Casino 1995 Characters

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Casino is a 1995 American epic crime film directed by Martin Scorsese, produced by Barbara De Fina and distributed by Universal Pictures.The film is based on the nonfiction book Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas by Nicholas Pileggi, who also co-wrote the screenplay for the film with Scorsese. Casino Cast and Crew 'No one stays at the top forever.' R 2 hr 59 min Nov 3rd, 1995 Drama.

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LDS/Mormon References and Characters
in the movie
Casino (1995)



'Casino' (1995)
Directed by Martin Scorsese
Screenplay by Nicholas Pileggi and Martin Scorsese
Based on the book by Nicholas Pileggi
Starring: Robert De Niro, Sharon Stone, Joe Pesci, James Woods, Don Rickles, Alan King, Kevin Pollak, L.Q. Jones, Dick Smothers, Frank Vincent, John Bloom, Pasquale Cajano, Melissa Prophet, Bill Allison
MPAA Rating: R
U.S. Box Office: $42,438,300
Production budget: $52,000,000

'Casino' is a historical mob drama chronicling the rise and fall of mafia involvement in the Las Vegas casino industry. Based on real events, 'Casino' is Nicholas Pileggi's adaptation of his own book, Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas (1995).

Two significant characters in 'Casino' are Latter-day Saints, or based partially on real-life Latter-day Saints. One character ('John Nance') is called an 'old Mormon' by Joe Pesci's character 'Nicky' approximately 8 minutes, 28 seconds after the start of the film. Another character ('Senator Harrison Roberts') is based partially on real-life Latter-day Saint politician Senator Harry Reid, who served as a Nevada state senator at the time period depicted in 'Casino,' and eventually became the Senate Minority Leader for the U.S. Senate.

Nacas campus cares. The real-life mob figure Anthony 'Tony' Spilotro (who was portrayed in the film by Joe Pesci, using the name 'Nicky Santoro') had a girlfriend who was a Latter-day Saint. Her name was Sheryl, and her time with Tony Spilotro (i.e., 'Nicky Santoro') is described in Nicholas Pileggi's non-fiction book Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas. Sheryl was not included as a character in the film version of Casino.

'Casino' focuses on 'Sam 'Ace' Rothstein' (Robert De Niro), who is assigned by mafia bosses to head up a lucrative hotel and casino. Rothstein knows that money is skimmed from the profits of his casino and sent to the mafia bosses that backed the operation, but for the most part he runs a legitimate business and has no interest in hurting anybody. Rothstein's boyhood friend Nicky Santoro (Joe Pesci) is also part of the mafia, but comes to Las Vegas to make money through myriad ruthless, criminal methods, including extortion, burglary and murder.

Sharon Stone plays 'Ginger,' a beautiful grifter whose outgoing personality catches Rothstein's attention. Rothstein courts and marries Ginger, but theirs is a stormy relationship. Despite marriage to Rothstein, Ginger remains committed to low-life crook and parasite named 'Lester Diamond' (played by Vernal, Utah native James Woods). She also has an affair with her husband's friend Nicky. Sharon Stone received a Golden Globe award and an Academy Award nomination for her role. Acclaimed filmmaker Martin Scorsese received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Director for 'Casino.'

The Senator: Casino character based partially on Latter-day Saint politician Sen. Harry Reid

The mafia-run casino is able to operate its legal, quasi-legal, and sometimes illegal operations in Las Vegas in part because it curries favor with powerful Nevada politicians. A character known in the film and screenplay as the 'Senator' represents some Nevada politicians. The Senator is played by Dick Smothers (of the famous 'Smothers Brothers' comedy duo). The character was based partially on real-life Nevada Senator Harry Reid, a Democrat and a devout Latter-day Saint. Sen. Reid made headlines by fighting against mafia-related corruption in the Las Vegas casino industry. In 'Casino,' some of the actions taken by the Senator are based directly on Sen. Reid's battle against mafia influence.

The name of the 'Senator' is never mentioned in the 'Casino' screenplay. The Senator's name is never spoken aloud in the film. But we know that the influential Senator character is named 'Harrison Roberts.' The Senator's name is shown prominently on a placard in front of him at the Senate Gaming Commission hearing at which Sam Rothstein's gaming license is revoked. The name of Senator 'Harrison Roberts' is intentionally similar to Senator Harry Reid's name. They share the same initials, and 'Harrison' would likely be called 'Harry' for short.

Ten years after 'Casino' was released, Sen. Harry Reid became the highest-ranking Democrat in the United States when he became the Senate Minority Leader. This also made Reid the highest-ranking elected Latter-day Saint in the U.S. federal government. (Mike Leavitt, another devout Latter-day Saint, concurrently held a Cabinet-level position as Secretary of Health and Human Services, but that is an appointed office.)

Another award-winning movie with a Harry Reid connection is Steven Soderbergh's Academy Award-winning movie about the U.S. drug war 'Traffic' (2000), in which Harry Reid makes a cameo appearance as himself, discussing policy with Michael Douglas in a Washington, D.C. reception. Senator Orrin Hatch, another high-ranking Latter-day Saint politician, appeared as himself in the same scene in 'Traffic.'

In an article by Chris Suellentrop, Slate reported (22 Dec. 2004, http://slate.msn.com/id/2111392/):

Reid may not be the most colorful figure in Washington, but his career is far more interesting than that of the average senator. In politics, Nevada is the next best thing to Louisiana. To take just one example, is there another U.S. senator who has been part of the inspiration for a character in a Martin Scorsese film? (A character played by Dick Smothers, no less.) In Casino, Robert DeNiro's character melts down in front of the Nevada Gaming Commission after the commission denies him a license to operate a casino. The scene is loosely based on a December 1978 hearing when Reid was the commission's chairman, and some of the dialogue spoken by Smothers is taken directly from Reid's words during the hearing. (The rest of the scenes involving Smothers, who plays a composite politician known only as 'Senator,' have nothing to do with Reid.) OK, it's lackluster Scorsese, but at least it's not Gangs of New York. And there are other Reid echoes in Casino: Joe Pesci's character refers to a 'Mr. Cleanface,' which gangster Joe Agosto said was his nickname for an in-his-pocket Reid, but a five-month investigation of Agosto's claims cleared Reid of wrongdoing.
Note that although the actual hearing that the 'Casino' scene is based on took place in December 1978, the scene is set in 1980 in the movie.

Below the section from the 'Casino' screenplay in which Joe Pesci's character 'Nicky' refers to 'Mr. Clean Face,' which a gangster said was his nickname for Sen. Reid (line 7625). This passage does not appear to refer to the Senator in the screenplay.

In a column for Hot Boxing News ('Talkin' Boxin', 10 March 2003; URL: http://www.hotboxingnews.com/reed/reed030903.htm), Howie Reed wrote:

It should be noted that at one time Senator Reid was the Chairman of the State Gaming Commission. His tenure included the period of time featured in the movie Casino. On Federal Wiretaps some claim that his voice turns up in regard to the securing of a gaming license for the late Frank Sinatra. It is also alleged that the Dick Smothers role in Casino was drawn on the Chairmanship of Mr. Reid.
A website called 'Choose Our President 2008' discusses potential presidential candidates for the 2008 race. The page analyzing Sen. Reid's chances as a Presidential hopeful mention 'Casino' (http://members.aol.com/ourprez08/reid.html):
Political pluses and minuses: Senator Reid was reelected in 2004 for his fourth term as senator from Nevada with a large margin, and is now the new top Democrat in the United States government, the public face of the opposition for the foreseeable future. Reid is moderate, deliberate and soft-spoken, with a reputation for integrity and bipartisanship. He fought the mob in Vegas during the seventies as chairman of the Nevada Gaming Commission, putting his life on the line (and is rumored to be the inspiration for Dick Smothers's character in Martin Scorsese's Casino). Reid has the advantage for the 2008 race of not having to run for reelection to the Senate, and has a new visibility and influence as Minority Leader. Not a Southern governor, Reid could nevertheless be a strong presidential or vice presidential candidate. He would be our first Mormon president or vice president, and our second named Harry.
The Explore-Biography.com Dictionary of Famous People notes 'Casino' in its capsule biography of Sen. Harry Reid (http://www.explore-biography.com/religious_figures/H/Harry_Reid.html):Harry Mason Reid (born December 2, 1939) is the senior United States Senator from Nevada and a member of the Democratic Party, for which he serves as Minority Leader.

