Paul Sorvino, whose TV credits included Law & Order, The Oldest Rookie and, most recently, Godfather of Harlem, died on Monday of natural causes. He was 83.
“Our hearts are broken, there will never be another Paul Sorvino,” his wife of seven years, Dee Dee Sorvino, said in a statement to the AP. “[H]e was the love of my life, and one of the greatest performers to ever grace the screen and stage.”
Born in Brooklyn the son of an Italian immigrant, Sorvino’s original dream of pursuing opera singing was dashed by an asthmatic condition. Turning to acting, his career kicked off in the mid-1970s with a role on the sitcom We’ll Get By, playing the the patriarch of middle-class New Jersey family.
In 1976, Sorvino headlined the police drama Bert D’Angelo/Superstar, followed by the miniseries Seventh Avenue and Chiefs, and then the title role in 1987’s The Oldest Rookie. In 1991, he boarded the original Law & Order‘s Season 2 cast as Sergeant Phil Cerreta, a role he played for one-and-a-half seasons. In 2000, he co-starred on That’s Life, a CBS sitcom from Diane Ruggiero.
Sorvino went on to have TV roles on Still Standing, The Goldbergs (as Ben “Pop Pop” Goldberg), Season 1 of Bad Blood then Godfather of Harlem, where he played crime boss Frank Costello.
On the big screen, Sorvino of course of well remembered for his role/garlic slicing in Goodfellas, plus his turn as Henry Kissinger in Nixon.