Here’s every actor from Goodfellas that can also be spotted in The Sopranos. Released in 1990, Goodfellas continued the fruitful working relationship between Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro after the heralded double-whammy of Taxi Driver and Raging Bull. Based on Wiseguy: Life in a Mafia Family by Nicholas Pileggi (who also co-wrote the screenplay), Goodfellas recounts the life and crimes of Henry Hill who, in his own words, always wanted to be a gangster. Alongside Ray Liotta and Joe Pesci, De Niro turns in another excellent performance under Scorsese’s direction, and Goodfellas became arguably the most beloved gangster film since The Godfather Part II.

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Of course, Robert De Niro knows all about The Godfather Part II. The acting legend starred as a young Vito Corleone in the flashback timeline of Francis Ford Coppola’s sequel, and it was here that De Niro’s long association with the gangster genre began. The Corleone and Lucchese crime families might’ve reigned supreme on the big screen, but it’s impossible to look beyond The Sopranos when considering the biggest and best mafia shows TV has to offer. Starring James Gandolfini as Tony Soprano, David Chase’s The Sopranos ran for six seasons through the 1990s and 2000s, offering a contemporary take on Italian-American gangster life in New York City.

Somewhat ironically, many mafia actors operate in the same circles, crossing paths time and again, and this means many faces from Goodfellas would subsequently feature in The Sopranos. Indeed, Ray Liotta is set to feature in upcoming prequel movie The Many Saints of Newark – but which good fellas appeared in The Sopranos proper?

Lorraine Bracco

The most obvious casting connection between Goodfellas and The Sopranos is undeniably Lorraine Bracco. In 1990, the actress made her name as Goodfellas‘ Karen Hill opposite Ray Liotta. An ordinary girl lured by the cash and glamour that came with dating a gangster, Karen would crash and burn as collateral damage from her husband’s illicit activities. Though Bracco was reluctant to play a mafia wife again, she joined The Sopranos as Jennifer Melfi, Tony’s therapist whom she enjoys(?) a complex attachment to throughout the HBO series. Dr. Melfi ultimately manages to avoid the tragic pitfalls Bracco’s Goodfellas character fell into.

Michael Imperioli

Unlike Bracco, Michael Imperioli is far more famous for his role in The Sopranos than he is for Goodfellas. As Christopher Moltisanti, Imperioli played Tony Soprano’s protege nephew, and the son of a gangster Gandolfini’s character respected deeply. Renowned for his love of tracksuits, Christopher battled several addictions on his way to the top, before meeting a predictably unfortunate fate at Tony’s own hands. Michael Imperioli had a brief but brilliant Goodfellas role as Spider – the mafia upstart shot in the foot by Joe Pesci, and then killed following an ill-advised “go f**kyourself.”

Frank Vincent

Frank Vincent enjoyed a memorable supporting role in Goodfellas as Billy Batts, the “made man” who riles up Tommy and gets himself killed as payback, forcing Henry and Jimmy to help in covering up the crime, or else risk retaliation from the Gambino family for murdering a protected figure. Frank Vincent’s character in The Sopranos, Phil Leotardo, enjoys even loftier status. Vincent’s Leotardo leads the Lupertazzi crime family, experiencing a fractious relationship with Tony and the DiMeo mob. Leotardo’s eventual demise in The Sopranos acts as a homage to Billy Batts’ death in Goodfellas.

Tony Darrow

Tony Darrow’s Sonny Bunz is an associate of Paulie’s mob in Goodfellas, and proud owner of the Bamboo Lounge which Henry and the others use at their convenience. Sonny’s Lucchese family dealings predictably end with him losing the bar altogether after the required protection money doesn’t get paid. In The Sopranos, Darrow regularly appeared as DiMeo family capo Larry Barese, who remains loyal to Tony throughout his time on-screen. In a curious twist of fate, Tony Darrow would later confess to a genuine affiliation with the real Gambino family.

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Chuck Low

One of the conspirators in Goodfellas‘ Lufthansa heist, Morrie Kessler owns a wig store and frequents with the local Lucchese mobsters. Kessler earns himself a telephone wire strangling after badgering Robert De Niro’s Jimmy about unpaid money one too many times. Chuck Low’s character in The Sopranos, Shlomo Teittleman, doesn’t fare much better, cutting a deal with Tony in season 3’s “Denial, Anger, Acceptance” for a share of a motel business. This time it’s Low’s character who reneges on the arrangement, once again getting on the wrong side of folks you don’t want to upset.