A Latter-day Saint and native of the small mining town of Searchlight, Nevada, his father was an alcoholic gold miner who committed suicide. Reid was a lawyer in the state before entering politics, serving a term in the Nevada state legislature and then being elected lieutenant governor in 1970. He served in that office until 1974.

Reid served as Nevada state gaming commissioner from 1977 to 1981, a post which subjected him to threats of danger. Reid's wife once found a bomb attached to one of their cars. A character in the film Casino played by Dick Smothers is based, in part, on Reid. Reid was also bribed by Jack Gordon (who would later manage and marry LaToya Jackson). Reid allowed the FBI to tape Gordon's attempt to bribe Reid with $12,000, at which point Reid attempted to strangle Gordon, saying 'You son of a bitch, you tried to bribe me.'

Reid was elected to the United States House of Representatives. He served two terms there, from 1983 to 1987, being reelected in 1984. He was elected to the Senate in 1986, succeeding the Republican incumbent, Paul Laxalt, who did not run in that election. Reid was reelected in 1992, 1998 and 2004. He narrowly defeated his Republican opponent in 1998, future Senator John Ensign (Ensign won Nevada's other Senate seat in 2000) and his Republican opponent in 2004 was Richard Ziser, whom Reid defeated by a vote of 61%-35%. Mike Ensign, Senator Ensign's father, contributed $2,000 to Reid's 2004 Senate campaign. In 1999, Reid became Minority Whip, and the right hand man of Minority Leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota

On November 16, 2004, Reid was elected Senate Democratic Leader and Minority Leader for the 109th Congress, following Daschle's defeat in his bid for reelection.

Some consider Harry Reid pro-life, or an opponent of legalized abortion, because of his vote against support of Roe v. Wade in 2004. However, Reid has subsequently refused to state he wants Roe v. Wade overturned. Reid is currently also the only Democratic Mormon Senator. Four other members in the Senate are members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but they are all Republican.

As mentioned above, the Nevada state senator played by Dick Smothers in 'Casino' is known only as the SENATOR in the script. The Senator in 'Casino' is a composite character not intended purely as a depiction of Senator Harry Reid of Nevada. However, one scene is based losely on a December 1978 hearing which Reid presided over as chairman of the Nevada Gaming Commission. Some of the dialogue spoken by the Senator (as played by Dick Smothers) was taken directly from Reid's words during the hearing.

Below is an excerpt from the screenplay featuring this scene (beginning at line 8838 of the 15,177-line script):


Below are images from the scene in which the Senator is first introduced. He is enjoying the hospitality of the Tangiers Hotel and Casino, and meeting the people who run the establishment: Sam 'Ace' Rothstein (Robert De Niro) and Billy Sherbert (Don Rickles). Many aspects of the character in this particular scene are clearly not based on real-life Nevada politician Harry Reid, a devout Latter-day Saint who does not gamble, drink alcohol or cavort with Millicent Sheridan. This scene begins at line 1265 of the 15,177-line script.

The scenes in 'Casino' which feature the Senator (including the scenes in the casino which were not based on real-life Latter-day Saint Senator Harry Reid) comprise 309 lines of the the 15,177-line script, or 2.0% of the length of the screenplay.

John Nance: an 'old Mormon' bagman

Another significant character who may be a Latter-day Saint is 'John Nance,' who works in Rothstein's hotel and casino. Joe Pesci's character 'Nicky' specifically calls Nance a 'Mormon' during the section of the film that introduces the character. As noted above, approximately 8 minutes, 28 seconds after the start of the film, in a voice-over spoken during a scene focusing on 'John Nance,' Joe Pesci's character 'Nicky' says of Nance:
Now this old Mormon [EXPLETIVE] here, he had to fly in with suitcases once a month. Nice and easy.
Nance (played by Bill Allison) is one of the key money men in the hotel's operations. Nance is what is known as a 'bagman.' Early in the movie (beginning 6 minutes, 21 seconds after the start of the film), John Nance is shown walking through the casino, going into the money-counting room, filling a suitcase with cash, flying to Kansas, and delivering the money to the mob bosses. The section ends 9 minutes, 31 seconds after the start of the film, meaning this section focusing on Nance is 3 minutes, 10 seconds long.

Nance appears in subsequent scenes, although he has few lines after this scene. Eventually Nance is killed by operatives working for Joe Pesci's character 'Nicky.'

It is not clear from the film if Joe Pesci means that Nance actually is a Mormon (a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints), or if Nance simply reminds Pesci of Mormons because of his clean-cut look and clean-living ways. Nance knowingly assists the mafia in skimming money from the casino, so obviously if he is a Latter-day Saint his work for the casino violates the 12th Article of Faith:

We believe in being subject to kings, presidents, rulers, and magistrates, in obeying, honoring, and sustaining the law.
1995
Casino 1995 actors
In doing research about the 'John Nance' character in 'Casino,' I could not find any information about an actual Las Vegas bagman or high-level casino operative by this name. It is entirely possible that the character is based on a real person, but the name seems to be entirely fictional.

Boston-born actor 'Jack Nance' (whose birth name was Marvin John Nance) has no connection to the 'John Nance' character in 'Casino.' Jack Nance was credited as 'John Nance' when he had the lead role ('Henry Spencer') in David Lynch's movie 'Eraserhead' (1977). Nance may be best known for his supporting role as 'Pete Martell' in Lynch's TV series 'Twin Peaks.' He also appeared in all of Lynch's movies after 'Eraserhead' (except for 'Elephant Man'), including: 'Lost Highway' (a 1997 movie which features a major character from Utah) and 'Blue Velvet' (1986). John Nance (or 'Jack Nance') the actor was born in 1943, so he would have been only 30 years old at the time his first scene in 'Casino' takes place: 1973. In that scene, Nance is clearly an older man, probably at least 60 years old. Moreover, John 'Jack' Nance spent his career as an actor, and did not work or live in Las Vegas. Clearly 'John Nance' in 'Casino' has no connection to the similarly-named actor.

Bill Allison, the actor who plays 'John Nance' in 'Casino' really does have a casino background. Allison owned the historic Mizpah hotel-casino in Tonopah for 16 years during the 1970s and 1980s. Bill Allison was originally hired as a consultant for the production of 'Casino,' but ended up being cast as an actor in the film as well. Bill Allison had no prior acting experience.

While Bill Allison's character 'John Nance' is called a 'Mormon' in the film, and he may indeed be intended by the writers to be a Latter-day Saint, actor Bill Allison is not known to be a Latter-day Saint.

Interestingly enough, Bill Allison subsequently played a casino guard in the Las Vegas casino movie 'Ocean's Eleven' (2001). Coincidentally, 'Ocean's Eleven' (2001) holds the record as the highest-grossing movie ever to feature main characters overtly identified as Latter-day Saints. One of Bill Allison's only other film roles aside from 'Casino' (in which Joe Pesci calls him a 'Mormon') and 'Ocean's Eleven' (in which he co-stars with two Mormon characters - Virgil and Turk Malloy) is the short film 'Courage & Stupidity' (2004), which was filmed in Salt Lake City. 'Courage & Stupidity' is a fictional comedy about what 'really' happened between a young Steven Spielberg (Todd Wall) and a young George Lucas (Aaron Fiore) during the filming of 'Jaws.' Bill Allison plays a movie producer in 'Courage & Stupidity.' Latter-day Saint actors in the film's cast include Johnny Biscuit ('Handcart', 'The Singles Ward') and Brian Sullivan. The film was written and directed by Utahn Darin Beckstead. The director of photography was Latter-day Saint cinematographer Brian Sullivan (Getting There; Little Secrets; Coyote Summer; The Paper Brigade; Wish Upon a Star; The Brainiacs.com; Just Like Dad; etc.) and special effects were by Ben Josephsen.

