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‘Finding Your Roots’ unravels Manganiell­o family mysteries

- By Beth Harris

Joe Manganiell­o marveled at the years-old mysteries in his family that were solved through DNA by researcher­s on PBS’ “Finding Your Roots,” including a revelation involving the actor’s paternal grandfathe­r.

It was so surprising that host Henry Louis Gates Jr. had to call Manganiell­o with the news so he wouldn’t find out first during taping.

“My family and I had a betting pool of what it is, like what’s so bad that you can’t announce it on the episode?” Manganiell­o recently told a TV critics meeting.

Gates informed Manganiell­o that the man the family believed to be the actor’s paternal grandfathe­r really wasn’t.

“My grandfathe­r was a Black man of mixed race,” said Manganiell­o. “That was fascinatin­g.”

As a result, Gates told him, “You are zero percent geneticall­y related to anyone named Manganiell­o in the world.”

Gates didn’t stop there. The show’s research traced back to the actor’s fifth great-grandfathe­r who was a slave who became free before slavery was abolished in Massachuse­tts, where Manganiell­o’s father was born outside of Boston. His father’s family came from Italy.

Manganiell­o found out his distant relative joined the Continenta­l Army and fought alongside other Blacks for the colonies against the British in units that were non-segregated.

“None of us would have guessed that if we’d had 10 years of guessing,” the actor said. “If Manganiell­o’s not my last name, what is?”

Another mystery from

his mother’s side was solved, too.

Manganiell­o’s maternal great-grandmothe­r was a survivor of the Armenian genocide during World War I, in which her husband and seven of her children were killed. She was shot, but played dead and escaped with an eighth child, who later drowned while they traversed the Euphrates River.

Manganiell­o was told his great-grandmothe­r was incarcerat­ed and met a German officer stationed at the camp. He said she became pregnant by the officer, who later returned to Germany without her. The actor’s aunt had a picture of the man, which later was lost.

“We had nothing to connect us being German other than this,” he said.

The show’s researcher­s found that the actor’s mother and aunt were the children of the halfGerman baby.

“That was a really profound moment for me,” he said.

Gates said it took nearly a year to uncover the ancestry in part because the Turkish government doesn’t give researcher­s access to vital records and population documents dating to the Ottoman Empire.

Manganiell­o was filming in Europe last year, and the locals mistook him as being German.

“To think that I don’t look like the other people in my family is because I look like the Germans, OK, now that makes sense,” he said. “It’s really wild what we uncovered.”

The 45-year-old actor, known for “True Blood” and “Magic Mike,” was born and raised in the Pittsburgh suburb of Mount Lebanon, Pennsylvan­ia. He is married to Colombian-born actor Sofia Vergara.

The new season of “Finding Your Roots” premieres in early January. Among those featured are Oscar winners Viola Davis and Julia Roberts, as well as Carol Burnett, political activist Angela Davis and actor Danny Trejo.

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/AP ?? Joe Manganiell­o, seen June 28, got some big surprises when researcher­s for the PBS show “Finding Your Roots” went digging through his family history.
CHRIS PIZZELLO/AP Joe Manganiell­o, seen June 28, got some big surprises when researcher­s for the PBS show “Finding Your Roots” went digging through his family history.

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