Joe Grifasi
Joe Grifasi (born Joseph G. Grifasi; June 14, 1944) is an American character actor renowned for his versatile supporting roles across film, television, and theater, spanning over five decades.[1] Born in Buffalo, New York, to Joseph J. Grifasi, a skilled laborer, and Patricia (née Gaglione), Grifasi briefly attended Canisius College before serving in the United States Army as a specialist fourth class from 1963 to 1966.[1][2][3] After his military service, he earned a Master of Fine Arts in acting from the Yale School of Drama, where he was a classmate of comedian Lewis Black.[4][5] Grifasi made his professional stage debut in 1972 at the Yale Repertory Theatre in a production of The Bourgeois Gentleman.[1] His Broadway credits include notable performances in The Mystery of Edwin Drood (1985–1986), for which he received a Drama Desk Award nomination for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical, as well as Dinner at Eight (1982), The Accidental Death of an Anarchist (1980), and The 1940's Radio Hour (1979).[2][6] He has continued to appear in off-Broadway and regional theater productions, including directing works like Heaven Can Wait in 2001.[5] In film, Grifasi debuted with a role in The Deer Hunter (1978) and went on to appear in over 50 features, often portraying everyman characters or authority figures.[6] Standout roles include the taxi dispatcher Manny in Splash (1984), Shy Waiter in Moonstruck (1987), the dock boss in The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! (1988), and Tommy Molto in Presumed Innocent (1990).[4] Other significant films encompass Matewan (1987), Benny & Joon (1993), Natural Born Killers (1994), Radium Girls (2018), and Tornado (2024).[6][7] On television, Grifasi has amassed more than 130 credits, frequently guest-starring in crime dramas and sitcoms.[8] He portrayed Phil Rizzuto in 61* (2001) and Yogi Berra in The Bronx Is Burning (2007), and played Defense Attorney (later Judge) Hashi Horowitz on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit from 2005 to 2021.[9] Recent appearances include roles in Evil (2019–2024), New Amsterdam (2018–2023), I Know This Much Is True (2020), and The Dreams of Rene Sendam (2022).[7][10] In his personal life, Grifasi has been married to jazz soprano saxophonist and composer Jane Ira Bloom since 1974.[1] Of Italian descent, he maintains a low-profile existence while continuing to contribute to the arts as both performer and occasional director.[5]Early life and education
Upbringing
Joe Grifasi was born on June 14, 1944, in Buffalo, New York, to Joseph J. Grifasi, a skilled laborer at the Chevrolet plant who worked there for 42 years, and Patricia Gaglione Grifasi.[1][11] He grew up in a working-class Italian-American family on Buffalo's West Side during the 1950s, immersed in a tight-knit community characterized by blue-collar resilience and strong familial bonds.[12][11] The family's Italian heritage, with parents who were Sicilian immigrants, reflected in traditions of hard work and communal storytelling, provided early cultural influences.[12] As a child, he enjoyed typical neighborhood pastimes, including collecting baseball cards and playing sandlot games with friends on streets like Congress Street, idolizing figures such as Yogi Berra.[12] Grifasi's formative interest in performance emerged during his high school years at Bishop Fallon High School, a now-defunct Roman Catholic institution in Buffalo.[3] Known as a class clown who often disrupted lessons by entertaining peers, he was encouraged by a priest to channel his energy into acting by casting him as the zany Dr. Herman Einstein in the school's production of Arsenic and Old Lace.[11] The priest remarked, "I'm going to give you a part where you can get a hundred people to laugh at you. But you've got to let me get some teaching done," an experience that captivated Grifasi after three performances and affirmed his aptitude for character roles, with the priest advising, "Character actors always eat."[11] Prior to this, Grifasi had no exposure to professional theater, having never attended a play in his working-class Italian household.[11]Education
