Leonardo Cimino(1917-2012)
- Actor
Veteran little old man Italian character actor Leonardo Anthony Cimino
steadily worked in both movies and TV shows alike from the late 1950's up
until 2007. Cimino was born on November 4, 1917 in New York City. He
was the son of tailor Andrea Cimino and his wife Leonilda. Leonardo
played violin as a child and studied at Juilliard as a teenager.
Moreover, Cimino studied acting, directing, and modern dance at the
Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theater. A small, frail, and
wizened fellow with a gaunt face, a slight build, and a distinguished
air about him, Leonardo often portrayed shrewd Mafioso types, nice
elderly gents, and various men of the cloth which include priests,
cardinals, and even the Pope in "Monsignor." Cimino twice played Nazi
concentration camp survivors: He was outstanding as the wise Abraham
Bernstein in the excellent science fiction TV mini-series "V" and
likewise marvelous as the kindly Scary German Guy in the delightful
"The Monster Squad." Leonardo had a nice bit as the Baron's doctor in
David Lynch's "Dune." Among the TV shows Cimino did guest spots on are
"Naked City," "The Defenders," "Kojak," "Ryan's Hope," "The Equalizer,"
"The Hunger," and "Law and Order." Outside of movies and television,
Leonardo acted on stage in such plays as "The Iceman Cometh," "They
Knew What They Wanted," "A Memory of Two Mondays," "Mike Downstairs,"
"Night Life," "A Passage to India," "Handful of Fire," "The Liar," and
"Cyrano de Bergerac." Cimino died at age 94 at his home in Woodstock,
New York on March 3, 2012.