Aside from 'Casino,' 'Ocean's Eleven' and 'Courage & Stupidity,' the only other film role listed for Bill Allison on IMDb.com is a small part in 'Stuey' (2003), which was filmed partially in Las Vegas and has no known Latter-day Saint characters.

The character 'John Nance' is only overtly described as a 'Mormon' once in 'Casino' - in the section of the film in which he first appears. The character appears in many subsequent scenes. Nance really never does anything in the film that clearly indicates he is a Latter-day Saint. Nor does he ever do anything that clearly indicates he is not one (aside from the connection to the mafia that his job entails).

Below is an excerpt from the 'Casino' screenplay, featuring the scenes which follow Nance ('a Mormon,' according to Joe Pesci's character) as he brings money from the casino in Las Vegas to the operation's real backers in Kansas City. Although Nance has relatively few lines during this section, the camera focuses on him almost non-stop during these scenes.

6 minutes, 21 seconds after the start of the film:End of section above: 9 minutes, 31 seconds after the start of the film. This section focusing on Nance is 3 minutes, 10 seconds long.


About half-way through the screenplay (line 7086 of the 15,177-line script), Nance appears for the second time:
A minute later there is the third section featuring John Nance (line 7334 of the 15,177-line script):
Piscano (played by Vinny Vella) later mentions Nance (line 8328):
In the fourth section of the film featuring Nance, he is almost arrested by the FBI toward the end of the script (line 14,255 of the 15,177-line script):
Finally, the fifth section of 'Casino' to feature John Nance shows his gruesome death at the hands of men working for Nicky (Joe Pesci), after Nance has already left his life in Las Vegas behind and retired to Costa Rica (line 14,587 of the 15,177-line script):In total, the scenes featuring 'John Nance' comprise 556 lines in the 15,177-line script, or 3.7% of the length of the screenplay. John Nance is a relatively minor character in the movie.
The scenes in 'Casino' featuring the movie's two Latter-day Saint characters (or characters based on real-life Latter-day Saints) - 'John Nance' and 'the Senator' - comprise a total of 865 lines, or 5.7% of the length of the screenplay.

References to Latter-day Saints in the non-fiction book Casino
(the basis for the 1995 movie)

As described in the non-fiction book that the movie 'Casino' was adapted from, Tony Spilotro (the Joe Pesci character) had a serious girlfriend who was a Latter-day Saint.

Source: Nicholas Pileggi. Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas. New York: Simon & Schuster (1995).

Nicholas Pileggi's non-fiction book Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas is (according to the book jacket):

..a riveting, true-life story of love and death in Las Vegas, a fatal romantic love triangle between
  • Lefty Rosenthal, gambling genius, the brains behind the mob's control of the casinos
  • Tony Spilotro, Lefty's friend and partner, the muscle of the mob in Las Vegas
  • Geri, Lefty's beautiful blond show-girl wife, whose affair with Tony ultimately drove the mob out of the 'paradise' they had built for themselves in the desert.
These real-life historical figures were portrayed in the 1995 movie 'Casino':
  • Frank 'Lefty' Rosenthal is portrayed by Robert De Niro (his name changed to: Sam 'Ace' Rothstein)
  • Anthony 'Tony' Spilotro is portrayed by Joe Pesci (his name changed to: Nicky Santoro)
  • Geri McGee is portrayed by Sharon Stone (her name changed to: Ginger)
Not only did Nicholas Pileggi write the book Casino, he also wrote the screenplay. Pileggi also wrote the non-fiction book Wise Guy, and he wrote the Academy Award-nominated screenplay for the movie 'Goodfellas' (1990) based on that book.
In the excerpt below, from Pileggi's non-fiction book Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas, the difficulties between Tony Spilotro (the Joe Pesci character) and his wife Nancy are briefly described. That section is followed by a detailed description of Spilotro's relationship with his Latter-day Saint (Mormon) girlfriend, Sheryl.

Pages 154 to 158:

As time passed, Spilotro spent less and less time with his wife, Nancy. When they were together, they fought -- and the FBI listened. She complained that he had lost interest in her. She accused him of affairs. He was never home. He never talked to her. In the morning, the FBI recorded the sound of silence as Tony made his coffee and Nancy read the newspaper. Then he would leave for the store without even saying good-bye.

Sometimes Nancy had to call him at work to relay a message; according to Bud Hall, Tony was always rude. 'She'd say, 'I don't know if this can wait, but so-and-so called.' 'It can wait,' Tony would say, sort of sarcastically, and just hang up. Or he'd say, in an exasperated tone, 'Nancy, I'm busy,' and hang up. He was never gentlemanly with her, and she'd whine to Dena Harte, Herbie Blitzstein's girlfriend, who managed the front of the Gold Rush. Nancy would tell Dena whenever Tony beat her up or whenever she suspected Tony was fooling around with this one or that one, and Dena kept Nancy informed about what Tony was doing.

'There was one time when Dena called Nancy at home and said, 'The bitch is here.' Nancy jumped in the car and tore over to the place and started screaming at Sheryl, Tony's girlfriend, calling her a no-good [EXPLETIVE] right there in the middle of the store.

'We could hear the screaming on the wire, and then Tony comes out, and then we hear Nancy screaming for Tony to stop hitting her. He was really beating her up. We got worried that he was going to kill her. It was a mess. So we called nine-one-one and said we were in the Black Forest German Restaurant next door, and said someone was being assaulted in the Gold Rush. We couldn't tell the cops who we were because at that point it looked like Tony owned Metro, and we didn't want to blow our surveillance. The police got there in a few minutes, and everything calmed down.'

'Nancy had her life and Tony had his,' said Frank Cullotta. 'Hers was mostly playing tennis and running around in white outfits. She had Vincent and Tony's brothers and their families. Once a week Tony'd take her out to dinner or something. But she wasn't afraid of him. She would scream and yell at him and drive him crazy.

'Once, he told me, she tried to kill him. They were having an argument over something and Tony knocked her across the room. She came up with a loaded thirty-eight cocked at his head. 'I'll kill you if you ever hit me again,' she said. Tony said, 'Nancy, think of Vincent.'

'I saw death,' he told me after. 'We talked until she put down the gun and then I hid all the guns in the house.'

* * *

'Sheryl was about twenty, but she looked younger,' said Rosa Rojas, who was her best friend. 'She was a Mormon from northern Utah, cute and fresh. When Tony first met her he used to call her his country girl. She was so naive that when he asked her out, she said she'd only go if she could bring her friend.

'Sheryl and I were both working in the hospital where he was going for his heart problem, which was how they met. They'd go to restaurants, but he never put the make on her. He held her at a distance for a long, long time.

Before he got too close he found out everything there was to find out about her. He had Joey Cusumano ask about where she was from, who her friends were, how long she lived where she lived. He wanted to know everything he could know about her before he got involved or felt he could trust her.

'It was a long time before she knew who he was. She began to suspect something was strange, because every time they went out, they were tailed by cops in plain clothes. Tony's brother told her that there were some legal problems and that Tony was being trailed because of the legal stuff. Tony used to tell us that we were going to read things about him in the newspapers, but he said the newspapers weren't always right.

'It was only after a long time that Tony and Sheryl started going to bed together. He was a gentleman always. Very quiet. Very reserved. I would see him mad sometimes, but I never once heard him curse or use bad language.

'Eventually, he bought her a two-story condo around Eastern and Flamingo, a two-bedroom place for about sixty-nine thousand dollars. It had everything. Refrigerator. Blinds. A washer-dryer. There was a garage and small patio and a sliding door that led into the downstairs, and upstairs they had the bedrooms and a large room that had all of the stereo and TV equipment you would want. That's where they spent most of their time -- watching ball games and listening to music.

