Fredo Corleone

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Frederico Corleone
FredoCorleone.jpg
John Cazale as Fredo Corleone in The Godfather: Part II
First appearance The Godfather
Last appearance Godfather II
Created by Mario Puzo
Portrayed by John Cazale
Information
Nickname(s) Freddie, Fredo
Gender male
Occupation Gangster
Title Underboss
Family Corleone family
Spouse(s) Deanna Dunn-Corleone
Children Four boys
all with Marguerite ("Rita") Duvall
Religion Roman Catholicism

Frederico "Fredo" Corleone is a fictional character in Mario Puzo's novel The Godfather. In the fictional universe of the novel and its film adaptation, he is the second son of Vito Corleone (Marlon Brando), head of a powerful Mafia family. He is the second oldest of Vito's four children; he is the younger brother of Sonny (James Caan) and elder brother of Michael (Al Pacino) and Connie (Talia Shire).

Fredo was portrayed by Italian-American actor John Cazale in Francis Ford Coppola's film adaptation of the novel, as well as in its sequel.

Contents

[edit] Role in the story

[edit] The Godfather

In Puzo's novel, Fredo is thought of in the Corleone family as the weakest and least intelligent of the three Corleone brothers, and therefore is given its unimportant businesses to run. Nevertheless, Fredo is the most obedient and dutiful of the Corleone children, despite being largely ignored by his father.

In a pivotal scene in the novel and film, Fredo is with his father when men working for drug kingpin Virgil Sollozzo (Al Lettieri) attempt to assassinate Vito, but Fredo fumbles with his gun and fails to return fire. He then sits on the street curb next to his badly wounded father and weeps. In the novel, he becomes sick after his father's shooting, going into shock after the incident. To help him recover and to protect him from any possible reprisals, Sonny sends him to Las Vegas under the protection of former hitman Moe Greene (Alex Rocco). While in Las Vegas, Fredo learns the casino trade and becomes a power in his own right.

After Sonny's assassination, Vito chooses Michael to succeed him as head of the Corleone Family. Over the course of the sequel, The Godfather Part II, it emerges that Fredo is deeply resentful about being overlooked and it eventually leads him to betray Michael, albeit unintentionally.

In the original novel, Fredo's primary weakness is his womanizing, a habit which he develops in Las Vegas. In the films, Fredo's feelings of personal inadequacy and his inability to act effectively on his own behalf become character flaws of much greater consequence. He is depicted as being far less cunning and resourceful than his younger brother Michael, weaknesses that other characters are very aware of; early in The Godfather Part II, Michael explains to his consigliere, Tom Hagen (Robert Duvall), that "Fredo has a good heart, but he's weak and he's stupid".

[edit] The Godfather Part II

By the beginning of The Godfather Part II, Fredo has become Michael's underboss, but has little real power. During a family gathering, Fredo is unable to control his intoxicated wife, Deanna Dunn (Marianna Hill). After she dances with another man, he furiously drags her off the dance floor and threatens to hit her. Deanna mocks him by saying "you couldn't belt your momma," and accuses him of being jealous because he's not "a real man." His wife has to be hauled away by one of Michael's henchmen, an order Michael asks Fredo if he wants to approve, which Fredo does.

Fredo runs a brothel in rural Nevada. Family consigliere (and unofficially adopted son) Tom Hagen is called to implicate Senator Pat Geary (G.D. Spradlin) in the murder of a prostitute in order to bring him under the family's thumb. Hagen explains that, in return for the senator's "friendship", the Corleone Family can take care of the problem. Hagen tells Geary, "My brother, Fredo, runs this place. It is like this girl never existed."

Fredo later betrays Michael when approached by Johnny Ola (Dominic Chianese), an agent of rival gangster Hyman Roth (Lee Strasberg), during the negotiation of a business deal between Roth's organization and the Corleone family. Ola and Roth claim that Michael is being particularly difficult in the negotiations, and Fredo secretly agrees to aid them in exchange for compensation; the film never reveals what specific assistance Fredo provided Ola and Roth against Michael. It is also unclear if he knew that his help would result in an assassination attempt on Michael at his Lake Tahoe home. (It is possible that Ola asked Fredo to draw the curtains in Michael's bedroom on the night of his son's first Holy Communion, thus facilitating the attempted assassination against him; as Fredo later remarks, "I swear I didn't know it was gonna be a hit, Mike.") Fredo later ambiguously claims that his interest in the secret deal was that there was "something in it for me—on my own."

While in Havana negotiating with Roth, Michael realizes that Fredo is the family traitor he had been looking for. Despite twice telling Michael that he had never met Ola, Fredo drunkenly lets slip that they had met in Havana earlier that year. Michael confronts Fredo later, telling him, "I know it was you, Fredo. You broke my heart. You broke my heart!" In the ensuing fray after dictator Fulgencio Batista's flight from Fidel Castro's rebel army, Michael pleads with Fredo to come with him, but a frightened Fredo runs away. He is eventually tracked down and convinced to return home.

Later, Michael is being pursued by a Senate subcommittee investigating organized crime. Michael's former caporegime, Frank Pentangeli (Michael V. Gazzo), is due to testify against Michael at the hearing. A few days before the hearing, Michael has a talk with Fredo to find out what he knows about Roth's plans. Fredo tells Michael that the subcommittee's lawyer is on Roth's payroll, thus revealing that he knew all along that Pentangeli's testimony could potentially send Michael to prison. He also reveals his bitterness at having been passed over when Michael was chosen as their father's successor:

Taken care of me?! You're my kid brother! You take care of me? Did you ever think about that? Did you ever once think about that? 'Send Fredo off to do this, send Fredo off to do that! Let Fredo take care of some Mickey Mouse nightclub somewhere! Send Fredo to pick somebody up at the airport!' I'm your older brother, Mike, and I was stepped over! [Michael: that's the way Pop wanted it] It ain't the way I wanted it! I can handle things, I'm smart! Not like everybody says. Like dumb. I'm smart and I want respect!


