Tony Musante(1936-2013)
- Actor
- Writer
Handsome, rugged, and talented Italian-American actor Tony Musante was
born on June 30, 1936 in Bridgeport, Connecticut to an accountant
father and a school teacher mother. He attended both Northwestern
University and Oberlin College. Tony worked as a school teacher prior
to beginning his acting career in Off-Broadway theater in 1960. In 1962
Musante married his writer wife Jane Sparkes. He made his film debut in
1965 in "Once a Thief." Musante gave a chillingly believable and
electrifying portrayal of nasty punk hoodlum Joe Ferrone in the harsh
and hard-hitting "The Incident," a role which he had previously played
in the hour long made-for-TV drama "Ride With Terror." Tony won a best
actor award at the Mar del Plata Film Festival for his outstanding
performance in "The Incident." Musante went on to act in a handful of
features made in Italy; he was especially memorable as brash Mexican
revolutionary Paco Roman in the superior spaghetti Western "The
Mercenary" and as imperiled American writer Sam Dalmas in Dario
Argento's masterful giallo murder mystery thriller "The Bird With the
Crystal Plumage." In addition, Tony played more than his fair share of
Mafiosa types: He was genuinely frightening as vicious hit man Paul
Rickard in "The Last Run;" spot-on as smooth heel Eddie Hagan in Robert
Aldrich's supremely gritty "The Grissom Gang;" excellent as Eric
Roberts' mob-connected Uncle Pete in "The Pope of Greenwich Village;"
and once again splendid as shrewd mob capo Nino Schibetta on the gritty
cable TV prison drama "Oz." Musante had a starring role as real life
chameleon-like New Jersey cop Dave Toma on the short-lived TV series
"Toma." After Tony left the show due to creative differences with the
producers, the program was changed to "Baretta" with Robert Blake in
the lead. Among the TV shows Musante had guest spots on are "The Alfred
Hitchcock Hour," "The Fugitive," "Marcus Welby, M.D.," "The Rockford
Files," "Medical Story" (Tony was nominated for an Emmy award for his
performance in the episode "The Quality of Mercy"), "Police Story,"
"The Equalizer," "Night Heat," and "Nothing Sacred." Moreover, Tony had
a recurring part on the popular daytime soap opera "As The World
Turns." On stage Musante appeared in the Broadway productions of "P.S.,
Your Cat Is Dead!" (Tony was nominated for a Drama Desk Award for his
acting in this particular play), "A Memory of Two Mondays/27 Wagons
Full of Cotton," and "The Lady from Dubuque." Musante died at age 77 on
November 26, 2013 in New York City.