'Tony was very generous. He used to leave a thousand dollars a week in a bear-shaped cookie jar in the kitchen. He never mentioned money and it was never mentioned that he was keeping her, but when he bought her a full-length mink coat Sheryl felt he had finally committed himself to her. She had really fallen in love with him.

'She didn't know he was married for quite a while. When she found out, it was very hard. She believed the only reason she and Tony weren't married was because Tony was a very strict Catholic and would have trouble leaving his wife. For a while, Tony even had Sheryl learning to be a Catholic. He gave her religious books to read. He knew the Bible.

'He never ever said anything bad about his wife. They had been married in the church and it was a difficult situation. On top of that. Tony loved his son. Vincent meant everything to him. Vincent was his soul. Tony would always get home at six thirty in the morning so he could be there to make breakfast for Vincent. Sheryl said he would do that even if he was in bed at her place.

'Eventually, Tony bought a car for her. It was a new Plymouth Fury. It wasn't a showy car.

'When Nancy found out what was going on, things got a little tough. Sheryl had stopped by the Gold Rush to see Tony. She was wearing a diamond studded S necklace that Tony had given her, and when Nancy came in and saw Sheryl wearing the S necklace. Nancy went wild and she reached for it.

'I got there just at that time and I found the two of them wrestling on the floor. Sheryl managed to hold on to her S. Tony came out of the back room and broke up the fight so Sheryl and I could get away.

'In the end, when it was over between Tony and Sheryl, he wouldn't return her calls. Sheryl was really crazy about him, but maybe she pushed too hard. He was having a lot of problems with the cops when they broke up, and maybe he was trying to spare her.

'His brother John used to tell her not to try and reach him. 'Don't call him,' he'd say. 'Spare yourself.' But she'd see him making his court appearances on TV and she saw that he was gaining weight and didn't look good, and she used to blame Nancy for not taking care of him. Sheryl used to make sure he ate the right food, and her refrigerator was always filled with fruits and salad and the kinds of healthy food that were good for people with heart problems.

'After she and Tony broke up she got a job doing cocktails at night. Tony wasn't happy about it. But she had grown accustomed to his lifestyle. She needed the money. Then she got into dealing blackjack. She worked in the old MGM, at Rally's. She had a prime shift and made excellent money. She started meeting high rollers. She wised up. She learned and started looking around for another rock to stand on.'


Additional commentary:
Casino movie real characters
I don't recall that Sheryl was included as a character in the movie 'Casino.'

One part of the 'Casino' non-fiction book that is interesting is the description of Sheryl's effect on hard-bitten mob muscleman Tony Spilotro:

He was a gentleman always. Very quiet. Very reserved. I would see him mad sometimes, but I never once heard him curse or use bad language.
This is NOT the way that Tony acted most of the time, according to the book. If you have seen 'Casino' the movie, you know that 'never once heard him curse or use bad language' is NOT how Joe Pesci portrays the character of Tony Spilotro (i.e., Nicky Santoro). Joe Pesci's character may be the foulest-mouthed character in the movie, and may be one of the foulest-mouthed characters Joe Pesci has played in any movie (which is saying something). It's nice to think that his Mormon girlfriend didn't put up with that kind of language.

Another interesting passage indicates that Sheryl's background as a Latter-day Saint (or perhaps her training as a nurse) had a healthful effect on Tony's life, as she encouraged him to eat according to the Word of Wisdom:

Sheryl used to make sure he ate the right food, and her refrigerator was always filled with fruits and salad and the kinds of healthy food that were good for people with heart problems.
Trivia Footnote about the name 'Nicky Santoro':
One of the two most important characters in Nicholas Pileggi's book, Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas, is real-life mob figure Anthony 'Tony' Spilotro. In the film adaptation 'Casino,' Joe Pesci plays this character, but a fictional name is used: 'Nicky Santoro.' I don't know if there is a connection, but this name is similar (but not identical) to the name of real
Casino 1995 Characters
mafia leader Nicky Santora. (Santora always went by 'Nicky,' but his birth name was 'Nicholas Santora.') Nicky Santora operated out of New York City, and was eventually convicted and sent to prison for 20 years. Nicky Santora is one of the major mafia figures in the book Donnie Brasco: My Undercover Life in the Mafia, written by former F.B.I. agent Joseph D. Pistone and Richard Woodley (New American Library, 1987). This book was adapted to the feature film 'Donnie Brasco' (1997), which featured actor Gerry Becker as Donnie Brasco's Latter-day Saint FBI section chief 'Dean Blandford.' In 'Donnie Brasco' Nicky was played by actor Bruno Kirby, in the film's fourth-billed role. (Bruno Kirby also had a supporting role in 'The Godfather: Part II').
Webpage created 1 March 2005. Last modified 9 April 2005.

Casino, directed by Martin Scorsese, is based on Nicholas Pileggi's book of the same name. This movie takes us back to the 1970s when Las Vegas casinos were run by a group of mobsters.

This story is centered on the life of Sam 'Ace' Rothstein (played by Robert De Niro) and Nicky Santoro (played by Joe Pesci).

Ace has found a great deal of success in running the Tangiers Hotel and Casino with the help of his partner, Nicky, who brings him more bad publicity than anything else. His wife Ginger, a money hungry former hustler only aids in his ultimate destruction.

This movie is packed full of action and violence and it gives you a clear picture of what Las Vegas used to be like back in the day.

Characters grow and crumble before your eyes and you find yourself feeling sorry for an incredibly wealthy mobster and his tainted relationships.

For more information about this movie and to see the rating we give it, please feel free to continue reading.

Director
Martin Scorsese
Editor
Thelma Schoonmaker
Genre
American Drama
Length
2 hours, 58 minutes
Producer
Barbara De Fina
Script Writers
Nicholas Pileggi, Martin Scorsese
Release Year
1995

Main Actors/ Actresses

Robert De Niro is an accomplished actor with a long list of achievements. As far as movies go, he's probably most famous for his role in Goodfellas, The Godfather, and Meet the Parents.

He has won several awards for his phenomenal acting skills including two Oscars (1975, 1981), a MTV Movie Award for Best Line in a Movie (2001), and a Britannia Award for Excellence in Film (2009). More recently, De Niro has been working on a plethora of different movies including Hands of Stone, The Intern, and Dirty Grandpa.

Joe Pesci as Nicholas 'Nicky' Santoro

Casino Film Cast

Joe Pesci has certainly earned a name for himself in Hollywood for his array of award winning performances. He's especially praised for his roles in Home Alone, Goodfellas, Raging Bull, and of course Casino.

Pesci won the LAFCA award for Best Supporting Actor (1990), an Oscar for Best Actor in a Supporting Role (1991), and an American Comedy Award for Funniest Actor in a Motion Picture (1993). Currently he's working on the children's film, Savva, Heart of the Warrior, where he plays the voice of Komar.

Sharon stone is a gorgeous actress with incredible talent. She's well-known for her role in Casino, Total Recall, Basic Instinct, and many more.

She won a MTV movie award for Best Female Performance (1993), a Golden Globe for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture (1995), and an Emmy for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series (1997). Currently she's working on the movie Mother's Day, which should be released towards the middle of 2016.

Supporting Actors/ Actresses

  • Frank Vincent as Frankie Marino
  • James Wood as Lester Diamond
  • Melissa Prophet as Jennifer Santoro
  • Alan King as Andy Stone

Nicholas Pileggi was born in New York City in 1933. In his mid twenties, he started working as a criminal journalist for Associated Press, specializing in mob related crimes.

Since his articles were so popular, many of them were written into Academy Award-winning screenplays including Wiseguy (1986), Goodfellas (1990), and of course Casino (1995). He has gotten several awards for his work including a Chicago Film Critics Association Awards and a BAFTA Awards for Best Screenplay in 1991.

Brief Bio on Martin Scorsese (Director)

Martin Scorsese was born in New York City in 1942 to Italian immigrants, so naturally he resided in the neighborhood of Little Italy. Scorsese was very well educated, having earned a both a bachelors and a masters in film communication from the New York University's School of Film.

