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IMDbPro

Joe Dallesandro

  • Actor
  • Writer
  • Producer
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Joe Dallesandro in Toubib malgré lui (1987)
Watch Trailer [OV]
Play trailer1:13
Letters to Paul Morrissey (2018)
9 Videos
17 Photos
Joe Dallesandro's still hangin' . . . after battles with drug addiction and alcohol, brushes with the law, three broken marriages and numerous love affairs, plus the suicide of his only sibling Bob. One of the most beautifully photographed wild guys to come out of the Andy Warhol and Paul Morrissey "Factory" era, the slight and slightly androgynous Dallesandro became an improbable pioneer of the male sexual revolution and the first film actor to be glorified as a nude sex symbol. The Morrissey/Warhol movies were known for their bizarre, amateur standing, yet Joe and his completely uninhibited, walk-on-the-wild-side demeanor managed to hold an entire underground audience captive. Joe's dangerous street mentality and raw erotic power became a definitive turn-on to both gay and straight audiences and his fame eventually filtered somewhat into the mainstream.

Born humbly as Joseph Angelo D'Alessandro III in Pensacola (located on Florida's panhandle) on New Year's Eve in 1948, his parents, Joe II and Thelma, were teenagers when Joe was born; his father was a Navy man stationed there and his mother had a wild streak of her own. Joe (then age 5) and younger brother Robert were placed into a New York adoption facility after Thelma was given a five-year prison sentence for auto theft and the father decided he was unable to care for them alone. Brought up in a series of foster homes, Joe became notorious for his delinquent behavior at school -- which was often ignited by his short stature and even shorter temper. Frequent runaways, he and his brother eventually returned to live with their grandparents but Joe quickly drifted towards a life of crime (thievery, burglary, etc.) via his association with street gangs.

At 15 "Little Joe" was caught stealing a car and sentenced to a juvenile rehab facility in New York's Catskill Mountains. During this time he started his famous "Little Joe" tattoo body markings. He escaped from the facility and lived a nomadic life in Mexico for a time before returning to the US (Los Angeles), where he gained unexpected acceptance in the California gay scene. The wanderlust teen found it profitable to exploit his sulky good looks and smoothly-muscled physique by posing nude for various photographers in the mid-'60s. Sometimes billed as "Joe Catano," Dallesandro hit many of the underground studios in both California and New York, working most notably for Robert Henry Mizer, who founded the Athletic Model Guild (AMG), and Bruce Bellas, aka Bruce of Los Angeles. A little magazine called Physique Pictorial, which was passed off as a bodybuilding publication, was, in truth, geared heavily toward its gay subscribers. Many were clients of Mizer, who photographed thousands of buff young men (some even out-of-work military servicemen) in various stages of undress from 1945-1993. Joe became Mizer's most famous model and can be seen featured in Thom Fitzgerald's docudrama Beefcake (1998), which chronicles the Mizer AMG era.

Back in New York during the summer of 1967, the 18-year-old, while visiting a friend in Greenwich Village, was invited to sit in and watch Andy Warhol and Paul Morrissey shooting an impromptu marathon movie in Warhol's building apartment. Morrissey's camera quickly found its way toward the ambivalent, good-looking Joe and the rest is history. Joe wound up shooting a wrestling scene with another guy clad only in his underwear. A year later that 23-minute footage found its way into The Loves of Ondine (1968), an 86-minute mishmosh of Warhol's eccentric ideas. Joe's image in his jockey shorts was used for the primary ads in The Village Voice. The movie, which featured his extended improvised wrestling scene, was reviewed by Variety and Joe himself, surprisingly, received raves for his charismatic good looks and natural acting ability, and was touted as a possible legit performer.

Young Dallesandro instead became Morrissey's protégé. Although Joe displayed beefcake appeal in Warhol's Lonesome Cowboys (1968), which was investigated by the FBI for rumors of an on-screen rape, and San Diego Surf (1968), the only Warhol feature film never released, it was Morrissey's film trilogy that led to Joe's subsequent idol worship. The first, Flesh (1968), placed Joe front-and-center as a male hustler á la Macadam cowboy (1969). Intended for female and gay audiences, Joe hit counterculture fame as the first actor to offer extensive full-frontal nudity and the movie also managed to filter successfully out to mainstream audiences.

