Los Angeles Times

Actor made his name as mobster Moe Greene

ALEX ROCCO, 1936 - 2015

- By Elaine Woo

Alex Rocco, a veteran character actor who secured a place in movie history playing the doomed mobster Moe Green ein “The Godfather,” died Saturday at his Studio City home. He was 79.

The cause was pancreatic cancer, said his stepson, Sean Doyle.

Rocco’s prolific 50- year career included voicing the role of jaded cartoon mogul Roger Meyers Jr. in “The Simpsons” animated series and his 1990 Emmy- winning portrayal of asm army talent agent in the short- lived sitcom “The Famous Teddy Z.”

Most fans, however, knew Rocco in the role of a cop, gangster or other tough guy, an identity cemented by his work in Part I of Francis Ford Coppola’s epic about the fictional Corleone crime family.

Based on infamous mobster Bugsy Siegel, Greene is the Las Vegas casino owner whose partnershi­p with the Corleones ends badly: He is murdered with a shot through the eye during a stomach- churning slew of revenge killings at the end of the film.

In a memorable scene before Greene’s violent death, Michael Corleone, the heir to his family’s crime syndicate played byAl Pacino, tells the

gaming kingpin that his family wants to buy him out.

Michael: I leave for New York tomorrow, think about a price.

Moe Greene: Doyou know who I am? I’m Moe Greene! I made my bones when you were going out with cheerleade­rs!

Playing Greene was “my biggest ticket anywhere,” Rocco said in a recent interview on the entertainm­ent website avclub. com.

“I had no idea what Moe-Greene was gonna do for me,” Rocco said in the interview. “There was an off-Broadway play, ‘ Who Shot Moe Greene?’ There was a Moe Greene’s Bakery. Alec Baldwin did Moe Greene on ‘ Saturday Night Live.’ Billy Crystal opened up the Academy Awards once, saying, ‘ I just ran into Moe Greene outside.’ It just doesn’t die down.”

Rocco was born Alessandro Federico Petricone in Cambridge, Mass., on Feb. 29, 1936. A ninthgrade dropout, he worked as a bookie in Boston and described himself as a “degenerate” gambler. I’d bet on anything,” he once told The Times, “and I’d lose.”

Hewas approachin­g 30whenhe decided to attend an acting class to meet women. He discovered that he loved acting.

After moving to Hollywood, he took a class taught by Leonard Nimoy who kicked Rocco out because no one could understand his thick Boston accent. “And he did it in front of 30 people— I hated him for that,” Rocco recalled in The Times in1989.

Undaunted, Rocco enrolled in a speech class. He learned to replace his Boston inflection­s with a New York accent, which Nimoy found acceptable. In 1965, Rocco made his screen debut in director Russ Meyer’s “Motor psycho!”

Over the next decades, he appeared in more than 130 films and TV episodes. His movie credits include “The Friends of Eddie Coyle,” “Cannonball Run II” and “The Wedding Planner.” In film “A Bug’s Life,” he voiced the character of Thorny the ant.

On television, his credits include episodes of “Murphy Brown,” “Baretta,” “Walker Texas Ranger” and “The George Carlin Show.” He had a recurring role on the long running 1980s sitcom “The Facts of Life,” oneof three series in which he was cast as the father of a character played by actress Nancy McKeon. ( The other two were “The Division” and “Can’t Hurry Love.”)

His last recurring role was inthe Starz network drama “Magic City,” in which he played the father of Jeffrey Dean Morgan as a Miami resort owner.

He enjoyed being recognized by fans, who often greeted him on the street with his lines from “The Godfather,” “The Simpsons” and “A Bug’s Life.”

“A lot of times he would meet people with sons in Afghanista­n,” said his wife, actress Shannon Wilcox. “They would mention. ‘ My son loved you in that, would you call him?’ Hewould talk to somany young soldiers and do his dialogue. Hewas always happy to do it.”

Besides Wilcox, Rocco is survived by two children from a previous marriage, Jennifer Rocco and Lucien Rocco; stepchildr­en Sean Doyle and Kelli Williams; a sister, Vivian De Simone; and four grandchild­ren.

 ?? CBS ?? IN ‘ GODFATHER’ Playing Moe Greene was “my biggest ticket anywhere,” Rocco said.
CBS IN ‘ GODFATHER’ Playing Moe Greene was “my biggest ticket anywhere,” Rocco said.
 ?? Nick Ut Associated Press ?? EMMY WINNER In 1990, Alex Rocco won the award for best supporting actor in a television comedy series for his
role as a smarmy talent agent in the short- lived sitcom “The Famous Teddy Z.”
Nick Ut Associated Press EMMY WINNER In 1990, Alex Rocco won the award for best supporting actor in a television comedy series for his role as a smarmy talent agent in the short- lived sitcom “The Famous Teddy Z.”

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