Grifasi briefly attended Canisius College in Buffalo, New York, for one year before enlisting in the United States Army, where he served as a specialist fourth class from 1963 to 1966.[13][1][3] After his service, he returned to the college but did not complete his degree.[13] He pursued advanced training at the Yale School of Drama, earning a Master of Fine Arts degree in acting in 1975.[2][4] During the early 1970s, his program emphasized rigorous techniques in classical and contemporary acting, preparing students for versatile stage and screen work through intensive scene study, voice, and movement training. Key influences at Yale included movement instructor Carmen de Lavallade, who mentored Grifasi and his classmates by teaching actors to integrate physicality and imagination for character development, drawing from her background in dance without requiring formal dance proficiency.[14] This approach shaped his distinctive character actor style, emphasizing nuanced, embodied portrayals. Grifasi's transition from amateur to professional was facilitated through Yale's student productions, including his professional stage debut as a student in Molière's The Bourgeois Gentleman at the Yale Repertory Theatre in 1972, as well as collaborative performances with mentors like de Lavallade.[1][14] These experiences honed his skills in ensemble work and classical repertoire, directly informing his subsequent career in theater.Personal life
Marriage and family
Joe Grifasi married jazz soprano saxophonist and composer Jane Ira Bloom in 1984. The couple met while both were at Yale University, where Grifasi was studying drama and Bloom had recently graduated from the School of Music, connecting through overlapping artistic communities in New Haven.[15][8][1] Grifasi and Bloom have shared a life together in New York City, primarily residing in Manhattan, where they have balanced their respective demanding careers in acting and music without having children. Public records and biographical accounts confirm the absence of offspring, allowing the couple to focus on their professional pursuits while maintaining a low profile on personal family matters.[16][17][18] Their marriage has been marked by mutual support, with the pair often attending each other's events and drawing strength from their shared artistic environment, which has contributed to Grifasi's personal stability amid his extensive career in theater and film. This partnership, rooted in creative synergy, has allowed them to navigate the challenges of artistic life while preserving privacy regarding intimate family details.[19][20]Connections to the arts
Grifasi's marriage to jazz soprano saxophonist and composer Jane Ira Bloom since 1984 has deeply influenced his artistic perspective, particularly in fostering an appreciation for improvisation as a core element of performance. Together, they co-teach the "Improvisational Artists Lab" at The New School's College of Performing Arts, where Bloom's jazz expertise intersects with Grifasi's dramatic training to guide students in exploring spontaneous creation across music, text, movement, and unconventional instrumentation. This interdisciplinary collaboration highlights how Bloom's improvisational approach has enriched Grifasi's understanding of music's role in live performance, blending structured preparation with real-time invention to develop new forms of artistic expression.[21] Beyond teaching, Grifasi and Bloom actively engage in New York's cultural ecosystem through philanthropy, supporting nonprofit theater and music initiatives that sustain the city's vibrant arts scene. They have contributed to A.R.T./New York, the Alliance of Resident Theatres, which provides grants, training, and resources to independent theater companies, reflecting their commitment to fostering emerging artists and organizations. Their involvement underscores a shared dedication to the interdisciplinary arts, where Grifasi's theater background complements Bloom's musical innovations, often attending galas and events that bridge performance disciplines.[22] These personal connections to the arts, rooted in their long-standing partnership, have offered Grifasi ongoing inspiration and a creative respite amid the fluctuations of an acting career spanning over five decades. The mutual exchange of ideas—particularly Bloom's emphasis on jazz's fluidity—has informed his directorial work and workshops, providing a stable artistic foundation through shared explorations up to the present day.[23]Career
