Chicago Sun-Times

Actor played Carmine on ‘Laverne & Shirley’

- BY MIRIAM DI NUNZIO, STAFF REPORTER mdinunzio@suntimes.com | @miriamdinu­nzio

Eddie Mekka, who starred as the singingdan­cing Carmine “The Big Ragu” Ragusa on the hit 1970s TV series “Laverne & Shirley,” has died. He was 69.

According to a Facebook post by a longtime friend, Mr. Mekka died on Saturday at his California home. The cause of death has not been revealed, but the Facebook tribute said the actor “passed away peacefully.”

Mr. Mekka, born Edward Rudolph Mekjian in Worcester, Massachuse­tts, began his career in entertainm­ent at the Worcester County Light Opera in Massachuse­tts as a voice instructor, according to the New York Post. He soon landed a role in the 1975 Broadway production of “The Lieutenant,” which earned him a Tony Award nomination for best actor in a leading role.

His TV credits included “Blanksy’s Beauties,” “Moonlighti­ng,” “The Love Boat” and most recently “It’s Always Sunday in Philadelph­ia,” but it was his role as “Laverne & Shirley’s” Carmine, the boyfriend of Cindy Williams’ Shirley, a boxer who wanted to make it big on Broadway (his favorite catchphras­e was singing the opening lyrics to the Tony Bennett classic “Rags to Riches”), that forever endeared him to audiences. The series co-starred Penny Marshall as Laverne.

Williams paid tribute to Mr. Mekka via Twitter, calling him “a world-class talent who could do it all.”

Mr. Mekka’s film credits include “Beaches,” “Dream Girls” and the 1992 Penny Marshall-directed “A League of Their Own,” in which Mr. Mekka famously got to show off his hoofing prowess as a soldier courting Madonna’s character, Mae, during a dancing scene at the local bar.

Michael McKean, who co-starred as Lenny Kosnowski on “Laverne & Shirley,” remembered Mr. Mekka in a tweet earlier Thursday, calling the actor “a genuinely good guy and purveyor of cheer.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES LIBRARY ?? Actor Eddie Mekka was in “Beaches” and “A League of Their Own.”
SUN-TIMES LIBRARY Actor Eddie Mekka was in “Beaches” and “A League of Their Own.”

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