Joe Pantoliano

This prolific, stage-trained character player transcended a youth of urban poverty, crime and poor academic skills to establish a successful entertainment career, often playing denizens and products of the kind of environment he escaped. Slender, bright-eyed and balding, Pantoliano has become known for playing low-level crooks, hustlers and other shady types in film comedies; lackeys and sidekicks in dramatic features; and a wider range of ethnic types on TV. Something of a lighter, taller Joe Pesci, he has excelled at projecting an air of somewhat likable sleaze, low cunning and street smarts.

Pantoliano grew up on welfare in a public housing project in Hoboken, New Jersey. He has described his parents as "bohemian"--his father was a hearse driver with mob ties and his mother was a bookie--who separated when he was a 12-year-old. Reading at a third grade level at age 17, Pantoliano decided that acting was a way out of a life that seemed to be leading to criminal behavior. Because of his comprehension skills, he had to memorize his scenes just to audition but it paid off as his literacy and confidence increased. Pantoliano moved to Manhattan where he waited tables, took acting lessons and built up stage credits.

Pantoliano moved to L.A. in 1976 where he found work in TV sitcoms. He gained attention with his performance in the TV miniseries version of "From Here to Eternity" (NBC, 1979) as Angelo Maggio, the role played by fellow Hoboken native Frank Sinatra in the 1953 film. Pantoliano first registered in features as the comic yet threatening Guido 'The Killer Pimp' in "Risky Business" (1983). He went on to regular work in film and TV in strong supporting roles: the ruthless anti-Communist attorney Roy Cohn in the miniseries "Robert Kennedy and His Times" (CBS, 1987); a bumbling criminal outwitted by kids in both "The Goonies" (1985) and "Baby's Day Out" (1994); John Malkovich's long-suffering sidekick in Steven Spielberg's "Empire of the Sun" (1987); and the slippery bail bondsman in "Midnight Run" (1988). Playing a more laudable character than usual, Pantoliano took part in a critical and commercial hit as Cosmo, one of Tommy Lee Jones's marshals, in "The Fugitive" (1993).

Pantoliano has also done several TV guest shots ("Amazing Stories", "L.A. Law"), stints as a recurring character on hit series ("NYPD Blue") and a regular on flops ("The Fanelli Boys"). He returned to TV in the fall of 1996 playing a shady supporting character on the short-lived CBS crime drama series "EZ Streets". Also in 1996, he played a frightening money launderer for the mob in the feature "Bound" opposite Jennifer Tilly as his mistress.

After reprising his role of Deputy Marshal Renfro in the sequel "U.S. Marshals" (1998), Pantoliano had his biggest box-office hit as the traitorous renegade Cypher in the blockbuster "The Matrix" (1999). The busy actor went on to play a seedy character that played off his on-screen persona in the stylish thriller "Memento" (2000) and joined the cast of the popular HBO series "The Sopranos" in 2001, playing the hotheaded, loudmouthed mob lieutenant Ralph Cifaretto, who becomes a major thorn in the side of Tony Soprano (James Gandolfini). Pantoliano's adroit portrayal made Ralph a love-to-hate-him character and at last had audiences connecting that well-known face to a now recognizable name. After his "Sopranos" tenure came to a memorable end in 2002, 'Joey Pants' next essayed Ben Urich, the dogged reporter on the trail of the secret identity of the super hero "Daredevil" (2003), before reprising his previous role as police captain Howard, comic foil to Will Smith and Martin Lawrence in the sequel "Bad Boys 2." In that same year, after winning a dramatic supporting actor Emmy for his much-admired work on "The Sopranos," Pantoliano held down a starring role as a FBI agent in the CBS drama series "The Handler."