Stage work
Joe Grifasi began his professional stage career in the early 1970s following his training at the Yale School of Drama, where he earned an MFA and made his debut at the Yale Repertory Theatre in Molière's The Bourgeois Gentleman in 1972.[2] By the mid-1970s, he transitioned to New York theater, appearing in regional and Off-Broadway productions before earning Broadway credits. His early work included the role of Frank, a charismatic deliveryman, in the 1976 Broadway revival of Arthur Miller's A Memory of Two Mondays, directed by John Tillinger at the Playhouse Theatre, which ran for nearly two months and showcased his ability to infuse ensemble roles with wry humor.[24] That same year, Grifasi took on the dual role of Premiere Announcer and Green in the short-lived revival of Boy Meets Girl at the Lyceum Theatre, marking his initial foray into comedic timing within fast-paced ensemble casts. Throughout the late 1970s and 1980s, Grifasi established himself as a versatile character actor on Broadway, excelling in supporting roles that blended comedy and pathos. He appeared as Captain Hannibal Jackson in the Brecht-Weill revival Happy End in 1977, demonstrating his musical theater chops in a satirical ensemble.[25] In the 1979 musical The 1940's Radio Hour at the St. James Theatre, he portrayed Neal Tilden, a young band member navigating wartime chaos, earning a 1980 Drama Desk Award nomination for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical for his energetic, era-evoking performance.[26] By the mid-1980s, Grifasi's dramatic range shone in The Mystery of Edwin Drood (1985-1987) at the Imperial Theatre, where he played the dual roles of Bazzard and Mr. Phillip Bax in the interactive musical adaptation of Dickens, receiving a 1986 Drama Desk nomination for his nebbishy, prayerful bit player who yearns for the spotlight.[27] His Off-Broadway work during this period, including other ensemble pieces, further highlighted his knack for eccentric, reactive characters that supported larger narratives without overshadowing leads.[4] Grifasi's stage career evolved into a hallmark of character-driven versatility, often portraying everyman figures with a mix of comedic flair and understated emotional depth in both musicals and straight plays. In the 1987-1988 Off-Broadway production of The Boys Next Door at the McGinn/Cazale Theatre, he played Arnold Wiggins, a resident of a group home, earning a 1988 Drama Desk nomination for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play for his poignant, multifaceted depiction of vulnerability and humor in ensemble dynamics.[28] Later Broadway appearances, such as Max Kane in the 2002 revival of George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber's Dinner at Eight at the Vivian Beaumont Theatre, reinforced his skill in period comedies, where he brought sharp wit to opportunistic supporting roles.[29] Off-Broadway highlights continued into the 2010s, including his turn as the gruff florist Mushnik in the 2015 Encores! Off-Center concert staging of Little Shop of Horrors at New York City Center, where his gravelly vocals and exasperated delivery anchored the show's cult-favorite ensemble.[30] In recent years, Grifasi has focused on intimate, character-rich productions, particularly those exploring absurdity and human frailty. He portrayed Nagg, the legless father confined to a dustbin, in Samuel Beckett's Endgame at the Irish Repertory Theatre in 2023, a role that extended through April and drew praise for his endearing, resilient performance amid the play's bleak tragicomedy.[31] This Beckett work exemplified his ongoing affinity for ensemble-driven theater, where subtle physicality and vocal nuance enhance dramatic tension. While no major productions are confirmed for 2024 or 2025, Grifasi has participated in staged readings and Beckett-related events, including a July 2025 reading of Lewis Black's The Deal at the Chautauqua Institution, maintaining his commitment to classical and contemporary ensemble roles that highlight his enduring versatility as a character actor.[32][33]Screen work
