in 1977
Film and television Aiello broke into films in the early 1970s. One of his earliest roles came as a ballplayer in the baseball drama,
Bang the Drum Slowly (1973), with
Robert De Niro. Aiello had a walk-on role as small-time hood Tony Rosato in
The Godfather Part II (1974), ad-libbing the line "
Michael Corleone says hello!" during a hit on rival gangster
Frank Pentangeli (
Michael V. Gazzo). Aiello had a co-lead role with
Jan-Michael Vincent in
Defiance (1980), about some Manhattan residents who fight back against the thugs terrorizing the neighborhood. He received considerable acclaim for playing a racist New York City cop in
Fort Apache, The Bronx (1981) with
Paul Newman. In 1981, Aiello won a
Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Performer in Children's Programming for his appearance in an
ABC Afterschool Special called
A Family of Strangers. He was paired with De Niro again for the
Sergio Leone gangster epic,
Once Upon a Time in America (1984), as a police chief whose name was also "Aiello." His many film appearances included two for director
Woody Allen, who cast him in
The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985), and
Radio Days (1987). He played a main role in the 1985-86 television series
Lady Blue. Aiello played Phil Cantone in Harlem Nights (1989) & the
pizzeria owner Sal in
Spike Lee's
Do the Right Thing (1989). At the time of the film's release, in an interview with the
Chicago Tribune, he called the role his "first focal part". He further identified the film as a very collaborative effort, during which Spike Lee at one point told him, "Whatever you wanna do, you do." Aiello went on to write a crucial scene he shared with
John Turturro ten minutes prior to its production. The role earned him nominations for a
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture and the
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, while the film critics' associations of
Boston,
Chicago, and
Los Angeles each named him best supporting actor. He also had sympathetic roles in the horror thriller ''
Jacob's Ladder (1990) and the comedy-drama 29th Street'' (1991). Aiello played nightclub owner and
Lee Harvey Oswald assassin
Jack Ruby in the biopic
Ruby (1992), the lead role in
Paul Mazursky's film business satire
The Pickle (1993), the titular character in the Academy Award-winning short film
Lieberman in Love (1995), and a political big shot with mob ties in
City Hall (1996), starring
Al Pacino. He later starred in the independent feature film
Dolly Baby (2012), written and directed by Kevin Jordan; Aiello also starred in Jordan's
Brooklyn Lobster, which premiered at the
Toronto International Film Festival in 2005.
Music Aiello's singing was on display in films such as
Hudson Hawk (1991),
Once Around (1991), and
Remedy (2005) that starred his son Ricky Aiello and
Jonathan Doscher. He released several albums featuring a big-band including
I Just Wanted to Hear The Words (2004),
Live from Atlantic City (2008), and
My Christmas Song for You (2010). Aiello and
EMI songwriter Hasan Johnson released an album of standards fused with rap entitled
Bridges in 2011. He played the father for the video of
Madonna's song, "
Papa Don't Preach" (1986), and recorded his own
answer song, "Papa Wants the Best for You", written by
Artie Schroeck.
Theater Aiello appeared on the Broadway stage many times throughout the 1970s and 1980s. He appeared in three plays by Louis La Russo II:
Lamppost Reunion (his Broadway debut - 1975),
Wheelbarrow Closers (1976), and
Knockout (1979). In 1977, he originated the role of Fran Geminiani in the long-running play
Gemini. In 1981, Aiello starred in
Woody Allen's play
The Floating Light Bulb alongside
Beatrice Arthur. The play, set in 1945, is a semi-autobiographical tale of a
lower middle class family living in
Brooklyn,
New York City.
Frank Rich, critic from
The New York Times gave the play a mild review, writing "there are a few laughs, a few well-wrought characters, and, in Act II, a beautifully written scene that leads to a moving final curtain". Rich also compared the play to the work of
Tennessee Williams. In the mid-1980s, Aiello starred in a replacement cast version of
Hurlyburly (1984) alongside
Christine Baranski,
Frank Langella,
Ron Silver, and
Candice Bergen. He also starred in
The House of Blue Leaves (1986) alongside
John Mahoney (who earned a
Tony Award for his performance),
Ben Stiller,
Stockard Channing, and
Julie Hagerty. In 2002, Aiello starred in
Elaine May's comedic play,
Adult Entertainment alongside May's daughter,
Jeannie Berlin. The play was directed by
Stanley Donen and opened off-broadway at the Variety Arts Theatre. Critic
Ben Brantley of
The New York Times, described the play as an "often very funny, but overstretched comedy sketch". In July 2011, Aiello appeared
Off-Broadway in the two-act drama
The Shoemaker, written by
Susan Charlotte and directed by Antony Marsellis. The play is a stage version of his 2006 movie
A Broken Sole, which began life in 2001 as a one-act play. == Personal life ==