John Aprea, ‘Godfather Part II’ and ‘Full House’ Actor, Dies at 83

John Aprea, whose acting career landed him roles on “Godfather Part II” and “Full House,” died on Aug. 5 of natural causes in Los Angeles. He was 83.

His death was confirmed by Will Levine, Aprea’s manager.

Born in 1941 to Italian immigrants in Englewood, N.J., Aprea spent part of his early years in Italy before his family resettled back in the States. In the early 1960s, he set out to pursue his passion, acting, enrolling in Joshua Shelley’s acting classes (who also taught Mia Farrow and Jon Voight) in New York. Eventually, he would land a role in the 1968 Steve McQueen classic film Bullitt, playing Killer.

After his splashy debut, Aprea found acting work on sets for the 1970s TV series “Mannix,” the 1970s film “The Grasshopper,” and Jonathan Demme’s 1974 feature, “Caged Heat.”

Popular on Variety

John’s career took off when he was cast as the young Tessio in Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Godfather Part II.” Before taking on the role, he reportedly reached out to Abe Vigoda, who played the older version of the character in the first film, for advice. According to his manager, Vigoda’s response, “I don’t know what I did. Just have a good time, kid,” became a guiding principle for John’s career.

John Aprea, Robert DeNiro, Bruno Kirby in “The Godfather Part II.”
Courtesy Everett Collection

After a lead role in the 1975 comedy TV series “The Montefuscos” (centered around the weekly Sunday dinners for an Italian-American family living in Connecticut), he went on to play a major role as the brother of Ray Sharkey’s character in Taylor Hackford’s debut film, “The Idolmaker.”

From 1981 to 1987, Aprea was a regular on the ABC series “Matt Houston,” playing Lt. Vince Novelli. He eventually returned to New York City to work on the soap opera “Another World” for six years as the character Lucas Castigliano (until his character was killed off). During this time, Aprea would also earn a “Soap Opera Digest” award nomination for outstanding villain in a prime-time series for his role on “Knots Landing.”

Aprea also played the father of John Stamos’ character Uncle Jesse on “Full House” and recently reprised this role for the Netflix reboot. The actor continued working late into his career including playing Don Armeteo in the 1991 feature “New Jack City,” directed by Mario Van Peebles, and landing roles on “NYPD Blue,” “CSI,” and “The Sopranos.”

Aprea was predeceased by his sister, Rosanna Sole. He is survived by his wife and partner of 25 years, Betsy Graci, his daughter Nicole from a previous marriage, and his stepchildren Marika Parker and Valentino Graci. A private service will be held to honor his life.

John Aprea on the 2016 film ‘Stevie D.’
Everett Collection / Everett Collection

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Vladimír Hron se na vnoučata těší, ale nechce je hned thumbnail

Vladimír Hron se na vnoučata těší, ale nechce je hned

Vladimír Hron. Moderátor, zpěvák, imitátor a komik v jedné osobě Vladimír Hron loni oslavil padesáté páté narozeniny. Spousta jeho vrstevníků už se pyšní titulem »dědeček«, ale Vladimír prozatím nic, byť už má syna ve věku, kdy by se mohl stát otcem. U Hronů totiž platí dvojnásob, že muži jsou velkými dětmi. Rodina pro Vladimíra Hrona…
Read More
Bhagya Lakshmi's Aman Gandhi talks about his journey from working at a global automobile company to becoming an actor thumbnail

Bhagya Lakshmi’s Aman Gandhi talks about his journey from working at a global automobile company to becoming an actor

MUMBAI: After several extremely successful collaborations, Zee TV and Balaji Telefilms recently presented viewers with an exciting story about life, love, karma, and destiny. Set against the backdrop of Mumbai, 'Bhagya Lakshmi' follows the journey of Lakshmi, a selfless girl of limited means, who despite her humble background and the curveballs life has thrown at…
Read More
Lawsuit against Valve over CS:GO skin gambling dismissed thumbnail

Lawsuit against Valve over CS:GO skin gambling dismissed

Court argued that the plaintiffs, who were suing on behalf of their children, had never used Steam and therefore couldn't claim they were misledA US federal court dismissed a lawsuit against Valve over Counter-Strike: Global Offensive skin gambling on January 7. The dismissal focused on the one claim remaining from a series of lawsuits dating…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share