Morrissey's second feature, Trash (1970), was anointed a "masterpiece" and "best film of the year" by none other than Rolling Stone magazine. In it Little Joe plays a heroin junkie living in New York squalor with girlfriend Holly Woodlawn (Warhol's well-known transvestite actress). The last of Morrissey's trilogy, Heat (1972) takes place in the vicinity of L.A.'s Sunset Boulevard with a long, pony-tailed Joe as a cold-hearted ex-child star who beds down everyone, including seamy "Midnight Cowboy" actress Sylvia Miles and her lesbian daughter, in order to resuscitate his long-dormant career. This attention led to Joe's making the cover of Rolling Stone in April 1971. He was also photographed by some of the top celebrity photographers of the time, including Francesco Scavullo, and Richard Avedon. Singer/songwriter Lou Reed utilized Little Joe's identity in his pop hit "Walk on the Wild Side". In Europe Morrisey's films were praised even more, while Dallesandro was placed on an erotic pedestal.

Acting pay was practically non-existent so Dallesandro, now a husband (to wife Leslie, who was the daughter of one of his dad's girlfriends) and father (their son Michael), received "Factory" pay by answering phones, checking in and checking out film prints, acting as a projectionist, handling security and even running the building's elevator. Morrissey's hot trilogy was followed by the European cult films Chair pour Frankenstein (1973) and Du sang pour Dracula (1974), both eclectic X-rated blood spillers and ultimate cult items.

Tired of being just a gear in the Factory machinery, Joe stayed on in Europe after filming the two 1974 gorefests and decided to see if his Warhol Superstar status could trigger foreign box-office career a la the recently transported Clint Eastwood and Charles Bronson. Joe made 18 feature films overseas throughout the rest of the 1970s. They were a mixture of styles: the sex-farce L'orgasme dans le placard (1974); the gritty, grimy crime yarn L'ambitieux (1975) ["The Climber"]; _Louis Malle's adult version of Alice in Wonderland, Black Moon (1975); La marge (1976) ["The Streetwalker"] co-starring softcore erotica star Sylvia Kristel; the sexually taunting Vacanze per un massacro (1980) as a car thief-turned hostage taker; Jacques Rivette's surrealistic Merry-Go-Round (1980); Tapage nocturne (1979) ["Nocturnal Uproar"] as a self-absorbed actor; and Queen Lear (1982), a Franco-Swiss co-production in which he plays a bisexual.

The best of Joe's European films, and his personal favorite, is the sexually-charged Je t'aime moi non plus (1976) ["I Love You, I Don't"], Serge Gainsbourg's film wherein he plays a gay garbage truck driver who has the hots for a very boyish café waitress Jane Birkin (Gainsbourg's wife at the time).

Returning to the States in 1980, Joe's work became more erratic than erotic, but some of his roles have earned a bit of attention. More noteworthy was his gangster Lucky Luciano in Francis Ford Coppola"s Cotton Club (1984); another gangster in the Bruce Willis starrer Meurtre à Hollywood (1988); his religious zealot in John Waters' mainstream Cry-Baby (1990); his psychotic paratrooper in Private War (1988); his trailer park scum who lusts after 'Drew Barrymore' in Guncrazy (1992); his sleazy photographer in _L.A. Without A Map (1998)_, and his brain-damaged hit man in Steven Soderbergh's L'Anglais (1999). On TV he made standard guest appearances on such popular shows as Deux flics à Miami (1984), Un flic dans la mafia (1987) and Matlock (1986).

The Teddy Award, an honor recognizing those filmmakers and artists who have contributed to the further acceptance of LGBT lifestyles, culture, and artistic vision, was awarded to Joe in February of 2009. A biography, "Little Joe: Superstar" by Michael Ferguson was released earlier in 2001 and a filmed documentary, Little Joe (2009), has been released with Joe serving as writer and producer. The thrice-married and divorced actor has two sons, Michael and Joe, Jr. Glimpsed here and there these days, he later managed a hotel in the Hollywood area.
BornDecember 31, 1948
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    • Agent info
    • Resume
BornDecember 31, 1948
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • View contact info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos17

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    Known for

    Terence Stamp in L'Anglais (1999)
    L'Anglais
    6.9
    • Uncle John(as Joe Dallessandro)
    • 1999
    Johnny Depp and Amy Locane in Cry-Baby (1990)
    Cry-Baby
    6.5
    • Milton's Father
    • 1990
    Margot Robbie in Babylon (2022)
    Babylon
    7.1
    • Charlie
    • Photographer (Wallach's Party)
    • 2022
    Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas in Deux flics à Miami (1984)
    Deux flics à Miami
    7.6
    TV Series
    • Alfredo Giulinni
    • DeMarco

