Anthony Corleone

Anthony Corleone
First appearance The Godfather
Last appearance The Godfather Part III
Created by Mario Puzo
Portrayed by Anthony Gounaris in the first film, James Gounaris in the second, and singer Franc D'Ambrosio in the third[1]
Information
Nickname(s) Tony
Gender Male
Occupation Opera singer
Family Corleone family
Religion Roman Catholicism

Anthony Vito "Tony" Corleone is a fictional character in The Godfather trilogy of films directed by Francis Ford Coppola. He is portrayed by Anthony Gounaris in the first film, James Gounaris in the second, and singer Franc D'Ambrosio in the third.[2] (The character was given the name Anthony because it was thought that the 3-year-old Gounaris of the first film would respond best if his own name was used.[3]) He is the son of Michael (Al Pacino) and Kay Corleone (Diane Keaton), and the older brother of Mary Corleone (Sofia Coppola). While Anthony was never a major character in the first two films, major events in his life were the backdrop of key parts of the second film, and his relationship with his father is a plot point in the third film. He was not mentioned by name in the novel.

Fictional character biography

The Godfather

Anthony has a small role in the first film; his only scene of consequence is when he witnesses the death of his grandfather, Vito Corleone (Marlon Brando), who dies while playing with him in the garden.

The Godfather Part II

The second film's plotline opens in 1958, with Anthony's first communion. It continues with an extravagant banquet held in his honor at the family estate near Lake Tahoe. During it, his father's time is largely taken up with tending to the family business, an ongoing theme throughout the film. Anthony receives many gifts, mostly from people he does not know, which confuses him.

Later in the film, he and his sister, Mary, overhear their parents arguing; Kay voices her concerns that Michael's button men are Anthony's primary playmates.

Michael refuses to believe he has influenced his son in any negative way. Michael and Kay are divorced by the end of the film; Anthony seems to resent his mother's role in his parents' split, and as a result is sullen and unaffectionate during her visit.

At the end of the film, Anthony has developed a close relationship with his Uncle Fredo (John Cazale). When they are about to go fishing together, Michael calls Anthony away, insisting he accompany him to Reno. Fredo is then assassinated by Al Neri (Richard Bright) on Michael's order.

The Godfather Part III

Sometime in the 1960s, Michael gave Kay custody of Anthony and Mary, so she could supervise their education. Anthony, now an adult, along with his mother and sister, Mary, attends a ceremony where Michael receives a citation from the Pope. At the banquet that follows, Anthony, along with Kay, confronts his father, and tells him that he is quitting law school for a career in opera and will never join the family business (even though, at this point, it is wholly legitimate). Michael, infuriated, wants him to finish law school.

Michael finally relents at Kay's urging. She privately tells Michael that Anthony knows that he had Fredo killed.

Anthony will make his operatic debut as the lead in Cavalleria Rusticana, in Palermo, Sicily, on Easter Sunday. His family joins him in Sicily, for the premiere. The day before, as a gift, he performs the traditional Sicilian ballad "Brucia La Terra" (the official theme of the trilogy).[4] During this trip Anthony, like his parents, disapproves of Mary's romance with their cousin Vincent Corleone (Andy García).

The film concludes with Anthony's performance. Although the production is a success, it is overshadowed by numerous murders and assassinations leading up to, during, and following it, most notably, that of Mary (Sofia Coppola), who is accidentally killed by assassin Mosca during his attempt on Michael's life.

Sequel novels

Anthony appears in Mark Winegardner's sequel novels The Godfather Returns and The Godfather's Revenge. In the former novel, he witnesses Fredo's murder from his bedroom window, explaining the third film's revelation that he knows the truth about his uncle's death. In these novels, Anthony has a difficult relationship with his father; he loves Michael but does not want to become like him. Anthony's ambivalence hurts Michael, but he understands it, as he had once felt the same way about his own father.

References

  1. "The Godfather, Part III (1990)". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-06-24.
  2. "The Godfather, Part III (1990)". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-06-24.
  3. The Godfather - Did You know...? (Accessed 9 August 2006)
  4. "Brucia La Terra'" at thegodfathertrilogy.com
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