Sophia Petrillo

Sophia Petrillo
First appearance "The Engagement" (The Golden Girls)
September 14, 1985
Last appearance "Remembrance of Clips Past"
(Empty Nest)
June 17, 1995
Portrayed by Estelle Getty
Information
Occupation Co-Owner of The Golden Palace/ Assistant Chef
Family Don Angelo Grisanti, Sr. (father; deceased)[1]
Eleanor Grisanti (mother; deceased)[2]
Angelo Grisanti, Jr. (brother) [3]
Angela Rachel Grisanti Vecchio (sister)[4]
Regina Grisanti (sister)[5]
Vito Grisanti (brother)
Dominic Grisanti (brother)
Spouse(s) Guido Spirelli (m. 1926, annulled)
Salvadore "Sal" Petrillo (m. 1928–73, widowed)
Max Weinstock (m. 1988, separated)
Children Dorothy Petrillo Zbornak Hollingsworth (daughter)
Phillip "Phil" Petrillo (son; deceased)
Gloria Mayston Petrillo Harker (daughter)
Relatives Stanley Zbornak (ex son-in-law)
Lucas Hollingsworth (son-in-law)
Angela Petrillo (daughter-in-law)
Carmine Vecchio (brother-in-law; deceased) (through Angela)
Kate Zbornak Griffiths (granddaughter) (through Dorothy)
Michael Zbornak (grandson) (through Dorothy)
Katherine Harker (granddaughter) (through Gloria)
Jim Harker (grandson) (through Gloria)
Harvey Petrillo (grandson) (through Phil)
5 Unnamed Grandsons Petrillo (through Phil)
4 Unnamed Granddaughters Petrillo (through Phil)
Robert "Robbie" Zbornak (great-grandson) (through Michael)
Renata Grisanti (paternal aunt)
Mario (uncle)
Teresa Grisanti (paternal aunt by marriage) (through Nunzio)
Nunzio Grisanti (paternal uncle)
Yolanda Zbornak (ex-co-mother-in-law)
Mr. Zbornak (ex-co-father-in-law)
Dennis Griffiths (grandson-in-law)
Bobby Griffiths (great-grandson)
Lorraine Wagner Zbornak (ex-granddaughter-in-law)
Graciella (niece)
Apollonia Grisanti (niece)
Dominic Petrillo (brother-in-law)
Dominic's Daughter Petrillo (niece by marriage)
Blanche Elizabeth Ann Hollingsworth Devereaux (great-niece by marriage)
Clayton "Clay" Louis Hollingsworth (great-nephew by marriage)
Charmaine Gertrude Hollingsworth LaPale (great-niece by marriage)
Theodore "Tad" Hunter Hollingsworth (great-nephew by marriage)
Virginia Lena Hollingsworth Warren (great-niece by marriage)
Janet Devereaux (great-great-niece by marriage)
Rebecca Devereaux (great-great-niece by marriage)
"Biff" Devereaux (great-great-nephew by marriage)
Douglas "Doug" Devereaux (great-great-nephew by marriage)
Matthew "Skippy" Devereaux (great-great-nephew by marriage)
Nicodemo (grandfather)
Religion Roman Catholic

Sophia Petrillo is a fictional character from the TV series The Golden Girls, and its spin-offs The Golden Palace and Empty Nest and one episode of the series, Blossom. She was portrayed by Estelle Getty for 10 years and 259 episodes. Bea Arthur, who played her daughter Dorothy Zbornak on the show, was in real life a year older than Getty.[6]

Early history

Sophia Petrillo (née' Grisanti) was most likely born in April 1906 in Palermo, Sicily. She had a sister Angela, a sister Regina, a brother Angelo, and she mentioned another brother, but he was unnamed and only spoken of a few times. Dorothy mentions an uncle Vito in Season 2. It is revealed in the season 2 episode "A Piece of Cake" that her 50th birthday was in April 1956, placing her date of birth in April 1906. However, in another season 2 episode, "And Then There Was One", Sophia claims she had been "walking since 1904." In the first episode of The Golden Palace (1992) it is revealed that Sophia was 87. However, in several episodes, she is revealed to be between the ages of 80 and 85. In her many flashbacks to life in Sicily, she frequently places herself as being a young woman (having romantic affairs) in dates between 1914 and 1920. These discrepancies may be due to either continuity errors or dramatic license on the part of Sophia.