    Credits

    Edit
    IMDbPro

    Actor



    • Citizens
      • Joe
      • Post-production



    • Margot Robbie in Babylon (2022)
      Babylon
      7.1
      • Charlie
      • Photographer (Wallach's Party)
      • 2022
    • Factory Cowboys: Working with Warhol (2018)
      Factory Cowboys: Working with Warhol
      7.0
      • Joe Dallesandro
      • 2018
    • 3 Stories About Evil (2008)
      3 Stories About Evil
      7.7
      Short
      • Jean Maries
      • 2008
    • Pacino Is Missing (2002)
      Pacino Is Missing
      6.2
      • Sal Colletti
      • 2002
    • Terence Stamp in L'Anglais (1999)
      L'Anglais
      6.9
      • Uncle John (as Joe Dallessandro)
      • 1999
    • Julie Delpy, Vincent Gallo, and David Tennant in I Love L.A. (1998)
      I Love L.A.
      6.0
      • Michael
      • 1998
    • Whoopi Goldberg and George Newbern in T-Rex (1995)
      T-Rex
      2.4
      • Rogan
      • 1995
    • Revocator (1994)
      Revocator
      5.8
      • Tony Adamo
      • 1994
    • Drew Barrymore and James Le Gros in Guncrazy (1992)
      Guncrazy
      5.5
      • Rooney
      • 1992
    • Tom Sizemore and Pamela Gidley in Love Is Like That (1992)
      Love Is Like That
      5.3
      • Boss
      • 1992
    • Brent David Fraser and Nina Siemaszko in Blue: L'orchidée sauvage II (1991)
      Blue: L'orchidée sauvage II
      4.0
      • Jules
      • 1991
    • Inside Out (1991)
      Inside Out
      4.6
      Video
      • Richard (segment "The Diaries")
      • 1991
    • Paul Hogan in Un ange... ou presque! (1990)
      Un ange... ou presque!
      5.6
      • Bank Hood Leader
      • 1990
    • Johnny Depp and Amy Locane in Cry-Baby (1990)
      Cry-Baby
      6.5
      • Milton's Father
      • 1990
    • Andy Griffith in Matlock (1986)
      Matlock
      7.1
      TV Series
      • Bobby Boyd
      • 1990

    Writer



    • Little Joe (2009)
      Little Joe
      8.4
      • story
      • 2009

    Producer



    • Little Joe (2009)
      Little Joe
      8.4
      • producer
      • 2009

    Videos9

    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 2:06
    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer
    Trailer 1:14
    Trailer
    Trailer
    Trailer 1:14
    Trailer
    Trailer
    Trailer 1:50
    Trailer
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:54
    Official Trailer
    Trailer
    Trailer 2:06
    Trailer
    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 1:13
    Trailer [OV]

    Personal details

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    • Official site
      • Facebook
    • Alternative names
      • Joe Catano
    • Height
      • 1.68 m
    • Born
      • December 31, 1948
      • Pensacola, Florida, USA
    • Spouses
        KimberlyJune 11, 1987 - present
    • Other works
      Album cover: A still photo of him in Andy Warhol's Flesh (1968) appears on the cover of The Smiths' debut album, "The Smiths".
    • Publicity listings
      • 1 Print Biography
      • 2 Interviews
      • 2 Articles
      • 2 Pictorials
      • 1 Magazine Cover Photo

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Lou Reed saw the movie Flesh (1968) and that's where he got the idea for the third verse of the song "Walk on the Wild Side", which is about "Little Joe". Paul Morrissey told Lou to watch the movie and write about the characters in the film. The song is the end result.
    • Quotes
      My introduction to the gay world did two things. One, it saved me from life in prison for murder, which is probably where I would have wound up. How? Because the gay world showed me that you didn't have to beat up every man you saw or hurt people to make a point. It gave me a whole other attitude, a calmer attitude. Two, it taught me never to be homophobic, even before there was such a term. I think because I grew up in a period, especially later on, when the people I looked up to were like...my heroes....That's what I liked about the period, that a man could say he liked both, that he appreciated both the look of a man and the look of a woman without being stereotyped.
    • Nickname
      • Little Joe

    FAQ

    Powered by Alexa
    • How old is Joe Dallesandro?
      76 years old
    • When was Joe Dallesandro born?
      December 30, 1948
    • Where was Joe Dallesandro born?
      Pensacola, Florida, USA
    • How tall is Joe Dallesandro?
      5 feet 6 inches, or 1.68 meters
    • What is Joe Dallesandro known for?
      Miami Vice, Cry-Baby, The Limey, and Babylon

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