Tony Sirico

Similar to Michael Imperioli, Tony Sirico worked his way up from a minor part in Goodfellas to a main credit in The Sopranos. In the former, he played a gangster by the name of Tony Stacks, who can be seen among Paulie’s crew near the start of the movie. This was before being cast as a Paulie of his own – “Walnuts” Gualtieri in The Sopranos. One of Tony’s most loyal, albeit most violent, followers, Paulie Walnuts got his nickname from a botched truck heist, but proved more competent than that incident suggested, serving as a capo in the Soprano mob before his promotion to underboss.

Frank Pellegrino

One of the few on this list to switch sides in fictional terms – Frank Pellegrino played a mobster in Goodfellas and an FBI chief in The Sopranos. Across the show’s first five seasons, Pellegrino’s Frank Cubitoso does his damnedest to get Tony Soprano and his family behind bars, going to criminal lengths to make that happen but always falling short. The same actor was Johnny Dio in Goodfellas – a Lucchese criminal who joins Henry and Jimmy in jail and “does the meat.”

Vincent Pastore

Salvatore Bonpensiero (known to his friends as Big Pussy) was a main character throughout the first two seasons of The Sopranos, returning as part of a dream sequence even after his demise. Getting his nickname from an uncanny knack for burglary, Bonponsiero was a member of the DiMeo crime family who turned into an FBI informant after finding himself in financial difficultly. Predictably, that didn’t end well for him. Pastore had much less to work with in Goodfellas, where he’s seen helping Henry move a rack of fur coats at the Bamboo Lounge.

Suzanne Shepherd

Lorraine Bracco might’ve been hesitant to revisit Goodfellas territory in The Sopranos, but there were no such concern for Suzanne Shepherd, who first portrayed the mother of Karen Hill, and then the mother of Carmela Soprano in The Sopranos. On both occasions, she was the mother-in-law of the story’s main gangster. Just as Karen’s parent was less than delighted about her daughter marrying into the local mafia, Mary DeAngelis had similar reservations about Carmela’s relationship with Tony Soprano.

Marianne Leone Cooper

Marianne Leone Cooper briefly graced Goodfellas as the wife of Tuddy Cicero, Paulie’s brother, but the actress is probably more recognizable as Christopher’s mother, Joanne Moltisanti, in The Sopranos. A callous woman who shows precious little love toward her son, Joanne is a difficult woman to like. Regardless, the character will return in The Many Saints of Newark, this time played by Gabriella La Piazza.

John Ciarcia

It’s not unusual for actors to cross paths time and time again in the gangster genre, but it’s far less common for one actor to occupy the same position on both occasions. John Ciarcia is one such man. First seen alongside Frank Vincent’s Billy Batts in Goodfellas, Ciarcia then followed Vincent to The Sopranos, where he served as a capo to the latter’s own Phil Leotardo. Now there‘s loyalty.

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Anthony Caso

In an unlikely meta twist, Caso worked both for and as Martin Scorsese. In Goodfellas, the actor is a simple truck hijacker grifting alongside Jimmy, but in the very first season of The Sopranos, Caso plays a fictionalized Martin Scorsese entering a nightclub complete with full celebrity entrance.

Paul Hernan

A regular cohort of Martin Scorsese’s, Paul Hernan is the “Pittsburgh Connection” in Goodfellas, where Henry and Karen go for their cocaine. Hernan also appeared in a handful of The Sopranos episodes as Peter “Beansie” Gaeta, a mobster turned restaurant owner who gets severely beaten by Richie Aprile, his former mafia associate.

Tony Lip

Carmine Lupertazzi led the crime family of the same name from season 3 to season 5 of The Sopranos. Despite their obvious differences in approach (mostly due to both men hailing from different generations), Carmine and Tony stayed respectful towards each other for the most part. Before Carmine, Tony Lip played real life gangster Frank “Frankie The Wop” Manzo in Goodfellas, who receives a quick introduction via Henry Hill’s Bamboo Lounge voice-over.

Nicole Burdette

Mirroring Marianne Leone Cooper somewhat, Nicole Burdette played the unnamed girlfriend of Frankie Carbone in Goodfellas, but enjoyed a larger presence in The Sopranos as Tony’s youngest sibling, Barbara, who lived a legitimate life with her husband and children away from the violence other members of her family took part in. Despite taking diverse paths, she remained part of Tony’s life.