Since then, Scorsese has directed and produced a plethora of award winning films including The Color of Money (1986), Goodfellas (1990), Gangs of New York (2002), and Shutter Island (2010) to name a few.

This movie is rated R for a plethora of reasons including an excessive amount of profanity.

Nicky Santoro, in particular, hardly has a sentence come out of his mouth that doesn't contain a swear word or two. In addition to that, there are many scenes full of violence where you see people badly beaten and seeping with blood.

Sex and nudity is also prevalent throughout the film where viewers are exposed to women's body parts and where sexual activity is implied. Last but certainly not least, viewers will see a great deal of alcohol and drug abuse throughout the film.

Ginger is a cocaine addict and there's several times where you'll see her snort it up her nose.

This movie is very vivid and realistic as to what went on in Las Vegas during this time and therefore this film isn't recommended for anyone under the age of seventeen.

Sam 'Ace' Rothstein

Ace is a lovable criminal if there ever was such a thing. Even though he's clearly working for the wrong people, has no problem killing people off, and is so incredibly arrogant at times, you somehow still want to see him succeed.

Ace is a good person who has gotten himself into situations he can't control and as viewers, we truly want to see him overcome his obstacles.

You see a glimmer of hope for Ace when he falls in love with Ginger and starts a family with her, but their relationship quickly fizzles, turning Ace into a control freak.

Nicky is certainly the antagonist of the film, having no boundaries when it comes to getting what he wants. He murders hundreds of people, most of which he didn't have a good reason to do so.

Casino 1995 Director

He's untrustworthy, un-loyal, and an overall horrible person. His only soft spot is his son, Little Nicky, who he goes out of his way to have breakfast with in the mornings, no matter what his activities were the night before.

Ginger

Ginger is a stunningly beautiful prostitute with a great love of money and an even bigger attachment to her pimp, Lester. As the movie goes on, you see the true Ginger emerge and it's certainly not a pleasant site to see.

Ginger is a drug addict and her shear dependence on Lester leads her down a slippery slope that she'll never be able to recover from.

The Beginning

At the opening scene of this movie, a car will explode in front of your eyes and you'll get to see Sam 'Ace' Rothstein (played by Robert De Niro) flying in the air. You'll then be taken back in time to the events leading up to his death.

The first half of the film is mostly narration by Ace himself, Nicky Santoro (played by Joe Pesci), and other main characters who will explain the mobster's hand in the Las Vegas Casinos.

The characters in this movie are based on real-life mobsters.

The character or Sam Rothstein represents Frank Rosenthal, the character of Nicky Santoro is based on the life of Anthony Spitotro, the character of Ginger McKenna is derived from the infamous Geri McGee, and the character of Frankie Marino is based on Italian Mobster Frank Cullotta.

This adds an element of authenticity to the film, as the lives of these characters were truly inspired by the real-life mobsters who used to run the street of Las Vegas.

You'll get to see how generously the casino gives away their money to politicians and other wealthy men in hopes that they'll stay at the casino long enough to spend all of their money.

You'll also get a better idea of the extreme violence that took place during that time as a result of the mafia and how quietly and quickly murders were executed. The suit case full of money that's passed around at the start of the film helps you get a better understand of how well executed their system was in the beginning and why it seemingly failed.

A couple of problems arise early on in the film, which seem minor at first but increasingly get worse and worse.

The first issue we run into is Ace's relationship with Ginger, as they never seem to be on the same page.

Casino 1995 Cast

Ace wants to get married and start a family but Ginger doesn't want to give up her lifestyle and all the freedoms she gets from it, plus she still has some unresolved feelings for her old pimp, Lester.

Her fear of marriage and commitment isn't as powerful as her love of money though. She agrees to marry Ace since he promises to always buy her everything that she wants and tells her that she can leave if she ever becomes unhappy.

Not only is that an unsettling start to a marriage, but the end result of their marriage is much worse. Luckily, or so it seems, Ginger's lover Lester passes away, making it easier for their relationship to grow. They start a family, having one daughter named Amy who they both love deeply.

A second problem that emerges early on is that Ace doesn't have a license to run a casino and yet he technically owns the Tangiers Casino.

Casino 1995 Characters Wiki

He gets away with this by taking on different positions within the company that allow him to oversee everything without claiming the title as owner. The State Regulators are picking up on his schemes though and it soon becomes obvious that in order to continue with business as usual, Ace will have to obtain a license.

Ace wants to show Ginger that he truly trust her, so he gives her complete control of one of his accounts that has $2 million dollars in it that's designed to be used in case of an emergency. Ginger feels honored that Ace trusts her with that much money and their relationship is strengthened because of it.

In the meantime, Nicky is practically going on a murder spree, killing anyone that he sees fit. He's soon barred from every casino in Las Vegas and was considered by many to be the new boss in town. This causes a lot of problems for Ace, as everyone knew that they were close.

Ginger requests $25,000 from Ace but refuses to tell him why she needs so much cash. He refuses to give it to her, causing her to take it out of the $2 million account.

This is when we find out that Lester is still alive and that Ginger needed the money for him and that she clearly still had feelings for him. When Ace finds out, he sends Nicky and his friends to beat Lester which devastates Ginger. When she gets home she heads back to her old ways of alcoholism and drug addiction.

On top of that, the FBI were really started to get on Nicky's trail and it became very difficult for him and Ace to meet privately.

Casino 1995 Characters List

Nicky plans to take over Las Vegas and it looks as if no one is going to stop him.

Ace doesn't agree with everything Nicky is doing but he's too worried about his gaming license trial that's coming up that he doesn't do anything about it either.

The day for Ace to get his gaming license is finally here and even after making a beautiful case for himself, Ace ultimately gets denied a license. In anger, Ace starts the show 'Ace's High' to show the judges that even if they deny him a gaming license, they certainly can't take him out of the casinos.

He even files a law suit against the Supreme Court but never ends up getting very far with that. Ace also has another lawsuit on his hands, as he and Ginger have finally decided that it was in their best interests to get a divorce.

Movie Casino Cast

Ginger meets secretly with Nicky; they plan to get as much money out of Ace as possible and then they sleep together. From this point on everything that could go wrong in Ace's life certainly does.

Photos are released of Nicky and Ginger together, so everyone knows about the affair. Ace comes home to see Amy tied to her bed, claiming that Ginger did this to her. Ginger takes the entire two million emergency fund from Ace and they never see each other again.

Wiki
In doing research about the 'John Nance' character in 'Casino,' I could not find any information about an actual Las Vegas bagman or high-level casino operative by this name. It is entirely possible that the character is based on a real person, but the name seems to be entirely fictional.

Boston-born actor 'Jack Nance' (whose birth name was Marvin John Nance) has no connection to the 'John Nance' character in 'Casino.' Jack Nance was credited as 'John Nance' when he had the lead role ('Henry Spencer') in David Lynch's movie 'Eraserhead' (1977). Nance may be best known for his supporting role as 'Pete Martell' in Lynch's TV series 'Twin Peaks.' He also appeared in all of Lynch's movies after 'Eraserhead' (except for 'Elephant Man'), including: 'Lost Highway' (a 1997 movie which features a major character from Utah) and 'Blue Velvet' (1986). John Nance (or 'Jack Nance') the actor was born in 1943, so he would have been only 30 years old at the time his first scene in 'Casino' takes place: 1973. In that scene, Nance is clearly an older man, probably at least 60 years old. Moreover, John 'Jack' Nance spent his career as an actor, and did not work or live in Las Vegas. Clearly 'John Nance' in 'Casino' has no connection to the similarly-named actor.

Bill Allison, the actor who plays 'John Nance' in 'Casino' really does have a casino background. Allison owned the historic Mizpah hotel-casino in Tonopah for 16 years during the 1970s and 1980s. Bill Allison was originally hired as a consultant for the production of 'Casino,' but ended up being cast as an actor in the film as well. Bill Allison had no prior acting experience.

While Bill Allison's character 'John Nance' is called a 'Mormon' in the film, and he may indeed be intended by the writers to be a Latter-day Saint, actor Bill Allison is not known to be a Latter-day Saint.

