Boy of Summer
By Kyle Smith and Sue Miller
(This article was published in the July 26, 1999 issue of People Magazine and is copyright protected. No copyright infringement is intended by this duplication. Ths is for entertainment purposes only.)
Michael Badalucco's
career started with a white-hot bang. His dad, Joe, who was working as a carpenter
on the New York City set of the 1964 film Fail Safe, wangled the 8 year old
from Flatbush, Brooklyn, his first movie role, so young Michael showed up in a suit
and had his picture taken. That was it. When he saw the film, that photo turned
up near the end: His character's city had just been obliterated by a nuclear bomb.
"I'm the little kid who got nuked," Badalucco says. "And it's been uphill from there!"
Has it ever. With his ordinary-Joe looks, Badalucco paid his dues with years
of bit parts - serving Robert De Niro a Coke in Raging Bull, playing "Guy
from Brooklyn" in Desperately Seeking Susan - while repeating to himself
the character actor's mantra ("There are no small parts, only small actors"). He paid
the bills by working as a prop man until as recently as 1996, but today he's getting
his props at last as the amiable Jimmy Berluti of ABC's hit The Practice, and as the
serial killer David "Summer of Sam" Berkowitz in Summer of Sam. "He can be dark
and menacing on the one hand," says The Practice's coexecutive producer
Jeffrey Kramer, "and funny and endearing on the other." In fact, Jimmy wouldn't
exist without Badalucco: The actor auditioned for a small part in The Practice with
its creator David E. Kelley. "They thought I had given a wonderful reading," Badalucco
remembers. "They were all cracking up." He also had a bit part in Kelley's wife
Michelle Pfeiffer's film One Fine Day. Pfeiffer and Kelley discussed his
talent, and Kelley decided to write a new character just for Badalucco. "When David
finds a voice that he likes, he writes to it," says Kramer. Everyone else on the
set likes Badalucco's voice too. "He is such a mensch," says costar Camryn Manheim.
"Michael is the guy who brings Yankees caps and salami from some deli in Brooklyn
to everybody on the set. He's also a boy scout - tried, loyal and true."
Tried he has certainly been. Badalucco, 44 (whose brother Joe Jr. recently
had a bit part in HBO's The Sopranos; parents Joe, 83, and homemaker mom
Jean, 79, live in Upstate New York), was a standout drama student at the State
University of New York at New Paltz, but afterward, he says, he often wondered,
"Is it ever going to happen?" His personal life, at least, began to click in
1991, after he landed a part in Spike Lee's Jungle Fever, which earned him
a trip to the Cannes Film Festival with his old college budy John Turturro, who was
starring in Barton Fink. (Turturro also does the voice of a dog who
speaks to Berkowitz in Summer of Sam.) Back in New York City, Badalucco told
his Cannes celebrity stories to a nice nurse, Brenda Heyob, he had met through
friends. "There was some furious name-dropping," Heyob jokes. "He was a little
too much." They went on their first date three months later and married in 1996 after
he handed her a big box that held a Niagra Falls place mat and an antique
engagement ring. "She's my best friend," says Badalucco, who lives with his wife,
41, in a three-bedroom Spanish-style stucco house in the Hancock Park section of
L.A. and a Manhattan apartment.
Turturro's still right up there, though. The pair sometimes take steam baths
together at the new York Athletic Club ("He shaves through the steam with heated
baby oil," says Turturro. "He's got a whole ritual. He's like a Roman") and even
made it back to Cannes after Badalucco starred in Turturro's 1992 film Mac. "He had
so much luggage," recalls Turturro. "But he couldn't carry them because he hurt
his neck. I'm carrying his luggage like a slave!"
Freed from his bit-part shackles, Badalucco says, "I feel very fortunate." His fame
has even reached his parents' local pharmacy, where his picture is hung lovingly.
"After all the years they were there to support me emotionally and financially,"
Badalucco marvels, "it finally paid off." With his next film, Oh Brother, Where
Art Thou?, due next year, he says with a shrug, "Me and Brenda, we take
everything in stride. We take what the Good Lord has to offer," he adds, "and
await the next adventure."