Grifasi's transition to screen acting began with early television appearances in 1974, including roles as Jerry Shields and Sam Sitko across two episodes of the series Police Surgeon.[34] These initial forays into the medium built on his stage experience, honing the naturalistic timing that would define his character work in film and TV. His film debut arrived in 1978 with a small but memorable role as the Bandleader in Michael Cimino's The Deer Hunter, where he captured the communal spirit of a working-class Pennsylvania wedding scene amid the film's exploration of the Vietnam War's impact.[35] This breakthrough marked his entry into major cinema, showcasing his ability to embody relatable everyman figures in ensemble casts.[1] Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Grifasi solidified his presence in film with supporting roles that often typecast him as authority figures or ordinary men thrust into extraordinary circumstances. In John Sayles's Matewan (1987), he portrayed Fausto, an Italian immigrant miner advocating for union rights during the 1920 West Virginia coal strikes, contributing to the film's gritty depiction of labor struggles. He followed with the comedic role of Frankie, the Pier 32 dock foreman, in The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! (1988), delivering deadpan humor in a scene involving absurd police antics. In [Presumed Innocent](/page/legal thriller) (1990), Grifasi played prosecutor Tommy Molto, a tenacious foil to Harrison Ford's lead in this taut legal thriller based on Scott Turow's novel. His versatility extended to Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers (1994), where he appeared as Deputy Sheriff Duncan Homolka, a hapless lawman in the film's chaotic satire of media sensationalism and violence.[36] On television, Grifasi achieved milestones portraying real-life baseball icons, leveraging his Buffalo roots and affinity for blue-collar authenticity. In the HBO film 61* (2001), he embodied Hall of Famer Phil Rizzuto as the Yankees' color commentator during the 1961 season's home run chase between Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris. He reprised this sports niche in the 2007 ESPN miniseries The Bronx Is Burning, playing another Hall of Famer, Yogi Berra, as the Yankees' bench coach amid the team's tumultuous 1977 championship run. A significant recurring role came as Defense Attorney—and later Judge—Hashi Horowitz on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit from 2005 to 2021, appearing in 14 episodes as a sharp-witted legal figure navigating high-stakes sex crimes cases.[37] These performances highlighted his skill in blending gravitas with subtle humor, often in procedural formats that rewarded his economical delivery. Grifasi's career demonstrated remarkable longevity, amassing over 120 screen credits by 2025 through consistent character work in ensemble-driven projects.[38] Post-SVU, he adapted to the streaming era with guest spots that capitalized on his seasoned presence, including Lombino in an episode of Evil (2022), a skeptical figure in the Paramount+ supernatural drama.[38] In 2023, he appeared as Lilo Steinhauser on New Amsterdam, portraying a patient in the NBC medical series' exploration of hospital ethics.[38] Shorter formats also featured him prominently, such as Dr. Bradley in the 2022 short film The Dreams of Rene Sendam and Rich in the 2024 short Tornado, roles that underscored his continued demand for nuanced supporting parts despite the industry's shift toward younger ensembles.[39] This phase reflected a steady comeback, with opportunities in prestige TV sustaining his profile after decades of steady output.Filmography
