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- Died
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Vito Scotti
Vito Giusto Scozzari (January 26, 1918 – June 5, 1996), also known as Vito Scotti, was an American character actor who played both dramatic and comedy roles on Broadway, in films, and later on television, primarily from the late 1930s to the mid-1990s. He was known as a man of a thousand faces for his ability to assume so many divergent roles in more than 200 screen appearances in a career spanning 50 years and for his resourceful portrayals of various ethnic types. Of Italian heritage, he played everything from a Mexican bandit, to a Russian doctor, to a Japanese sailor, to an Indian travel agent.
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As actor
Get Shorty
National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon 1
Beverly Hills Brats
Side Roads
Stewardess School
Pinocchio
The Haunting of Harrington House
Chu Chu and the Philly Flash
Herbie Goes Bananas
The Ghosts of Buxley Hall
Zero to Sixty
Lindsay Wagner: Another Side of Me
Halloween with the New Addams Family
The Big Bus
I Wonder Who's Killing Her Now?
The Wild McCullochs
Adventures of the Queen
Paesano
How to Seduce a Woman
Twice in a Lifetime
Herbie Rides Again
The World's Greatest Athlete
The Six Million Dollar Man: The Solid Gold Kidnapping
The Godfather
The Bull of the West
When the Legends Die
Napoleon and Samantha
The Boy from Dead Man's Bayou
The Aristocats
The Boatniks