Nicholas
Georgiade, ‘The Untouchables’ actor and Syracuse University alumnus, dies at 88
Syracuse.com
By
Geoff Herbert
December
21, 2021
Nicholas “Nick” Georgiade, the last
surviving regular cast member of “The Untouchables,” is dead at age 88.
Georgiade died Sunday, Dec. 19, in Las Vegas, Nevada,
according to his nephew and namesake Nick Georgiade, who lives in
Baldwinsville, N.Y. A cause of death was not immediately disclosed.
“He lived 88 long years, and had a beautiful life,” actor
Nicholas Georgiade’s daughter Anastazia wrote on Facebook Sunday. “He was also
a wonderful father to me. I had the blessing to have him pass away in my arms
tonight. Thank you in advance to all your kind words and prayers.”
Georgiade was best known for playing agent
Enrico Rossi, the hunky sidekick of Elliot Ness (played by Robert Stack) on the
original “The Untouchables” TV series. He appeared in 113 of 119 episodes that
aired from 1959 to 1963, according to IMDb.
“I’m playing myself,” Georgiade told the Chicago Tribune in 1960. “Sometimes actors have to be
doctors of human behavior and the more they like their work the better they are
at it. I’ve watched policemen and have been interested in their reactions. My
brother George is a detective and he, like most cops, has the same emotions,
fallibilities, frustrations and joys of all human beings.”
George Georgiade, who died in 2015, spent 22 years with
Syracuse Police Department until his retirement as a lieutenant in 1982. In
1976, he was the detective responsible for returning SU football legend Ernie Davis’ stolen Heisman Trophy, according to his obituary.
Nicholas Georgiade was born March 25, 1933, in New York
City. He was a boxer who joined the U.S. Army during the Korean War, winning
the European Heavyweight title for the Army in 1952. After his military
service, he received an athletic scholarship to Syracuse University, where he
majored in sociology, psychology and drama; he graduated in 1957.
According to Syracuse University,
Georgiade continued to box in college and intended to become a teacher after
graduation, but first gave acting a try. He ended up being discovered by “I
Love Lucy” star Lucille Ball when he appeared in a small theater production in
California. According to the Tribune, he became one of the first members of her
Desilu Workshop theater and acted in a stage production of “The Untouchables,”
which helped land him the role of Rossi in Desilu Productions’ TV adaptation of
“The Untouchables.”
Georgiade’s acting credits also included
the 1963 movie “It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World,” 1993′s “Indecent Proposal,” and
appearances on TV shows like “Batman,” “Mission: Impossible,” “The Rockford
Files,” “Hawaii Five-0,” “Hondo,” “Mannix,” “Get Smart,” “The Equalizer,” “T.J.
Hooker” and “Kojak.” He was credited as both “Nick Georgiade” and “Nicholas
Georgiade” throughout his career.
His final role was in the 2007 film “Three Days to
Vegas,” playing a casino boss opposite George Segal, Rip Torn, Bill Cobbs and
fellow SU alum Peter Falk.
“The Untouchables” was based on the real life of Ness, a
U.S. Treasury Agent who sought to bring down gangster Al Capone in Chicago
during the Prohibition era. A 1987 movie adaptation, directed by Brian De
Palma, starred Kevin Costner, Charles Martin Smith, Andy Garcia, Robert De
Niro, and Sean Connery; Connery won an Oscar for best supporting actor.
Nick Georgiade, who lived with his uncle Nicholas in Las
Vegas in the ‘80s and ‘90s, said Nicholas was an inspiration for his own acting
career, which includes television commercials in the Syracuse area.
“He meant a lot to me,” Nick told
syracuse.com | The Post-Standard. “Some people said he was my idol.”
“He meant a tremendous amount,” close family friend Mike
Distefano added from Las Vegas. “He was larger than life and his persona was
very powerful and magnetic, he was extremely generous. He was a star and a
superstar.”
Nick and Mike also credited Nick’s uncle with encouraging
them to go back to college and get their degree like he did.
“He was like a father to me,” Mike said. “He was like a
father to many people.”
Georgiade was predeceased by his wife of 40 years, Alicia
Razaf, in 2017. According to IMDb, he was previously married to Anita
Khanzadian, a fellow SU student later known as Anita Raffi; and Davee Decker.
He was also preceded in death by his brother, former Syracuse Police lieutenant
George Georgiade; his sister Fotina (Flo) of Minoa; and his nephew, Michael
DeFelix.
Survivors include Georgiade’s daughter, Anastazia Juliet
Georgiade; sister Mary; nephews, Nick, George and Rick; niece Linda DeFelix;
and numerous family and friends including Mike Distefano.
GEORGIADE,
Nicholas
Born:
3/25/1933,
New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 12/19/2021, Las
Vegas, Nevada, U.S.A.
Nicholas
Georgiade’s westerns - actor:
The
Travels of Jaimie McPheeters (TV) – 1964 (Rob, Cairo)
Eye
for an Eye – 1966 (Neil Robertson)
Daniel
Boone (TV) – 1966 (Chief White Wolf)
Hondo
(TV) – 1967 (bartender)
Hang
‘Em High – 1968 (prisoner in wagon)
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