Film
Joe Grifasi has appeared in approximately 60 feature films throughout his career. The following is a chronological list of his verified film roles, including character names where available.| Year | Title | Role | Director |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1978 | The Deer Hunter | Bandleader | Michael Cimino[40] |
| 1978 | On the Yard | Morris | Raphael D. Silver[1] |
| 1979 | Something Short of Paradise | Barney Collins | Robert Downey Sr.[1] |
| 1980 | Hide in Plain Sight | Matty Stanek | James Caan[1] |
| 1981 | Honky Tonk Freeway | Osvaldo | John Schlesinger[1] |
| 1982 | Still of the Night | Joseph Vitucci | Robert Benton[1] |
| 1984 | Splash | Manny | Ron Howard[1] |
| 1984 | The Pope of Greenwich Village | Jimmy the Cheese Man | Stuart Rosenberg[41] |
| 1984 | The Flamingo Kid | Mario Minetta | Garry Marshall[1] |
| 1985 | Brewster's Millions | J. B. Donaldo | Walter Hill[1] |
| 1985 | Bad Medicine | Gomez | Harvey Miller[1] |
| 1986 | F/X | Detective Mickey Galeau | Robert Mandel[1] |
| 1987 | Matewan | Fausto | John Sayles[1] |
| 1987 | Moonstruck | Shy waiter | Norman Jewison[1] |
| 1987 | Ironweed | Jack | Héctor Babenco[1] |
| 1988 | Big Business | Desk clerk | Jim Abrahams[1] |
| 1988 | The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! | Foreman | David Zucker[1] |
| 1988 | Beaches | Otto Titsling | Garry Marshall[1] |
| 1989 | Chances Are | Omar | Emile Ardolino[1] |
| 1989 | The Feud | Bud Bullard | Bill D'Elia[1] |
| 1990 | Presumed Innocent | Tommy Molto | Alan J. Pakula[1] |
| 1991 | City of Hope | Pauly | John Sayles[1] |
| 1992 | Primary Motive | Paul Melton | Daniel Adams[1] |
| 1992 | Lift | Godfrey | Salomé Breziner[42] |
| 1993 | Benny & Joon | Mike | Jeremiah S. Chechik[1] |
| 1993 | Household Saints | Frank Manzone | Nancy Savoca[1] |
| 1994 | The Hudsucker Proxy | Lou | Joel Coen[1] |
| 1994 | Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult | Director | Peter Segal[1] |
| 1994 | Natural Born Killers | Duncan Homolka | Oliver Stone[1] |
| 1995 | Heavy | Leo | Hal Hartley[1] |
| 1995 | Tall Tale | Man in top hat | Jeremiah S. Chechik[1] |
| 1995 | Batman Forever | Bank guard | Joel Schumacher[1] |
| 1995 | Money Train | Riley | Joseph Ruben[1] |
| 1995 | Two Bits | Uncle Joe | James Foley[1] |
| 1996 | One Fine Day | Manny Feldstein | Michael Hoffman[1] |
| 1997 | Sunday | Scottie Elster | John Lawlor[1] |
| 1998 | The Naked Man | Det. Lt. Albert Karski | J. Todd Williams[1] |
| 1999 | The Out-of-Towners | Arresting cop | Sam Weisman[1] |
| 1999 | Looking for an Echo | Vic Spidero | Martin Davidson[1] |
| 2001 | Queenie in Love | Bertold | Amos Kollek[1] |
| 2002 | Auto Focus | Strip Club M.C. | Paul Schrader |
| 2002 | Grasp | Pete | James Orlando[1] |
| 2003 | Bought & Sold | Alphonso 'Chunks' Colon | Prince D. Whaley[43] |
| 2005 | Slow Burn | Desk Sergeant Drown | Wayne Beach[43] |
| 2006 | A Crime | Bill | Manuel Pradal[43] |
| 2006 | The Last New Yorker | Jerry | Dov Simens[43] |
| 2006 | Creating Karma | Prighorn | Pfeiffer & Reed[43] |
| 2007 | Dark Matter | Prof. Colby | Shi-Zheng Chen[43] |
| 2009 | Marino's | Uncle Leo | David Serranno[43] |
| 2009 | Under New Management | Msgr. Tranni | Joe Otting[44] |
| 2016 | Baked in Brooklyn | David's Dad | Rory Rooney[45] |
| 2016 | The American Side | The Serb | Rob Malone[43] |
| 2018 | Radium Girls | Nonno | Lydia Dean Pilcher[43] |
| 2022 | The Dreams of Rene Sendam | Dr. Bradley | Joshua Zev Nathan[46] |
| 2024 | Tornado | Rich | Jack Kendrick[47] |
Television
Joe Grifasi has amassed over 70 television credits by 2025, encompassing guest appearances, recurring roles, and made-for-TV films across broadcast and cable networks.[38] His early TV work featured episodic roles in crime dramas and comedies, evolving into more prominent recurring parts in legal and procedural series later in his career. Notable examples include his portrayal of Yogi Berra in the 2007 miniseries The Bronx Is Burning and a long-running role as Judge Hashi Horowitz on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit from 2005 to 2021.[48][49] The following table provides a chronological overview of his television appearances, focusing on series episodes, specials, and TV movies, with character names and key details where available.| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1974 | Dr. Simon Locke (also known as Police Surgeon) | Unspecified | Series appearance.[1] |
