Julie Bovasso
Julia Anne Bovasso (August 1, 1930 – September 14, 1991) was an American actress of stage, screen, and television.
Bovasso was born in Brooklyn, New York and raised in the Bensonhurst neighborhood of this borough, the daughter of Angela Mary (née Padovani) and Bernard Michael Bovasso, a teamster. She was Albanian-Italian-American.
She attended The High School of Music & Art in Manhattan.
Bovasso appeared in numerous films, including Saturday Night Fever (1977) as Florence Manero, the mother of John Travolta's character, Tony Manero. She reprised the role in the film's 1983 sequel Staying Alive. Before Saturday Night Fever, she appeared in the 1970 Otto Preminger film Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon.
In addition to Staying Alive, she was in a number of films in the 1980s, including Willie & Phil (1980), The Verdict (1982), Daniel (1983), Off Beat (1986), Wise Guys (1986), Moonstruck (1987). In the 1990s, Bovasso was seen in Betsy's Wedding (1990) and My Blue Heaven (1990).
On-stage, Bavasso wrote and appeared in avant-garde productions off-Broadway such as Jean Genet's The Maids. For the latter, she won the first Best Actress Obie (Off-Broadway) Award in 1956, presented to her by Shelley Winters.
Before her film work, Bovasso established the experimental Tempo Playhouse at 4 St. Marks Place in Manhattan during the 1950s. There, she introduced works of the Theater of the Absurd, including works by the playwrights Jean Genet, Eugene Ionesco and Michel de Ghelderode, to the professional theater in the United States.
Bovasso also performed with The Living Theater and had a longstanding relationship with La Mama Experimental Theatre Club. From 1968 to 1975, she directed many of her own original works at La MaMa, including Gloria and Esperanza, Schubert's Last Serenade, The Moondreamers, Standard Safety, and The Nothing Kid.
In addition to her work as a director and actor, her playwriting credits include the four-hour play Gloria and Esperanza, which Village Voice theatre critic Jerry Tallmer described as "a miracle, a mythopoetic fireworks display." A sought-after acting coach, Bovasso was known as an exacting instructor and her private New York workshops regularly included prominent performers. As per the DVD commentary, Bovasso coached both Cher and Olympia Dukakis on their Brooklyn accents in the film Moonstruck.
In earlier performances, she played Rose Corelli Fraser in the short-lived soap opera From These Roots. She was fired from that show due to a disagreement with producers.
Acting
Movie
Saturday Night Fever
as Flo
1977
Movie
Moonstruck
as Rita Cappomaggi
1987
Movie
The Verdict
as Maureen Rooney
1982
TV
Miami Vice
as Bag Lady
1984
Movie
Staying Alive
as Mrs. Manero
1983
Movie
My Blue Heaven
as Vinnie's Mother
1990
Movie
Wise Guys
as Lil Dickstein
1986
TV
Cagney & Lacey
1982
Movie
Article 99
as Amelia Sturdeyvant
1992
Movie
Betsy's Wedding
as Grandma
1990
Movie
Daniel
as Frieda Stein
1983
Movie
Off Beat
as Mrs. Wareham
1986
Movie
Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon
as Ramona
1970
Movie
Willie & Phil
as Mrs. D'Amico
1980
The Sin of Jesus
1961
Movie
The Iceman Cometh
as Pearl
1960
Movie
Doubletake
as Lou DiMona
1985
Movie
The Gentleman Bandit
as Doris
1981
From These Roots
as Rose Corelli Fraser
1958
Movie
Just Me and You
as Waitress
1978
Movie
A Time to Triumph
1986
Movie
Moonstruck: At the Heart of an Italian Family
as Self (archival footage)
2006
TV
Nurse
as Mrs. Mazzelli
1981
Movie
King Crab
as Mrs. Campana
1980