Fredo Corleone
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Frederico "Fredo" Corleone (b. 1917) | |
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First appearance | The Godfather |
Last appearance | The Godfather's Revenge |
Created by | Mario Puzo |
Portrayed by | John Cazale |
Information | |
Nickname(s) | Freddie, Fredo, The Fredster |
Gender | Male |
Age | 42 |
Occupation | Gangster |
Spouse(s) | Deanna Dunn (b. 1915) |
Relatives | Vito Corleone (father), Carmella Corleone (mother), Santino Corleone (brother), Michael Corleone (brother), Tom Hagen (adopted brother) |
Frederico "Fredo" Corleone (1917-1959) is a fictional character in Mario Puzo's novel The Godfather. In the fictional universe of the novel and its film adaptation, he is the middle brother to oldest brother Sonny Corleone and younger brother Michael Corleone, and son of Vito Corleone, head of a powerful Mafia family.
Fredo was portrayed by late Italian-American actor John Cazale in Francis Ford Coppola's film adaptation of the novel, as well as in its sequel.
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[edit] Role in the novel and film
In Puzo's novel, Fredo was always thought of in the Corleone crime Family as the weakest of the three Corleone brothers, and therefore was given its unimportant businesses to run. Despite being a weak and sickly child, however, Fredo is the most obedient and dutiful of the Corleone children.
In a pivotal scene in the novel and film, Fredo attempts to immediately retaliate after the attempted assassination of his father on a New York street by men working for drug kingpin Virgil Sollozzo. However, he fumbles with the gun, drops it, and is unable to return fire. He then sits on the street curb next to his unconscious father and weeps. In the novel, he becomes quite sick after his father's shooting, going into shock after the incident, believed by Michael and Tom to be due to his great regard for their father and seeing him get shot.
After Sonny's assassination and Vito's death, the younger Michael is appointed head of the family over Fredo, causing a deep rift between the two brothers which is expanded upon in Coppola's later sequels to the first film adaptation.
In the original novel, Fredo's primary weakness is his womanizing, a habit which he develops only after he is sent to Las Vegas to learn the casino trade. His father, Vito, sees this as a flaw for two reasons: first, he is "notoriously straitlaced" when it comes to matters of sex, and second, he sees Fredo as allowing women to control him. In the films, Fredo's lack of intelligence plays a greater role than it does in the novel. He is seen as far less mentally acute than his younger brother Michael. Michael even uses the word "stupid" when discussing his brother with family consigliere Tom Hagen.
[edit] In the sequels
At the Lake Tahoe party at the beginning of The Godfather Part II, Fredo is unable to control his intoxicated wife, Deanna. After she danced with another man, he furiously drags her off the dance floor and threatens to hit her. Deanna mocks him by saying that he "couldn't belt [his] momma," and that he's jealous because he's not "a real man."
In a flashback to the early days of the Corleone family, there is a scene where an infant Fredo is being treated for pneumonia.
Fredo betrays Michael when approached by Johnny Ola, an agent of rival gangster Hyman Roth. This betrayal ultimately results in an assassination attempt on Michael at his Lake Tahoe home. The film leaves unclear the details of Fredo's deal with Ola and Roth. Fredo ambiguously claimed that his goal in that deal is simply to get something for himself, on his own, and swears that he did not realize he was being used as part of a larger plot to kill his brother.
Michael discovers Fredo's role in the plot during his trip to Havana when Fredo, forgetting that he had previously told Michael that he'd never met Johnny Ola, lets it slip out that he and Ola had been in Havana together. Michael confronts Fredo later and tells his older brother, "You broke my heart." Later, when Michael is being pursued by a Congressional Committee investigating organized crime, he has a talk with Fredo and realizes that Fredo had both withheld important information from him about Roth's connection with the Committee's lawyer and is deeply resentful and jealous of Michael's role in the family business. Michael disowns and banishes Fredo from the family. Upon their mother's death, and at the urging of their sister Connie, Michael relents toward Fredo and seemingly offers reconciliation. However, it is only to draw Fredo in so as to have him murdered, something Michael did not permit while their mother was alive.
Towards the end of The Godfather Part II, Fredo and his nephew, Michael's son Anthony, develop a friendship and are to go fishing on Lake Tahoe. However, Anthony is called away by Connie, who tells him that his father wants to take him to Reno. Fredo is left alone in the fishing boat with Al Neri and he takes the boat far out onto the lake. As Fredo prays the Hail Mary, Neri shoots him in the back of the head. It is implied that Fredo's body is thrown overboard after being chained to weights. Family members outside of Michael's inner circle are told that Fredo drowned in a boating accident.
Ordering Fredo's death would haunt Michael for the rest of his life, and further alienates him from his wife Kay and son Anthony. In The Godfather Part III, Michael expresses deep remorse at ordering his brother's death years later while confessing his sins to Cardinal Lamberto who, in the film, later becomes Pope John Paul I.
[edit] Family
- Vito Corleone — Father; played by Marlon Brando in The Godfather and by Robert De Niro in The Godfather Part II
- Carmella Corleone — Mother; played by Morgana King
- Santino 'Sonny' Corleone — Elder brother; played by James Caan
- Constanzia 'Connie' Corleone-Rizzi — Sister; played by Talia Shire
- Michael Corleone — Younger brother; played by Al Pacino
- Tom Hagen — Adopted brother; played by Robert Duvall
- Mary Corleone — Niece; played by Sofia Coppola
- Anthony Vito Corleone — Nephew; played by Anthony Gounaris in Godfather I, played by James Gounaris in Godfather II, played by Franc D'Ambrosio
- Vincent 'Vinnie' Mancini-Corleone — Illegitimate nephew and succeeding 'Don'; played by Andy Garcia.
[edit] Cultural references
- In one of the Las Vegas scenes early in the film "Swingers," Vince Vaughn's character Trent Walker says, "I'm gonna find me two waitresses here and I'm gonna pull me a Fredo," a reference to Fredo Corleone "banging cocktail waitresses two at a time" in the first "Godfather" film.
- In the movie Analyze This, starring Robert de Niro and Billy Crystal, there is a reference to Fredo in a dream scene which replicates The Godfather almost exactly. In the dream, psychiatrist Ben Sobel (Crystal) is shot in the same way as Vito Corleone, while mob boss Paul Viti (De Niro) stands by helpless, much like Fredo. Viti is angered by his role in the dream ("I was Fredo? I don't think so!")In the sequel Analyze That, to start a prison fight, a hired assassin taunts Paul Vitti by getting his attention with that taunt "Hey, Fredo!"
[edit] Expanded character
Many aspects of Fredo's life, his marriage to Deanna, and his role in the assassination attempt on Michael are expanded upon in Mark Winegardner's 2004 novel The Godfather Returns. The novel says that Fredo originally intended to become a priest but left his studies for unknown reasons, though it is implied he was molested by the priest he studied under. The novel also portrays Fredo as being gay or possibly bisexual. Although his wife Deanna knows about it, he denies and loathes this aspect of himself. He believes his sexuality to be a secret, but Michael and Tom Hagen have their suspicions.
Within the pages of The Godfather Returns, and followed up on in The Godfather's Revenge, also by Winegardner, it is stated that Fredo had a child before he died, and the child was given up for adoption by the mother, Margurite Duvall, who was Michael's Corleone's girlfriend for the duration of The Godfather's Revenge.
[edit] Notes
[edit] References
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