| 1981 | The Gentleman Bandit | Detective Esposito | TV movie.[1] |
| 1982 | The Elephant Man | Pinhead manager | TV movie, CBS.[1] |
| 1986 | One Police Plaza | Unspecified | TV movie, CBS.[1] |
| 1987 | Hill Street Blues | Ronnie Delacroce | Episode: "Sorry Wrong Number", NBC.[1] |
| 1989 | Perfect Witness | Breeze | TV movie, HBO.[1] |
| 1989 | Kojak: Ariana | Lieutenant Rastelli | TV movie, ABC.[1] |
| 1989 | Moonlighting | Unspecified | Episode: "Lunar Eclipse", ABC.[1] |
| 1990 | WIOU | Tony Pro | Recurring series role, CBS.[1] |
| 1990 | Midnight Caller | Harry Manx | Episode: "Planes", NBC.[1] |
| 1990 | Roseanne | Unspecified | Episode: "April Fool's Day", ABC.[1] |
| 1991 | Law & Order | Ezra Gould | Episode: "Out of Control", NBC.[1] |
| 1992 | Citizen Cohn | Gerald Walpin | TV movie, HBO.[1] |
| 1992 | Sinatra | George Evans | Miniseries, CBS.[1] |
| 1993 | L.A. Law | Dominic Nuzzi | Episodes: "That's Why the Lady Is a Stamp", "Vindaloo in the Villows", NBC.[1] |
| 1993 | Moon over Miami | Larry | Episode: "Careless Dentist Blues", ABC.[1] |
| 1994 | L.A. Law | Dominic Nuzzi | Episodes: "McKenzie, Brackman, Barnum & Bailey", "God Is My Co-Counsel", "Finish Line", NBC.[1] |
| 1994 | Jack Reed: A Search for Justice | Gravedigger | TV movie, NBC.[1] |
| 1995 | Shadow of a Doubt | Sydney Sherman | TV movie, NBC.[1] |
| 1996 | Undue Influence | Clem | Miniseries, CBS.[1] |
| 1996 | Law & Order | James Linde | Episode: "Corpus Delicti", NBC.[1] |
| 1996 | Remember WENN | Larry Looper | Episode: "Armchair Detective", AMC.[1] |
| 1996 | Early Edition | Harry Hawks | Episodes: "The Paper", "His Girl Thursday", CBS.[1] |
| 1996 | Chicago Hope | Larry Ruscetti | Episode: "Mummy Dearest", CBS.[1] |
| 1997 | Early Edition | Harry Hawks | Episode: "The Wall (Part 1)", CBS.[1] |
| 1997 | The Practice | Unspecified | Episode: "Sex, Lies and Monkeys", ABC.[1] |
| 1997–1998 | All My Children | Mr. Gale | Recurring series role, ABC.[1] |
| 1998 | Homicide: Life on the Street | Lt. Walter Neal | Episode: "Closet Cases" (uncredited), NBC.[1] |
| 1998 | Law & Order | Warings' attorney | Episode: "Cherished", NBC.[1] |
| 1998 | Blood on Her Hands | Detective Larry Beers | TV movie, ABC.[50] |
| 1999 | Switching Goals | Dave | TV movie, ABC.[1] |
| 2000 | The Other Me | Conrad | TV movie, Disney Channel. |
| 2001 | 61* | Phil Rizzuto | TV movie, HBO.[1] |
| 2001 | Deadline | Unspecified | Episode: "Somebody's Fool", NBC.[1] |
| 2001 | Some of My Best Friends | Joe Zito | Episode: "Pilot", CBS.[1] |
| 2001 | Law & Order | James Linde | Episode: "Deep Vote", NBC.[1] |
| 2001 | Thieves | Mickey | Episode: "Bad Moon Rising", ABC.[1] |
| 2005–2021 | Law & Order: Special Victims Unit | Judge Hashi Horowitz | Recurring role (14 episodes, including "Raw" [S7E6] and "The Five Hundredth Episode" [S21E6]); also appeared as other characters in the franchise.[49][38] |
| 2007 | The Bronx Is Burning | Yogi Berra | Miniseries, 8 episodes, ESPN.[48] |
| 2009 | The Good Wife | Judge John Mata | Guest role. |
| 2010 | The Front | Mr. Zeffirelli | TV movie (Patricia Cornwell's The Front).[51] |
| 2017 | The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel | Judge Hackett | Guest role, episode "Because You Left" (S1E3), Amazon Prime Video.[52] |
| 2018–2019 | Lodge 49 | Burt | Guest role, AMC.[38] |
| 2019 | Bull | Judge Arlen Rand | Recurring guest role, 7 episodes, CBS. |
| 2020 | The Good Fight | Judge John Mata | Guest role, Season 4, CBS All Access.[53] |
| 2020 | I Know This Much Is True | Steve Falice | Miniseries, HBO.[38] |
| 2022 | Evil | Lombino | Episode: "The Demon of Parenthood" (S3E8), Paramount+.[54] |
| 2023 | New Amsterdam | Lilo Steinhauser | Episode: "Right Place" (S5E12), NBC.[55] |