January 7, 2009

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STAGE TO SCREENS: Chatting with "Sopranos" and A Second Hand Memory Star Dominic Chianese

By Michael Buckley
19 Dec 2004

Dominic Chianese

This month we chat with Dominic Chianese, best-known as Corrado Soprano, Jr., "Uncle Junior," in "The Sopranos," for which he's twice received nominations for an Emmy Award. Currently, he's starring Off-Broadway in Woody Allen's A Second Hand Memory at Atlantic Theater Company.

A veteran actor, his first love is singing, which he does every Monday evening (except Dec. 20 and 27) at the Manhattan nitery, Sofia's, with a band called the New York Sidewalkers. He considers himself "an actor who sings, rather than a singer who acts."

Early in 2005, Chianese, who also plays guitar, and his group are switching venues — to the West Bank Café, on 42nd Street and Ninth Avenue. His success as the avuncular Mafioso came late in his career, and the genial Chianese fully appreciates it. "You never know what's going to happen," he says cheerfully.

"I was only 68 years old when I got 'The Sopranos.' It took me a little while," he adds with a laugh. "I was lucky. That really put me on the map." One guesses that it would have been nicer had the role come a little sooner, but the actor disagrees. "It came when it had to come. I think I had a lesson to learn. I'm writing an autobiography, and I want to tell people that we have to learn something in life. We're here for some reason."

***

Chianese (KEY-ah-nays-ay) is having a great time playing Lou Wolfe, the father, in Allen's play. "The first couple of weeks were very hard. We were dealing with pacing and a playwright-director who could hear it in his mind. During the previews, we were still learning, and that can be quite frustrating. Now, it's fine, and Woody's very happy."

"Now" is the key word, explains Chianese. "I was frustrated with Woody, because he wasn't giving me a chance to work on who Lou Wolfe was. I was trying to please him. It was my own fault, not his fault. Woody kept saying, 'You've got the character, you had him in the audition. Just learn the lines and do it.' It works, but it takes time. Woody slowed up the process; he doesn't work on motivation. I feel I'm really getting into it now. If Woody had let me alone, I would've gotten it sooner."

The drama takes place in the 1950s, the same time that the Bronx High School of Science graduate's career began. One day, young Dominic was on a bus, on his way to work with his bricklayer father. Picking up a copy of the New York Herald-Tribune, he noticed a listing that the American Savoyards were seeking singers for a Gilbert and Sullivan show. He asked his father if he could attend the audition, and ended up with a job. "We did [H.M.S.] Pinafore first, and then toured for a year in Mikado and Patience. Dorothy Raedler was the artistic director. It was very, very good training."

Bitten by the acting bug, summer stock and regional theatre followed, during Chianese's ten years of night college. He graduated from Brooklyn College in 1961, with a Bachelors degree in Speech and Theater. "Bernie Barrow and Wilson Lehr were my teachers at Brooklyn College, but they're gone now." In 1963 and '64, he taught fifth grade at two Brooklyn schools. "They wouldn't let me teach creative arts, so I ended up leaving. The problem was the bureaucracy. They didn't allow the teacher to teach his or her way. You had to follow a curriculum, which just didn't work. At some point, I reached success with supposedly the dumbest fifth-grade class. They weren't so dumb; they just weren't taught.

"At one point, I had them on the stage in a version of Caucasian Chalk Circle. We took out all the political stuff and made it a fairytale. These kids went up on that stage and brought the house down. It was so exciting! The next day, I was called in to the principal's office and told I couldn't do that. I quit about a week later. I apologized to the kids. It broke my heart. My father wanted me to be a teacher. To the first generation Italian-Americans, teaching was looked up to as a profession."

Studying at the HB Studios, Chianese worked with Walt Witcover, whom he credits with "unlocking my emotions. He made me realize that emotions are important. He's a real genius. He's now 82, and just wrote a book, 'Living on Stage.' I once did a scene from Climate of Eden, where my character is supposed to kill a woman. The actress got so scared that she knocked a flat over, but Walt looked me in the eye and told me, 'I didn't believe a word you said.' I was blocked; I couldn't get the real emotion. One day, he asked me to describe my grandfather, who had died. I started to describe him, and tears started flowing. Witcover said, 'That's what acting is.' Witcover, Barrow and Lehr were the three gentlemen who taught me about acting."

Chianese's Broadway debut came playing a Londoner in a 1965 engagement of Oliver! "When we went on the national tour, I played Sowerberry [the undertaker]. At the Paper Mill Playhouse, I went on for Fagin. It was one night, but I realized that I could hold down a lead role. It was the highlight of my life!" Continued...

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