Ad – content continues below

 

10. Joe Masseria (played by Ivo Nandi) 

Giuseppe Masseria was best known as “Joe the Boss.” He was also known as “the man who can dodge bullets” because he survived a multi-gun execution attempt on Bowery. The hit crew wounded six people, killed two people and a horse and shot Masseria at point blank range. Masseria had bullet holes in his hat and ringing in his ears. Masseria was the father of what is now the Genovese family, which was called the Luciano family before he got deported. Masseria was born in Marsala, Sicily and came to America to escape a murder rap. With the backing of Salvatore D’Aquila, whose family would become the Gambinos, Masseria was named capo consigliere of the early New York mob families after Nick Morello died.

Masseria never actually held the title “Capo di Tutti Capi,” but did head the Morello family after an ambush took out Umberto Valenti. Word on the street is Charlie Lucky did the job on Valenti.  After Frankie Yale died in 1928, Joe Masseria wanted to be the boss of bosses. The only thing standing in his way was “Little Augie” Pisano, who was the don of the Yale family. After a little finagling, Masseria became “Joe the Boss” of his own Sicilian family. He wanted to dip his beak into “the Broadway Mob” and siphoned “Lucky” Luciano because he was the only Sicilian in a group of Italians and Jews. Luciano balked at first, but after realizing that his Sicilian heritage afforded him more perks, he paid tribute and bided his time. Masseria started the Castellamarese War when he asked for Salvatore Maranzano’s head on a platter. He got served up himself instead. Legend has it that he was fingered by Luciano and shot by Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel, Vito Genovese, Albert Anastasia, and Joe Adonis and that he died with the ace of spades in his hand, but there were actually only two shooters who hit him with 20 shots and left the guns in the alley. They took the canoli.

[related article: Boardwalk Empire Close-Up – Joe Masseria]

11. Waxey Gordon (played by Nick Sandow) 

Irving “Waxey Gordon” Wexler was known, as a kid, for being such a good pickpocket that it was like people’s wallets were lined with wax. Waxey Gordon came up through Dopey” Benny Fein’s labor sluggers. Waxey ran rum and gambling houses for Arnold Rothstein and was so good at it The Brain put him in charge of all his bootlegging operations and he pulled in about $2 million a year for himself. Waxey Gordon lived large, buying mansions and living in New York City’s finest hotels, but kept his family out of the loop. When Rothstein died, Waxey aligned himself with Charles Luciano and Meyer Lansky until Lansky got sick of him and Luciano fed him to the feds for tax evasion in 1933.

When Waxey got out ten years later, his gang was gone and his political connections dried up. He got divorced and moved west to be Irving Wexler, sugar salesman. It wasn’t sweet enough and he got popped for peddling smack. He tried to bribe his way out of it, but died in Alcatraz in 1952.

Ad – content continues below

12. Big Jim Colosimo (played by Frank Crudele) 

Vincenzo “Big Jim” Colosimo is best known as the guy who was permanently sidelined so Johnny Torrio and Al Capone could take over Chicago for New York. Colosimo was born in Calabria, Italy. He ran cathouses and social clubs in Chicago and got into the gambling rackets when the Black Hand came down on him asking for a taste. Colosimo called Torrio and Frankie Yale for help. Torrio moved to Chicago in 1909 and broke the Black Hand’s fingers. When Torrio found out Al Capone needed to get out of New York to dodge a murder rap in 1919, Torrio told Colosimo to take him on.

Colosimo was slow to move into bootlegging, so Torrio and Capone called Frankie Yale in to get him up to speed and Colosimo was hit on May 11, 1920. Whether it was by Frankie Yale, the Mafia, represented by the Genna and Aiello families (Torrio and Capone were not Mafia), or Colosimo’s in-laws is not really known.

13. George Remus (played by Glenn Fleshler) 

George Remus is best known for inspiring the character Jay Gatsby in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. He was also known as the King of the Bootleggers. George Remus had a daughter named Romola Remus who played Dorothy Gale in the 1908 silent version of The Wizard of Oz. Remus was born in Germany and moved to Chicago when he was five. When he was 14, he worked at a drugstore to support his family. When he was 19 he bought it. Then he bought more drug stores. George Remus got sick of drug stores, and his wife, and became a mouthpiece and married his secretary, Imogene. Remus became a criminal defense lawyer, specializing in murder and was pulling in $500,000 a year by 1920.

When the Volstead Act was passed Remus memorized it and found enough loopholes to pull in $40 million in three years. George Remus threw parties. He gave kids money to buy clothes. He gave guests diamond watches. He gave their wives new cars. In 1925, the Feds read their own Volstead act and realized Remus violated it thousands of times. It took a jury two hours to give him two years. While he was in prison George Remus made friends with an undercover fed who quit his job and slept with Remus’ wife. Imogene liquidated and hid George Remus’ assets. After a day in divorce court, Remus chased Imogene’s car and shot her to death in front of a park full of people. Remus defended himself with claims of insanity. The jury thought he was crazy and sentenced him to six months in an asylum. When Remus got out, he retired from bootlegging and died quietly in 1952 of natural causes at age 77.