Nancy Cassaro

Whether a sign of the era or of the subject matter, the wives of Goodfellas don’t see much screen time, and so it proves with Nancy Cassaro, who was cast as the spouse of Joe Buddah in Martin Scorsese’s classic. Cassaro would then become the first actress to play Joanne Moltisanti, Christopher’s mother, in The Sopranos, appearing in a single episode before Marianne Leone Cooper took over.

Frank Albanese

Frank Albanese will be most familiar for his turn as The Sopranos‘ Pat Blundetto, known to Tony as “Uncle Pat.” Retired as a gangster when the story begins, Pat still crops up in a handful of episodes, usually to lend Tony the benefit of his wisdom and experience. In Goodfellas, Albanese can be found playing a mob-friendly legal representative when a younger Henry Hill is on trial for the very first time.

Tobin Bell

The man better known as Jigsaw in the Saw franchise has a single credit in The Sopranos to his name, featuring as Major Zwingli in season 3’s finale, “Army of One.” Zwingli unsuccessfully attempts to recruit Tony and Carmela’s son into military school. Bell makes an even less prominent appearance in Goodfellas as a parole officer.

Susan Varon

Susan Varon made her screen debut in Goodfellas, playing a background character simply credited as “Susan.” Over a decade later, she was a real estate agent in The Sopranos, showing Christopher and Kelli around a new house. Outside of her mafia exploits, Varon will be more familiar to audiences from another New York-based TV series, Daredevil, in which she played Josie.

Vito Antuofermo

Transitioning from boxing to acting, Goodfellas marked Vito Antuofermo’s introduction to Hollywood and, true to life, he played a prizefighter. Antuofermo continued to frequent the gangster genre’s casting rooms, and later turned out in The Sopranos as Bobby Zanone. The owner of a garbage company, Bobby had dealings with Richie Aprile, who distributed drugs using garbage truck routes as cover. The character is also remembered for having trash dumped on an angry customer’s driveway.

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Daniel P. Conte

Credited as a character by the name of Dr. Dan, Daniel P. Conte has made cameos in a host of Martin Scorsese movies, Goodfellas included. He’ll perhaps be better remembered for his stint in The Sopranos, however. Conte’s character, Doc Santoro, is a Lupertazzi family capo who engages in a power struggle with Phil Leotardo, played by the aforementioned Frank Vincent. Santoro loses after being murdered by a bullet through the eye. Moe Greene would be proud.

Jerry Vale

Vale sings “Pretend You Didn’t See Her” in Goodfellas, while Henry and the other gangsters watch on in awe with their girlfriends. Vale would later perform several uncredited numbers in The Sopranos.

Frank Adonis

Adonis played another Goodfellas character based on a real life figure – Anthony Stabile. He’s one of several characters trying to calm Tommy during the famous “you think I’m funny?” scene, believing Joe Pesci’s erratic mobster is genuinely mad. Adonis later played an unnamed man in The Sopranos season 2’s “House Arrest” episode.

Angela Pietropinto

After appearing ever so briefly as Paulie’s wife in Goodfellas, Angela Pietropinto is seen in The Sopranos season 6’s “The Fleshy Part of the Thigh.”

Victor Colicchio

Victor Colicchio is one the unnamed faces serving as young Henry’s criminal pals during Goodfellas‘ 1960s scenes. The actor would later reform himself for The Sopranos, appearing as Joe, a mechanic at the garage owned by Salvatore.

Gaetano LoGuidice

It seems Henry’s crew members were in high demand after Goodfellas, as Gaetano LoGuidice also made the trip to The Sopranos. Unlike his fellow Goodfellas alumni, however, LoGuidice has earned more than one credit in the HBO TV series, including a patron at the Bada Bing! strip club, a casino guest, and a funeral attendee.

Anthony Alessandro

Alongside Colicchio and LoGiudice, Alessandro acts as another of Henry’s young friends in Goodfellas‘ opening act. He also can be seen when Tommy DeVito is chewing out a younger Henry with “funny how?” Scored a small part as a waiter in The Sopranos season 2.

Gene Canfield

One of Canfield’s earliest acting gigs came as a prison guard in Goodfellas after Henry and the boys are sentenced to a stint inside. Sticking on the right side of the law, the actor appears as a cop in The Sopranos season 1.

Vito Picone

Better known as the leader singer of The Elegants, Picone is simply credited as “Vito” in Goodfellas. Made an uncredited appearance during The Sopranos‘ pilot episode.

Key Release Dates
  • The Many Saints Of Newark (2021)Release date: Oct 01, 2021
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