Interestingly enough, Bill Allison subsequently played a casino guard in the Las Vegas casino movie 'Ocean's Eleven' (2001). Coincidentally, 'Ocean's Eleven' (2001) holds the record as the highest-grossing movie ever to feature main characters overtly identified as Latter-day Saints. One of Bill Allison's only other film roles aside from 'Casino' (in which Joe Pesci calls him a 'Mormon') and 'Ocean's Eleven' (in which he co-stars with two Mormon characters - Virgil and Turk Malloy) is the short film 'Courage & Stupidity' (2004), which was filmed in Salt Lake City. 'Courage & Stupidity' is a fictional comedy about what 'really' happened between a young Steven Spielberg (Todd Wall) and a young George Lucas (Aaron Fiore) during the filming of 'Jaws.' Bill Allison plays a movie producer in 'Courage & Stupidity.' Latter-day Saint actors in the film's cast include Johnny Biscuit ('Handcart', 'The Singles Ward') and Brian Sullivan. The film was written and directed by Utahn Darin Beckstead. The director of photography was Latter-day Saint cinematographer Brian Sullivan (Getting There; Little Secrets; Coyote Summer; The Paper Brigade; Wish Upon a Star; The Brainiacs.com; Just Like Dad; etc.) and special effects were by Ben Josephsen.

Aside from 'Casino,' 'Ocean's Eleven' and 'Courage & Stupidity,' the only other film role listed for Bill Allison on IMDb.com is a small part in 'Stuey' (2003), which was filmed partially in Las Vegas and has no known Latter-day Saint characters.

The character 'John Nance' is only overtly described as a 'Mormon' once in 'Casino' - in the section of the film in which he first appears. The character appears in many subsequent scenes. Nance really never does anything in the film that clearly indicates he is a Latter-day Saint. Nor does he ever do anything that clearly indicates he is not one (aside from the connection to the mafia that his job entails).

Below is an excerpt from the 'Casino' screenplay, featuring the scenes which follow Nance ('a Mormon,' according to Joe Pesci's character) as he brings money from the casino in Las Vegas to the operation's real backers in Kansas City. Although Nance has relatively few lines during this section, the camera focuses on him almost non-stop during these scenes.

6 minutes, 21 seconds after the start of the film:End of section above: 9 minutes, 31 seconds after the start of the film. This section focusing on Nance is 3 minutes, 10 seconds long.


About half-way through the screenplay (line 7086 of the 15,177-line script), Nance appears for the second time:
A minute later there is the third section featuring John Nance (line 7334 of the 15,177-line script):
Piscano (played by Vinny Vella) later mentions Nance (line 8328):
In the fourth section of the film featuring Nance, he is almost arrested by the FBI toward the end of the script (line 14,255 of the 15,177-line script):
Finally, the fifth section of 'Casino' to feature John Nance shows his gruesome death at the hands of men working for Nicky (Joe Pesci), after Nance has already left his life in Las Vegas behind and retired to Costa Rica (line 14,587 of the 15,177-line script):In total, the scenes featuring 'John Nance' comprise 556 lines in the 15,177-line script, or 3.7% of the length of the screenplay. John Nance is a relatively minor character in the movie.
The scenes in 'Casino' featuring the movie's two Latter-day Saint characters (or characters based on real-life Latter-day Saints) - 'John Nance' and 'the Senator' - comprise a total of 865 lines, or 5.7% of the length of the screenplay.

References to Latter-day Saints in the non-fiction book Casino
(the basis for the 1995 movie)

As described in the non-fiction book that the movie 'Casino' was adapted from, Tony Spilotro (the Joe Pesci character) had a serious girlfriend who was a Latter-day Saint.

Source: Nicholas Pileggi. Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas. New York: Simon & Schuster (1995).

Nicholas Pileggi's non-fiction book Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas is (according to the book jacket):

..a riveting, true-life story of love and death in Las Vegas, a fatal romantic love triangle between
  • Lefty Rosenthal, gambling genius, the brains behind the mob's control of the casinos
  • Tony Spilotro, Lefty's friend and partner, the muscle of the mob in Las Vegas
  • Geri, Lefty's beautiful blond show-girl wife, whose affair with Tony ultimately drove the mob out of the 'paradise' they had built for themselves in the desert.
These real-life historical figures were portrayed in the 1995 movie 'Casino':
  • Frank 'Lefty' Rosenthal is portrayed by Robert De Niro (his name changed to: Sam 'Ace' Rothstein)
  • Anthony 'Tony' Spilotro is portrayed by Joe Pesci (his name changed to: Nicky Santoro)
  • Geri McGee is portrayed by Sharon Stone (her name changed to: Ginger)
Not only did Nicholas Pileggi write the book Casino, he also wrote the screenplay. Pileggi also wrote the non-fiction book Wise Guy, and he wrote the Academy Award-nominated screenplay for the movie 'Goodfellas' (1990) based on that book.
In the excerpt below, from Pileggi's non-fiction book Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas, the difficulties between Tony Spilotro (the Joe Pesci character) and his wife Nancy are briefly described. That section is followed by a detailed description of Spilotro's relationship with his Latter-day Saint (Mormon) girlfriend, Sheryl.

Pages 154 to 158:

As time passed, Spilotro spent less and less time with his wife, Nancy. When they were together, they fought -- and the FBI listened. She complained that he had lost interest in her. She accused him of affairs. He was never home. He never talked to her. In the morning, the FBI recorded the sound of silence as Tony made his coffee and Nancy read the newspaper. Then he would leave for the store without even saying good-bye.

Sometimes Nancy had to call him at work to relay a message; according to Bud Hall, Tony was always rude. 'She'd say, 'I don't know if this can wait, but so-and-so called.' 'It can wait,' Tony would say, sort of sarcastically, and just hang up. Or he'd say, in an exasperated tone, 'Nancy, I'm busy,' and hang up. He was never gentlemanly with her, and she'd whine to Dena Harte, Herbie Blitzstein's girlfriend, who managed the front of the Gold Rush. Nancy would tell Dena whenever Tony beat her up or whenever she suspected Tony was fooling around with this one or that one, and Dena kept Nancy informed about what Tony was doing.

'There was one time when Dena called Nancy at home and said, 'The bitch is here.' Nancy jumped in the car and tore over to the place and started screaming at Sheryl, Tony's girlfriend, calling her a no-good [EXPLETIVE] right there in the middle of the store.

'We could hear the screaming on the wire, and then Tony comes out, and then we hear Nancy screaming for Tony to stop hitting her. He was really beating her up. We got worried that he was going to kill her. It was a mess. So we called nine-one-one and said we were in the Black Forest German Restaurant next door, and said someone was being assaulted in the Gold Rush. We couldn't tell the cops who we were because at that point it looked like Tony owned Metro, and we didn't want to blow our surveillance. The police got there in a few minutes, and everything calmed down.'

'Nancy had her life and Tony had his,' said Frank Cullotta. 'Hers was mostly playing tennis and running around in white outfits. She had Vincent and Tony's brothers and their families. Once a week Tony'd take her out to dinner or something. But she wasn't afraid of him. She would scream and yell at him and drive him crazy.

'Once, he told me, she tried to kill him. They were having an argument over something and Tony knocked her across the room. She came up with a loaded thirty-eight cocked at his head. 'I'll kill you if you ever hit me again,' she said. Tony said, 'Nancy, think of Vincent.'

'I saw death,' he told me after. 'We talked until she put down the gun and then I hid all the guns in the house.'

* * *

'Sheryl was about twenty, but she looked younger,' said Rosa Rojas, who was her best friend. 'She was a Mormon from northern Utah, cute and fresh. When Tony first met her he used to call her his country girl. She was so naive that when he asked her out, she said she'd only go if she could bring her friend.

'Sheryl and I were both working in the hospital where he was going for his heart problem, which was how they met. They'd go to restaurants, but he never put the make on her. He held her at a distance for a long, long time.

