirico's salvation, so as not to end up as a constant riot clown in small roles.

Actually he should play a less important role, but after the first test shots the series creator David Chase built him the central character of Paulie Walnuts.

Sirico recalls the offer: "I said, 'Who's that guy supposed to be?' David said, 'You're going to like him.' And boy, I'm telling you, I loved him.

I'll be Paulie until I die."

The man who was Paulie Walnuts spent his final years in a nursing home in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

He died there on Friday morning in the presence of his family;

he had just celebrated his 80th birthday with her.

On Wednesday, the family scheduled a large public memorial service at the Regina Pacis Basilica in Brooklyn.

Where the real Tony Sirico made his home.

Source: spiegel

All life articles on 2022-07-09

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