While in Sicily, as a teenager she was briefly engaged to a young man from her village Augustine Bagatelli, she also claims that she was once engaged to her brother. Later, she became engaged to Giuseppe Mangiacavallo, who jilted her at the altar. She moved to New York after she annulled her arranged first marriage to Guido Spirelli when she was 14. She has no accent left to show that she grew up speaking the Sicilian language. Instead, she sports a Brooklyn accent with a fast speaking pace, which often contributed to the humor in her one-liners.

Sophia Spirelli then married Salvadore "Sal" Petrillo (played by Sid Melton in flashback), and had three children with him: Dorothy, a divorced substitute teacher; Phil (an unseen character), a cross-dresser with a wife named Angela, a welder, and several children in a trailer park in Newark, New Jersey who later died of a heart attack during the series; and Gloria (played by Doris Belack and Dena Dietrich), who lived in California and married into money and later lost her husband to some unknown cause. She remained with Salvadore until his death from a heart attack.

1985–92

In her later years, Sophia suffered a stroke (the effects of which are said to be a partial explanation for Sophia's blunt, uncensored, and brazen remarks) and was subsequently placed in Shady Pines retirement home by Dorothy. After Shady Pines was damaged in a fire, Sophia moved in with Dorothy.[7] Sophia did not have many good things to say about "the home", alluding to poor treatment by the staff many times, and Dorothy sometimes threatened to send her back there to check Sophia's behavior.

While living in Miami, Sophia had many suitors but does not date any for a substantial amount of time. She did remarry once more though to Max Weinstock (Jack Gilford). Max was her late husband's long-time business partner whom Sophia had long blamed for ruining the business, although it was later revealed Sal was responsible. Sophia and Max forgave each other after the latter reveals the truth, and the two quickly became close and got married. The newlyweds realize their romance would not work out, and they part ways as friends. However, both remained legally married, as divorce would have gone against her Roman Catholic beliefs.

Due to Sophia's Sicilian descent, there were regular hints in the series that she and her family have some mafia connections; she has made reference to several vendettas. It is even hinted that Sophia herself has done mob work; she once stated that no one in her family had "ever left a body to be found". Sophia also claimed to have been present at the 1929 St. Valentines Day Massacre, to which she then took back stating, "Oh yeah, I was at the movies that day. All day."

Sophia believed strongly in ancient Sicilian custom and traditions, and in the power of a "Sicilian curse." The list of people she claims to have cast curses on include: Shelley Long, the Baltimore Colts, the New York Jets, Giuseppe Mangiacavallo (the boy who stood her up at the altar), and Leonard Barton (the girls' next door neighbor who expressed disdain for Italians, played by Gordon Jump). She has threatened to cast a curse on Dorothy (before she found that it was prohibited by another arcane custom), and on Stan Zbornak. In the final season, Sophia spent two episodes doing odd tasks in order to save Dorothy from an ancient curse from a Sicilian strega, or witch.

In the series finale of The Golden Girls, Sophia, after initially deciding to follow the now-married Dorothy out of the house, turns back and decides to stay with Rose and Blanche, which sets up the transition to The Golden Palace. When Rose, Blanche and Sophia invest in a hotel, Sophia is installed as one of the two chefs, specializing in Italian cuisine while the hotel's previous chef, Chuy Castillos (Cheech Marin), handles Mexican food. Sophia begins to show signs of senile dementia, usually in comical situations (for instance, she is shown to be standing still and apparently unconscious while attempting to operate a vacuum cleaner) and her bluntness is toned down to a certain extent. In the episode "One Angry Stan" she is the only one to witness Stanley Zbornak after he fakes his death to avoid tax troubles; the fact that no one else sees Stan in these episodes (he ducks out of sight whenever someone else enters the room), coupled with Sophia's increased senility, make it unclear whether or not Stan is really alive or if Sophia is hallucinating Stan's appearance.