  • Also Credited As:
    'Joey Pants', Joseph Pantoliano
  • Born:
    September 12, 1954 in Hoboken, New Jersey
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Waiter
Family
  • Daughter: Daniella Pantoliano. born on March 8, 1992; mother, Nancy Sheppard
  • Daughter: Isabella Grace Pantoliano. born on August 27, 1998; mother, Nancy Sheppard
  • Father: Dominic Pantoliano. separated from Pantoliano's mother c. 1963; divorced
  • Mother: Mary Isabella. separated from Pantoliano's father c. 1963; divorced
  • Sister: Mary Ann Pantoliano. younger
  • Son: Marco Pantoliano. born c. 1981; mother, first wife
  • Step-daughter: Melody. born c. 1985 mother, Nancy Sheppard
  • Step-father: Florio Isabella. had ties to the underworld; spent 15 years in jail on drug trafficking charges before marrying Pantoliano's mother
Education
  • HB Studio, New York, New York
Milestones
  • 1968 First professional stage appearance in New York at age 17 (date approximate)
  • 1968 Possessed a third grade reading level at age 17
  • 1972 Portrayed Billy Bibbit in a stage production of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest"
  • 1976 Moved to Los Angeles
  • 1977 TV acting debut, "McNamara's Band", a busted sitcom pilot
  • 1978 Recurring role in the summer replacement series "Free Country", a period sitcom about the immigrant experience from co-producer, co-writer and star Rob Reiner
  • 1978 Worked with Rob Reiner again in the TV-movie romantic comedy "More Than Friends"
  • 1979 Gained notice for his interpretation of Angelo Maggio--Frank Sinatra's role in the original--in the NBC miniseries version of "From Here to Eternity"
  • 1980 Feature acting debut, "The Idolmaker"
  • 1982 Portrayed Tommy MacMillan in "Brothers" at the South Coast Repertory Theatre in Costa Mesa, California
  • 1983 Breakthrough feature supporting role, Guido "The Killer Pimp" in the surprise hit "Risky Business"
  • 1983 Originated the lead role of Philip in "Orphans" at the Matrix Theatre in Los Angeles, California
  • 1985 First role in a Steven Spielberg production, "The Gooonies"
  • 1987 Directed by Spielberg as John Malkovich's sidekick in "Empire of the Sun"
  • 1987 Portrayed anti-Communist attorney Roy Cohn in the CBS miniseries biopic "Robert Kennedy and His Times"
  • 1990 Cast as a regular in the short-lived sitcom "The Fanelli Boys"
  • 1993 Portrayed Cosmo Renfro in "The Fugitive"
  • 1994 Provided a voice for the CBS animated version of the children's movie "Beethoven"
  • 1995 Played the recurring role of stoolie Vinnie Greco on the ABC cop drama "NYPD Blue"
  • 1996 Cast as a regular on the CBS crime drama "EZ Streets"
  • 1996 Was Jennifer Tilly's gangster lover in "Bound", directed by the Wachowski brothers
  • 1998 Reprised role of Cosmo Renfro in "U.S. Marshals"
  • 1999 Cast as the renegade Cypher in the blockbuster "The Matrix", helmed by the Wachowski brothers
  • 2000 Appeared in writer-director James Toback's "Black and White"
  • 2000 Played off screen persona as an oddball, slightly mysterious figure shadowing a man who cannot form new memories in the stylish thriller "Memento"
  • 2001 Joined the cast of the HBO series "The Sopranos", playing mob hothead Ralph Cifaretto
  • 2001 Appeared in two episodes of the WB's teen sci-fi series "Roswell"
  • 2001 Voiced Peek in the comedy "Cats and Dogs"
  • 2002 Appeared in the Eddie Murphy misfire "The Adventures of Pluto Nash"
  • 2003 Made feature directorial debut with "Just Like Mona" (lensed 2001)
  • 2003 Reprised his role as Captain Howard in the sequel "Bad Boys 2"
  • 2003 Returned as Cypher in "The Matrix: Reloaded"
  • 2003 Starred in the television series "The Handler"
  • 2005 Cast in a recurring role on the short-lived drama "Dr. Vegas" (NBC)
  • 2006 Co-starred in "The Amateurs," an independent comedy about a sleepy town that comes together to film a porno
  • Acted off-Broadway in "The Death Star" and "Visions of Kerouac"
  • Raised in a public housing project in Hoboken, NJ; family dependent on welfare

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