Before he got too close he found out everything there was to find out about her. He had Joey Cusumano ask about where she was from, who her friends were, how long she lived where she lived. He wanted to know everything he could know about her before he got involved or felt he could trust her.

'It was a long time before she knew who he was. She began to suspect something was strange, because every time they went out, they were tailed by cops in plain clothes. Tony's brother told her that there were some legal problems and that Tony was being trailed because of the legal stuff. Tony used to tell us that we were going to read things about him in the newspapers, but he said the newspapers weren't always right.

'It was only after a long time that Tony and Sheryl started going to bed together. He was a gentleman always. Very quiet. Very reserved. I would see him mad sometimes, but I never once heard him curse or use bad language.

'Eventually, he bought her a two-story condo around Eastern and Flamingo, a two-bedroom place for about sixty-nine thousand dollars. It had everything. Refrigerator. Blinds. A washer-dryer. There was a garage and small patio and a sliding door that led into the downstairs, and upstairs they had the bedrooms and a large room that had all of the stereo and TV equipment you would want. That's where they spent most of their time -- watching ball games and listening to music.

'Tony was very generous. He used to leave a thousand dollars a week in a bear-shaped cookie jar in the kitchen. He never mentioned money and it was never mentioned that he was keeping her, but when he bought her a full-length mink coat Sheryl felt he had finally committed himself to her. She had really fallen in love with him.

'She didn't know he was married for quite a while. When she found out, it was very hard. She believed the only reason she and Tony weren't married was because Tony was a very strict Catholic and would have trouble leaving his wife. For a while, Tony even had Sheryl learning to be a Catholic. He gave her religious books to read. He knew the Bible.

'He never ever said anything bad about his wife. They had been married in the church and it was a difficult situation. On top of that. Tony loved his son. Vincent meant everything to him. Vincent was his soul. Tony would always get home at six thirty in the morning so he could be there to make breakfast for Vincent. Sheryl said he would do that even if he was in bed at her place.

'Eventually, Tony bought a car for her. It was a new Plymouth Fury. It wasn't a showy car.

'When Nancy found out what was going on, things got a little tough. Sheryl had stopped by the Gold Rush to see Tony. She was wearing a diamond studded S necklace that Tony had given her, and when Nancy came in and saw Sheryl wearing the S necklace. Nancy went wild and she reached for it.

'I got there just at that time and I found the two of them wrestling on the floor. Sheryl managed to hold on to her S. Tony came out of the back room and broke up the fight so Sheryl and I could get away.

'In the end, when it was over between Tony and Sheryl, he wouldn't return her calls. Sheryl was really crazy about him, but maybe she pushed too hard. He was having a lot of problems with the cops when they broke up, and maybe he was trying to spare her.

'His brother John used to tell her not to try and reach him. 'Don't call him,' he'd say. 'Spare yourself.' But she'd see him making his court appearances on TV and she saw that he was gaining weight and didn't look good, and she used to blame Nancy for not taking care of him. Sheryl used to make sure he ate the right food, and her refrigerator was always filled with fruits and salad and the kinds of healthy food that were good for people with heart problems.

'After she and Tony broke up she got a job doing cocktails at night. Tony wasn't happy about it. But she had grown accustomed to his lifestyle. She needed the money. Then she got into dealing blackjack. She worked in the old MGM, at Rally's. She had a prime shift and made excellent money. She started meeting high rollers. She wised up. She learned and started looking around for another rock to stand on.'


Additional commentary:
I don't recall that Sheryl was included as a character in the movie 'Casino.'

One part of the 'Casino' non-fiction book that is interesting is the description of Sheryl's effect on hard-bitten mob muscleman Tony Spilotro:

He was a gentleman always. Very quiet. Very reserved. I would see him mad sometimes, but I never once heard him curse or use bad language.
This is NOT the way that Tony acted most of the time, according to the book. If you have seen 'Casino' the movie, you know that 'never once heard him curse or use bad language' is NOT how Joe Pesci portrays the character of Tony Spilotro (i.e., Nicky Santoro). Joe Pesci's character may be the foulest-mouthed character in the movie, and may be one of the foulest-mouthed characters Joe Pesci has played in any movie (which is saying something). It's nice to think that his Mormon girlfriend didn't put up with that kind of language.

Another interesting passage indicates that Sheryl's background as a Latter-day Saint (or perhaps her training as a nurse) had a healthful effect on Tony's life, as she encouraged him to eat according to the Word of Wisdom:

Sheryl used to make sure he ate the right food, and her refrigerator was always filled with fruits and salad and the kinds of healthy food that were good for people with heart problems.
Trivia Footnote about the name 'Nicky Santoro':
One of the two most important characters in Nicholas Pileggi's book, Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas, is real-life mob figure Anthony 'Tony' Spilotro. In the film adaptation 'Casino,' Joe Pesci plays this character, but a fictional name is used: 'Nicky Santoro.' I don't know if there is a connection, but this name is similar (but not identical) to the name of real mafia leader Nicky Santora. (Santora always went by 'Nicky,' but his birth name was 'Nicholas Santora.') Nicky Santora operated out of New York City, and was eventually convicted and sent to prison for 20 years. Nicky Santora is one of the major mafia figures in the book Donnie Brasco: My Undercover Life in the Mafia, written by former F.B.I. agent Joseph D. Pistone and Richard Woodley (New American Library, 1987). This book was adapted to the feature film 'Donnie Brasco' (1997), which featured actor Gerry Becker as Donnie Brasco's Latter-day Saint FBI section chief 'Dean Blandford.' In 'Donnie Brasco' Nicky was played by actor Bruno Kirby, in the film's fourth-billed role. (Bruno Kirby also had a supporting role in 'The Godfather: Part II').
Webpage created 1 March 2005. Last modified 9 April 2005.

Casino, directed by Martin Scorsese, is based on Nicholas Pileggi's book of the same name. This movie takes us back to the 1970s when Las Vegas casinos were run by a group of mobsters.

This story is centered on the life of Sam 'Ace' Rothstein (played by Robert De Niro) and Nicky Santoro (played by Joe Pesci).

Ace has found a great deal of success in running the Tangiers Hotel and Casino with the help of his partner, Nicky, who brings him more bad publicity than anything else. His wife Ginger, a money hungry former hustler only aids in his ultimate destruction.

This movie is packed full of action and violence and it gives you a clear picture of what Las Vegas used to be like back in the day.

Characters grow and crumble before your eyes and you find yourself feeling sorry for an incredibly wealthy mobster and his tainted relationships.

For more information about this movie and to see the rating we give it, please feel free to continue reading.

Director
Martin Scorsese
Editor
Thelma Schoonmaker
Genre
American Drama
Length
2 hours, 58 minutes
Producer
Barbara De Fina
Script Writers
Nicholas Pileggi, Martin Scorsese
Release Year
1995

Main Actors/ Actresses

Robert De Niro is an accomplished actor with a long list of achievements. As far as movies go, he's probably most famous for his role in Goodfellas, The Godfather, and Meet the Parents.

He has won several awards for his phenomenal acting skills including two Oscars (1975, 1981), a MTV Movie Award for Best Line in a Movie (2001), and a Britannia Award for Excellence in Film (2009). More recently, De Niro has been working on a plethora of different movies including Hands of Stone, The Intern, and Dirty Grandpa.

Joe Pesci as Nicholas 'Nicky' Santoro

Casino Film Cast

Joe Pesci has certainly earned a name for himself in Hollywood for his array of award winning performances. He's especially praised for his roles in Home Alone, Goodfellas, Raging Bull, and of course Casino.

Pesci won the LAFCA award for Best Supporting Actor (1990), an Oscar for Best Actor in a Supporting Role (1991), and an American Comedy Award for Funniest Actor in a Motion Picture (1993). Currently he's working on the children's film, Savva, Heart of the Warrior, where he plays the voice of Komar.

Sharon stone is a gorgeous actress with incredible talent. She's well-known for her role in Casino, Total Recall, Basic Instinct, and many more.