After the events of The Golden Palace (which ended without a series finale), Sophia returns to the Shady Pines nursing home, joining the cast of Empty Nest.

Relationships

Sophia is best known for her wisecracks, put-downs and brazen remarks, often commenting on Dorothy's unmarried state, Blanche's promiscuity, and Rose's cluelessness. However, despite her sharp criticism of her daughter and roommates, she loves and cares for them deeply; she even sees Rose and Blanche as surrogate daughters. The other women usually seek Sophia out for advice, which Sophia is all too willing to share, usually beginning with her catchphrase, "Picture it…" Like Rose's tall tales, Sophia's parables often end with a moral, from which advice can be gleaned. These stories usually also involved historical figures, with Sophia claiming to have had trysts with Pablo Picasso, Sigmund Freud, and Winston Churchill, amongst others. She also claims to have befriended many famous people including Golda Meir, Mama Celeste, and accidentally claimed that Robert Frost was always "nipping at my nose" (she was confused with Jack Frost).

Members of Sophia's family who have appeared on the program include: Her sister, Angela (Nancy Walker for 2 episodes in Season 2); her brother, Angelo, and her father (both roles were played by Bill Dana); her daughter, Gloria; her husband, Sal (in flashbacks and in dream sequences); and Sophia's own mother (Bea Arthur in a dual role who also didn't have a Sicilian accent), who also appeared exclusively in flashbacks; and even Dorothy at a younger age (played by Lynnie Greene).

It is unclear whether Sophia moved to the United States alone or with her family, as her sister and mother had both eventually lived in New York as well. Sophia and her sister Angela were estranged for decades after a misunderstanding at a Christmas party in 1955; Angela then became a widow and she moved back to Sicily for 30 years until they reconciled and she moved back to the U.S. Sophia's brother Angelo (initially a priest, then a layman) remained in Sicily and moved to the United States only in season six.

Probably one of the most notable continuity goofs in Golden Girls with Sophia is when her mother is mentioned. In an early episode, Sophia's brother stated that their mother died seventy-two years earlier just as Angelo was about to become a priest (which he didn't do). In later episodes, Dorothy, as a young woman, brought Sophia's mother to visit (she was played by Bea Arthur). In an episode not long after this one, Dorothy mentioned that her grandmother (Sophia's mother) died when Dorothy was six years old.

Appearance

In her younger years, Sophia apparently had always been short, with reddish-brown hair (Estelle Getty's natural color), but in one episode she says she was "a tall voluptuous blonde with a butt like granite" when she was younger (though this statement was likely a by-product of her penchant for telling tall tales).

During the series' run, Sophia resembled the archetypal "old lady" in looks: White-haired, small stature, wrinkles, and large-framed eyeglasses. Sophia owned a tan bamboo handbag which became her personal trademark, as she carried the purse everywhere, even around the house (including the bathroom). Sophia's sister Angela displayed these traits as well.

Appearances in others series

Outside The Golden Girls, Sophia appears on two episodes of Empty Nest ("Libby's Gift" and "Windy") before becoming a regular for the final two seasons. She also appears on the Blossom episode "I Ain't Got No Buddy" and the Nurses episode "Temporary Setbacks".[8]

References

  1. "Valentine's Day". February 11, 1989.
  2. "Mother's Day". May 7, 1988.
  3. "My Father, My Brother". February 6, 1988.
  4. "The Sisters". January 3, 1987.
  5. "Rose the Prude". September 28, 1985.
  6. Wood, Sandy; Kovalchik, Kara (2008). The Complete Idiot's Guide to Fun FAQs. Penguin. p. 233. ISBN 1592577547.
  7. Brooks, Tim; Marsh, Earle (2007). The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946-Present (3 ed.). Random House Digital, Inc. p. 546. ISBN 0-345-49773-2.
  8. Laufenberg, Norbert B. (2005). Entertainment Celebrities. Trafford Publishing. p. 255. ISBN 1-4120-5335-8.
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