[related article: Boardwalk Empire Close-Up – George Remus]

14. Frankie Yale (played by Joseph Riccobene) 

Frankie Yale, was called the “Beau Brummell of Brooklyn” and the “Prince of Pals” because he was quick with a joke and helped out a lot of people in the neighborhood. Frankie Yale and Capone came up through the Five Points Gang, and their Dutch uncle was Johnny Torrio. Yale owned The Harvard Inn, where Frank Galluccio slashed Al Capone across the face and Capone got the nickname “Scarface.” Yale is the guy who sent Capone to Chicago to work under Johnny Torrio. He was one of the biggest bootleggers in Brooklyn. Future bosses Albert Anastasia and Joe Adonis worked under him. In 1920, Yale took out Jim Colosimo so Torrio could take over Chicago. (SPOILER ADVISORY) Yale, along with John Scalise, and Albert Anselmi, did the hit on Dean O’Banion for Torrio. Yale survived four attempted hits. One on the orders of Capone. Yale was also the first mobster to be taken out with a tommy gun. Yale’s funeral was one of the biggest in mob history. Two women showed up at Holy Cross Cemetery who said they were his wife.

Ad – content continues below

[related article: Boardwalk Empire: Frankie Yale Close-Up]

15. Hymie Weiss (played by Will Janowitz) 

Henry Earl J. Wojciechowski was known as Hymie Weiss or Hymie the Pole. He was also known as “The Perfume Burglar” because he spilled perfume during a robbery. Weiss worked for Dean O’Banion in the North Side Gang. Weiss intimidated everybody. He threatened to kill photographers if they took his picture. His brother said he saw Weiss once in twenty years “when he shot me.” When a party Weiss went to was raided for Mann Act violations, Weiss sued to get his silk shirts and socks back. Weiss was killed on October 11, 1926 outside of O’Banion’s Schofield flower shop. He is buried at the same cemetery as Al Capone and Dean O’Banion, Mount Carmel Cemetery in Hillside, Illinois.

16. – 20. – The D’Allessio Brothers are The Lanzetti Brothers.

Eric Schneider plays Sixtus D’Alessio; Max Casella plays Leo D’Alessio, Nicholas Alexander Martino plays Pius D’Alessio and Al Linea plays Matteo D’Allesio. The D’Allesio Brothers are based on the six Lanzetti brothers, four of whom were named after popes. Pius, Ignatius, Lucien, Teo, Leo, and Willie Lanzetti controlled the Little Italy section of South Philadelphia’s prostitution, bootlegging, numbers and dope rackets.

The press loved them because they died well. Willie Lanzetti’s corpse was found beheaded and his head was found in a burlap bag with a bullet in the brain. Leo was shot in South Philadelphia in 1925; Pius got it in a luncheonette (what part of the body is a luncheonette?) on Dec. 31, 1936. Willie’s corpse was found in two sewn-together potato sacks on the Wynnewood Estate on July 31, 1939. Ignatius Lanzetta, their real name according to a Supreme Court Case, got a law changed. He was convicted, basically, of being a gangster and because he was a gangster there was a minimum sentence. There was no crime actually named, just that he was a gangster. The Supreme Court said that sounded repugnant under the Fourth Amendment.

21. Salvatore Maranzano (played by Giampiero Judica) 

Salvatore Maranzano, also known as Don Turridru, was born on July 31, 1886, in Castellammare del Golfo, Sicily. Maranzano was a Sicilian hero and had studied to become a priest. On orders of Sicilian mob family father Don Vito Cascio Ferro, he emigrated to Brooklyn, USA, in 1919. His legit business was as a real estate broker, but he made his scratch with booze, prostitution and drugs.

Maranzano had a fascination with Julius Caesar and based his crime structure on the military of the Roman Empire. Maranzano divided his army into squads and each soldier had to pledge loyalty to his squad leader. Maranzano instigated the Castellammarese War in 1930, when he went up Joe Masseria. On April, 15, 1931, Masseria was set up for execution by Charles “Lucky” Luciano on Maranzano’s orders. Word on the street is Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel and Albert Anastasia did the deed. Winning the Castallammarsese War, Maranzano made Luciano his number one man, set up the Five Families, and declared himself “capo di tutti capi.”  

Ad – content continues below

Fearing Luciano’s growing power, Maranzano contracted Mad Dog Coll to murder Luciano, but Lucky acted first. Lucky Luciano and Vito Genovese contracted Samuel “Red” Levine and three other gangsters who worked for Meyer Lansky to do the job on Maranzano. Posing as tax officers, they hit Maranaon in his  office in Grand Central. On Sept. 10, 1931, they shot and stabbed Salvatore Maranzano to death. In his autobiography, A Man of Honor, Joseph Bonanno says he didn’t know about the plot to kill Maranzano. Bonanno became the youngest crime boss in America at the age of 26. The Maranzano family became known as the Bonanno family.