She won a MTV movie award for Best Female Performance (1993), a Golden Globe for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture (1995), and an Emmy for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series (1997). Currently she's working on the movie Mother's Day, which should be released towards the middle of 2016.

Supporting Actors/ Actresses

  • Frank Vincent as Frankie Marino
  • James Wood as Lester Diamond
  • Melissa Prophet as Jennifer Santoro
  • Alan King as Andy Stone

Nicholas Pileggi was born in New York City in 1933. In his mid twenties, he started working as a criminal journalist for Associated Press, specializing in mob related crimes.

Since his articles were so popular, many of them were written into Academy Award-winning screenplays including Wiseguy (1986), Goodfellas (1990), and of course Casino (1995). He has gotten several awards for his work including a Chicago Film Critics Association Awards and a BAFTA Awards for Best Screenplay in 1991.

Brief Bio on Martin Scorsese (Director)

Martin Scorsese was born in New York City in 1942 to Italian immigrants, so naturally he resided in the neighborhood of Little Italy. Scorsese was very well educated, having earned a both a bachelors and a masters in film communication from the New York University's School of Film.

Since then, Scorsese has directed and produced a plethora of award winning films including The Color of Money (1986), Goodfellas (1990), Gangs of New York (2002), and Shutter Island (2010) to name a few.

This movie is rated R for a plethora of reasons including an excessive amount of profanity.

Nicky Santoro, in particular, hardly has a sentence come out of his mouth that doesn't contain a swear word or two. In addition to that, there are many scenes full of violence where you see people badly beaten and seeping with blood.

Sex and nudity is also prevalent throughout the film where viewers are exposed to women's body parts and where sexual activity is implied. Last but certainly not least, viewers will see a great deal of alcohol and drug abuse throughout the film.

Ginger is a cocaine addict and there's several times where you'll see her snort it up her nose.

This movie is very vivid and realistic as to what went on in Las Vegas during this time and therefore this film isn't recommended for anyone under the age of seventeen.

Sam 'Ace' Rothstein

Ace is a lovable criminal if there ever was such a thing. Even though he's clearly working for the wrong people, has no problem killing people off, and is so incredibly arrogant at times, you somehow still want to see him succeed.

Ace is a good person who has gotten himself into situations he can't control and as viewers, we truly want to see him overcome his obstacles.

You see a glimmer of hope for Ace when he falls in love with Ginger and starts a family with her, but their relationship quickly fizzles, turning Ace into a control freak.

Nicky is certainly the antagonist of the film, having no boundaries when it comes to getting what he wants. He murders hundreds of people, most of which he didn't have a good reason to do so.

Casino 1995 Director

He's untrustworthy, un-loyal, and an overall horrible person. His only soft spot is his son, Little Nicky, who he goes out of his way to have breakfast with in the mornings, no matter what his activities were the night before.

Ginger

Ginger is a stunningly beautiful prostitute with a great love of money and an even bigger attachment to her pimp, Lester. As the movie goes on, you see the true Ginger emerge and it's certainly not a pleasant site to see.

Ginger is a drug addict and her shear dependence on Lester leads her down a slippery slope that she'll never be able to recover from.

The Beginning

At the opening scene of this movie, a car will explode in front of your eyes and you'll get to see Sam 'Ace' Rothstein (played by Robert De Niro) flying in the air. You'll then be taken back in time to the events leading up to his death.

The first half of the film is mostly narration by Ace himself, Nicky Santoro (played by Joe Pesci), and other main characters who will explain the mobster's hand in the Las Vegas Casinos.

The characters in this movie are based on real-life mobsters.

The character or Sam Rothstein represents Frank Rosenthal, the character of Nicky Santoro is based on the life of Anthony Spitotro, the character of Ginger McKenna is derived from the infamous Geri McGee, and the character of Frankie Marino is based on Italian Mobster Frank Cullotta.

This adds an element of authenticity to the film, as the lives of these characters were truly inspired by the real-life mobsters who used to run the street of Las Vegas.

You'll get to see how generously the casino gives away their money to politicians and other wealthy men in hopes that they'll stay at the casino long enough to spend all of their money.

You'll also get a better idea of the extreme violence that took place during that time as a result of the mafia and how quietly and quickly murders were executed. The suit case full of money that's passed around at the start of the film helps you get a better understand of how well executed their system was in the beginning and why it seemingly failed.

A couple of problems arise early on in the film, which seem minor at first but increasingly get worse and worse.

The first issue we run into is Ace's relationship with Ginger, as they never seem to be on the same page.

Casino 1995 Cast

Ace wants to get married and start a family but Ginger doesn't want to give up her lifestyle and all the freedoms she gets from it, plus she still has some unresolved feelings for her old pimp, Lester.

Her fear of marriage and commitment isn't as powerful as her love of money though. She agrees to marry Ace since he promises to always buy her everything that she wants and tells her that she can leave if she ever becomes unhappy.

Not only is that an unsettling start to a marriage, but the end result of their marriage is much worse. Luckily, or so it seems, Ginger's lover Lester passes away, making it easier for their relationship to grow. They start a family, having one daughter named Amy who they both love deeply.

A second problem that emerges early on is that Ace doesn't have a license to run a casino and yet he technically owns the Tangiers Casino.

Casino 1995 Characters Wiki

He gets away with this by taking on different positions within the company that allow him to oversee everything without claiming the title as owner. The State Regulators are picking up on his schemes though and it soon becomes obvious that in order to continue with business as usual, Ace will have to obtain a license.

Ace wants to show Ginger that he truly trust her, so he gives her complete control of one of his accounts that has $2 million dollars in it that's designed to be used in case of an emergency. Ginger feels honored that Ace trusts her with that much money and their relationship is strengthened because of it.

In the meantime, Nicky is practically going on a murder spree, killing anyone that he sees fit. He's soon barred from every casino in Las Vegas and was considered by many to be the new boss in town. This causes a lot of problems for Ace, as everyone knew that they were close.

Ginger requests $25,000 from Ace but refuses to tell him why she needs so much cash. He refuses to give it to her, causing her to take it out of the $2 million account.

This is when we find out that Lester is still alive and that Ginger needed the money for him and that she clearly still had feelings for him. When Ace finds out, he sends Nicky and his friends to beat Lester which devastates Ginger. When she gets home she heads back to her old ways of alcoholism and drug addiction.

On top of that, the FBI were really started to get on Nicky's trail and it became very difficult for him and Ace to meet privately.

Casino 1995 Characters List

Nicky plans to take over Las Vegas and it looks as if no one is going to stop him.

Ace doesn't agree with everything Nicky is doing but he's too worried about his gaming license trial that's coming up that he doesn't do anything about it either.

The day for Ace to get his gaming license is finally here and even after making a beautiful case for himself, Ace ultimately gets denied a license. In anger, Ace starts the show 'Ace's High' to show the judges that even if they deny him a gaming license, they certainly can't take him out of the casinos.

He even files a law suit against the Supreme Court but never ends up getting very far with that. Ace also has another lawsuit on his hands, as he and Ginger have finally decided that it was in their best interests to get a divorce.

Movie Casino Cast

Ginger meets secretly with Nicky; they plan to get as much money out of Ace as possible and then they sleep together. From this point on everything that could go wrong in Ace's life certainly does.

Photos are released of Nicky and Ginger together, so everyone knows about the affair. Ace comes home to see Amy tied to her bed, claiming that Ginger did this to her. Ginger takes the entire two million emergency fund from Ace and they never see each other again.

The FBI finally have enough evidence to arrest every mobster associated with the Las Vegas Casinos and one by one you see Ace and Nicky's accomplices heading to jail. Nicky didn't get caught by the FBI but the Mafia did deal with him; they killed his brother right in front of him and then buried him alive.

We find out that Ginger spent all her money on drugs, eventually leading to her death by overdose. At the end of the story, we see Ace living in a mansion in San Diego and running a sports betting business.

He heads to his luxury sports car and we are taken back to the opening scene when Ace's car explodes in to a million pieces, costing him his life.





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