Philip Tattaglia
Philip Tattaglia | |
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Philip Tattaglia portrayed by Victor Rendina
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First appearance | The Godfather |
Last appearance | The Godfather (official) |
Portrayed by | Victor Rendina |
Information | |
Gender | Male |
Occupation | Crime's boss, manager |
Title | Boss |
Family | Tattaglia |
Children | Bruno Tattaglia (?-1945), John(?-?) |
Relatives | Rico Tattaglia (brother) |
Philip Tattaglia is a fictional character and antagonist in Mario Puzo's novel The Godfather, the first installment of The Godfather film trilogy[1] and The Godfather video game. He was portrayed by actor Victor Rendina.[1]
In the story
Tattaglia heads one of New York's Five Families, which bears his name. Although his primary business is prostitution, he is the first to invest in Virgil Sollozzo's heroin trade, and wages war with the Corleone family after Vito Corleone refuses to provide financing and lend political and police protection to the enterprise.
The Tattaglia family attempt to assassinate Vito Corleone, first killing notorious Corleone enforcer Luca Brasi. Further attacks flounder, and Tattaglia is dealt a debilitating blow when the bloody conflict claims his son, Bruno, and after Vito Corleone recovers and resumes control of his family. After Vito's son, Sonny Corleone, is murdered, the two Dons negotiate an end to the protracted struggle. However, Tattaglia tellingly insists on Don Corleone's guarantee to honor the peace. After conceding to Tattaglia's demands, Corleone realizes that he fronted Emilio Barzini's master plan to collapse the Corleone empire, divide the spoils among the four remaining families, and embrace the heroin trade unopposed.
After the meeting, Vito tells Tom Hagen that Tattaglia is a "pimp" and never could have outfought Sonny. He realized at the meeting that Barzini was the mastermind behind the war and Sonny's assassination.
Death
Tattaglia's death varies between the movie and the book. In the movie version, he is in bed with a prostitute when Rocco Lampone and another assassin, acting on Michael Corleone's orders, burst in and murder both with Madsen M-50 submachine guns. This scene took place in room 242 on the second floor of the then Lido Beach Hotel, in Lido Beach, New York. The assassins prepared for the hit in one of the two cuppolas on the hotel's top floor.
In the novel, Tattaglia is standing over a bed with a young girl lying on it when Rocco Lampone shoots and kills him.
In The Godfather: The Game, protagonist Aldo Trapani kills Don Tattaglia in a similar manner, except Tattaglia holds the prostitute hostage instead, giving the protagonist the option to shoot both.
References
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- Pages with broken file links
- The Godfather characters
- Characters in American novels of the 20th century
- Fictional American people of Sicilian descent
- Fictional assassinated people
- Fictional characters from New York City
- Fictional characters introduced in 1969
- Fictional crime bosses
- Fictional mobsters
- Fictional pimps and madams
- Literary villains
- Novel character stubs