Michael disowns Fredo, coldly informing him that "you're nothing to me now" and instructs assassin Al Neri (Richard Bright) that nothing is to happen to him while their mother is alive; the implication is that Fredo will be murdered once she dies. At their mother's funeral, and at their sister Connie's urging, Michael seemingly forgives Fredo; however, it is only a ploy to draw Fredo in so as to have him murdered.

Towards the end of the film, Fredo befriends his nephew, Michael's son Anthony, and is to go fishing with him on Lake Tahoe. However, Anthony is called away by Connie, who tells him that his father wants to take him to Reno. Fredo is left alone in the fishing boat with Neri, and he takes the boat far out onto the lake. As Fredo prays the Hail Mary, Neri shoots him in the back of the head, killing him. As this happens, Michael watches from afar in his den.

Fredo makes a final appearance in the movie's penultimate scene, a flashback to December 1941. It emerges that Fredo was the only member of the family who supported Michael's decision to drop out of college and join the Marines after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

[edit] The Godfather Part III

Fredo appears only once in the third film, in a flashback depicting his death through archive footage. He is also mentioned many times throughout the film; the dialogue makes it clear that Michael is wracked with guilt over ordering his brother's death, and that it has alienated him from his wife, Kay (Diane Keaton), and his son, Anthony (Franc D'Ambrosio), both of whom know what really happened. Michael himself cries out Fredo's name while having a diabetic stroke. Later in the film, he breaks down in tears while confessing having ordered Fredo's death to Cardinal Lamberto (Raf Vallone), who later becomes Pope John Paul I. Michael's daughter, Mary (Sofia Coppola), however, appears to be unsure whether or not Michael was behind Fredo's death; she asks her cousin and love interest, Vincent Mancini-Corleone (Andy García), if it is true, but Vincent says it is "just a story" and changes the subject.

[edit] In The Godfather Returns

Mark Winegardner's novel, The Godfather Returns, further expands upon the character of Fredo Corleone. It includes explanations of some of the questions left open by the films, such as the details of Fredo's betrayal of Michael in The Godfather Part II, and how, as was revealed in The Godfather Part III, Anthony had known the truth about Fredo's death.

In the novel, it is revealed that Fredo is bisexual, and that he had been molested as a child by his parish priest. Michael's rivals, chiefly Louie Russo, the mob boss of Chicago, hope to exploit this rumor of Fredo's bisexuality to make Michael look weak. In Las Vegas, Fredo meets Marguerite "Rita" Duvall, who was sent up to his room by Johnny Fontane as a prank. Though hesitant, they have sex, and Fredo pays her to tell Johnny it was the best she had ever had.

At the funeral for Don Molinari of San Francisco, Fredo gets the idea of setting up a necropolis similar to Colma in New Jersey. The Corleone family would be able to buy up the former cemetery land, now prime real estate, and also be a silent partner in the graveyard business. Fredo would propose this plan to Michael and impress him, reassuring him and others of his abilities. To Fredo's dismay, however, Michael dismisses the plan as unrealistic. Later, in San Francisco, Fredo meets a man at a club and presumably sleeps with him. When the man recognized him from a newspaper photo, Fredo panics and beats him to death. However, largely because of Hagen's efforts, the authorities are persuaded that the man had tried to rob Fredo, forcing Fredo to kill him in self-defense.

At Christmas, Fredo shows up at the Corleone Christmas party with Deanna Dunn, a famous, yet fading, movie starlet. A few months later they get married. Dunn gets Fredo to make appearances in bit parts in some of her movies. Later, in September 1957, Fredo's Hollywood connections allow him to get his own unsuccessful TV show, "The Fred Corleone Show", which airs irregularly, usually on Monday nights, until his death. Meanwhile, Fredo's alcoholism worsens. One day, he discovers Deanna cheating on him with her co-star, and shoots up the car he bought her. When Deanna's co-star tries to attack him, Fredo knocks him unconscious and goes to jail. Hagen bails him out, and they get in an argument about Fredo's recklessness and Hagen's blind loyalty to Michael. Despite this, Hagen again gets Fredo out of trouble by claiming self-defense.

It is also revealed that former Corleone capo Nick Geraci and Vincent Forlenza, the Don of Cleveland, were in on Roth's plot to eliminate Michael. Geraci, who is seeking revenge against Michael after the Don tried to have him killed, had met with Forlenza to discuss how Fredo could fit into their plans. Michael's planned deal with Roth has now reached a stalemate, and they figure Fredo could be used as a pawn to get Michael out of the way. If Fredo is told they could help him with his Colma vision, he would do anything to help. Geraci meets with Fredo, who is blind drunk after having a fight with his wife, and persuades him to meet with Johnny Ola. Fredo then supplies Ola with all the information he needs about the Corleone family, particularly financial information.

Fredo's death plays out in the novel exactly as filmed in The Godfather Part II. Anthony, who is called by his Aunt Connie to go to Reno, actually never goes there; instead, he is sent to his room, where, from his window, he sees Fredo and Neri motor out on the lake aboard a small boat. Anthony hears a gunshot and sees Neri come back on the boat alone.

[edit] In The Godfather's Revenge

In Winegardner's 2006 sequel, The Godfather's Revenge, Fredo appears in one of Michael's dreams, warning him about an unspecified threat and asking him why he had his own brother killed. Much of the novel portrays Michael dealing with his guilt over Fredo's murder.

[edit] Family

[edit] References

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