Tony De Nonno | |
Birth Date: | 1947 1, mf=yes |
Occupation: | Filmmaker, photographer, puppeteer |
Years Active: | 1970–present |
Alma Mater: | New York Institute of Technology |
Website: | http://www.denonnoprodinc.com/ |
Anthony Joseph De Nonno (born January 12, 1947) is an Italian–American filmmaker, photographer, puppeteer, historian, and speaker in humanities.[1]
De Nonno was born in Brooklyn, New York to Antoinette (née Carifa) and Jerry De Nonno, two residents of Manhattan's Little Italy neighborhood.[2] His grandparents, Giovanni and Angelina Carifa, owned and operated the Columbia Restaurant on Mulberry Street in Manhattan.[3] His father, Jerry, was a sports columnist and horse racing handicapper who worked at the New York Post from 1927 to 1977.[4] He wrote a daily column called "De Nonno's Picks," which highlighted racing odds at the Aqueduct and Belmont tracks.
De Nonno attended New Utrecht High School and later received a B.F.A. in Communications from the New York Institute of Technology-Manhattan. Around this time, he worked as a copy boy for the New York Post, the newspaper where his father worked.
Between 1970 and 1993, De Nonno has photographed a number of public figures including Muhammad Ali, Tina Turner, Cary Grant, David Bowie, Joan Baez, Bette Midler, The Who, The Rolling Stones, Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, and Stevie Wonder.[5] He served as Eric Clapton's 1974 American tour photographer.[6]
Since 1970, De Nonno has written, produced, and directed over 50 short films and documentaries. While studying at NYIT-Manhattan, De Nonno made his first films: El Fang-Dango, a spoof of Dracula, The Kiss of Death, a gangster-film spoof, and It's All in my Hands, a documentary on local shoemaker John Principe. It's All in my Hands was an end-of-year project that cost him $800 (~$4,800 in 2018). De Nonno recalls in an account on Folkstreams: "...Finnish TV acquired the rights to broadcast It's All in My Hands six times over a 2 year period-and paid me exactly $800."[7]
Subjects of his documentaries have included Itzhak Perlman, Anne Akiko Meyers, and Antonio Meucci, as well as senior citizens, physically challenged persons, and family businesses in New York City. Many of his documentaries have aired on ABC, PBS, Bravo, and New York's WLIW. Meucci, in particular, had resonated with De Nonno in his filming of 1992's Antonio Meucci: Father of the Telephone. He would later advocate House Resolution 269 among the U.S. House of Representatives to honor Meucci, which passed on June 11, 2002.[8]
In a recollection of It's All in my Hands on Folkstreams, De Nonno states his ethos on filmmaking:
"At the heart of what I do as a filmmaker...is to mine the essence and core of the individual(s) I am focusing upon and reveal something about him or her, which touches a chord in all of us. I see myself as a storyteller and I love to shine my filmmaker’s eye on the often unspoken and unrecognized “Salt of the Earth” individuals of this world...I am especially determined to honor the legacy and dignity of Italian Americans as well as the heritage and traditions of culturally-diverse people of our great nation."From 1981, after filming It's One Family: Knock on Wood, he has offered public performances and workshops with a marionette of a knight based on the epic poem Orlando Furioso.[9] De Nonno is a close friend of the film's subjects: the Manteo family of puppeteers versed in the marionette shows of Catania, Sicily.[10] He has also worked as a Senior Security Officer at The New School in Manhattan.[11]
"Michael Racanelli, director of the Vocational Division of the New York City Department of Education, called it 'An impressive personalized film on working.' Dr. Paul Patane, trustee of the School Art League said 'it awakens young people to the dignity of working with their hands.' Joan Eskenaski of the National Career Counseling and Resource Center cited the film in a review calling it 'A film of feeling and quality...a great vocational guidance film.' Her review inspired librarians across New York State to acquire 16mm prints for their film collection."
Year | Title |
---|---|
1970 | The Kiss of Death |
1971 | El Fang-Dango |
1972 | It's All in my Hands |
1977 | Part of Your Loving |
1979 | One Generation Is Not Enough |
1980 | Moira: A Vision Of Blindness |
Fleetwood Mac | |
1981 | The Way of The Wind |
It's One Family: Knock on Wood | |
1982 | Itzhak Perlman: In My Case, Music |
Dancing's All of You | |
1983 | Anne Akiko Meyers: Beyond The Gift of Music |
Just Be Me | |
1984 | Housing With a Heart: The Enterprise Foundation |
1985 | Just Be Me |
Navigation Without Sight | |
1986 | Liberty Minutes |
Portraits of Liberty | |
1987 | a3520 For Piano Solo(a composition by Matthias Kriesberg) |
1988 | Fast and Sexy |
1989 | A Fistful of Words |
1990 | Everybody Rejoice |
1991 | The Morris Magnet School for the Arts |
1992 | Antonio Meucci: The Father of the Telephone |
1993 | Rebuilding the South Bronx: The Story of SEBCO |
1994 | Italian American Visions: Portraits of 20th Century Immigration |
1995 | An Empowering Partnership |
1996–97 | The UN in Queens: A Global Celebration |
1998 | Teaching Technology to the World |
2000 | Tai Chi and Seniors: A Meditation in Movement |
2001–2005 | Heaven Touches Brooklyn in July |
2003 | Teaching Technology to the World |
2004 | A Gift of Joy |
New York City Through Time: The Museum of the City of New York | |
Public Schools are Everybody's Business | |
2005 | Forming Men for All Seasons |
2006 | Young People: Building Bridges to a Safer World |
2010 | John LaCorte: A Monument to History |
Serving Society With Heart: UNICO National's 85-Year Contribution to America | |
2007–2010 | From Devastation to Celebration: The South Bronx: A Community Reborn |
A Century of Laughter, Heart, and Song: The Art of Italian Comedy in America |
De Nonno's debut documentary, 1972, hosted on Folkstreams.