Growing up in the city that never sleeps
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Joe Morano tells everyone that he’s just a simple guy from New York.
He grew up in Bensonhurst a very Italian neighborhood with Steve
Schirripa who plays Bobby “Bacala” Baccalieri on the hit HBO series
“The Sopranos.” Morano thinks of himself as a big kid and enjoys
playing sports. He has friends from New York who drop in to see him
at Ciao, his restaurant on Balboa Island.
The 48-year-old recently sat down with the Pilot’s Luis Pena over
a plate of tasty pasta to discuss growing up as an Italian Catholic
in Brooklyn along with the rest of his “simple” life.
Where did you grow up?
I grew up in Brooklyn, N.Y. New York City -- it’s the greatest
city in the world. I’m glad I grew up there, and I grew up I think
during the greatest time, too. I grew up in the 1960s and ‘70s, and I
think that was a great time of growing up in this world, and this
country especially. I grew up with Mickey Mantle playing baseball. I
grew up in an Italian neighborhood. I learned a lot from my roots, my
family. You learn so much by being on the streets and going to
different neighborhoods. You learn more on the streets of New York,
meeting different people and different cultures. It was a real ethnic
Italian neighborhood. I grew up in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. When you
grow up in New York, its something different. When I go back there --
and I go back there quite often -- its almost like I never left. Your
neighborhood’s changed, of course, but people you grow up with there
are your lifelong friends.
What kind of childhood did you have?
When you’re a kid, everything is happy. I grew up with my parents
and grandparents. And my grandfather used to make wine when I was a
kid, so I used to help him down in the basement -- or in New York,
they call it a cellar. I used to step on the grapes with him. My
grandmother used to cook everyday, so I was infatuated with that.
Every day, I would watch her cook. In Italian families, cooking and
food is the primary thing. It’s their passion for life. I would go to
the store with my grandparents or my mother. I learned a lot about
food just growing up. Being in the restaurant business, I never was
formally trained, but being around my family was my training. I
couldn’t ask for anything better than that. I went to Catholic school
all my life -- grammar school, high school, college. I’m from a
strict Italian family. I got good morals, good family roots -- it’s
stuff you don’t see these days.
How did you end up in Newport-Mesa?
I moved to Las Vegas during my college years, and I stayed in
Vegas for about four years. I was young and I had a lot of fun. I
moved there to play baseball, but I ended up working at a restaurant.
That was over 20 years ago. I had a lot of fun, I was single. Las
Vegas was pretty interesting in those days. Then I moved to Palm
Springs. I was in the restaurant business there. When I was in Palm
Springs, I used to come to the beach down here, Newport Beach, and
said, “Someday I’d like to move down here.” Fortunately, I had an
opportunity to come open up a restaurant and that’s where I’m at now.
Besides New York, I wouldn’t want to live anywhere else. This area
here -- who could complain? Growing up in New York, I’d never thought
that I’d end up in California.
What are your greatest accomplishments in life?
I find it very hard talking about myself. It’s very awkward
talking about me and things that I’ve done because I’m just an
ordinary guy. I don’t have one great accomplishment. I hit a home run
once to win a baseball game in a New York City high school
tournament. But other than that, I think one of my accomplishments is
creating a restaurant and having people come ... and they enjoy your
food and they enjoy your restaurant. That makes you feel so good that
you’ve done something and built something and have people come in and
thank you. That really gets to me. I feel that’s sort of an
accomplishment.
I do a lot of work with animal rescuing. I like doing stuff with
animals and kids. If I had more time I’d try to get into coaching.
If you could re-do one moment or incident in your life, what would
it be?
It’s a tough question. Growing up, I thought I’d be either a
priest or baseball player. I was an altar boy till I was pretty old.
I waited and waited, and I never got the call from God. I wanted to
be a baseball player of course, like every young boy. I had talent,
but growing up in New York, it’s not like growing up here. It’s hard
growing up in New York if you want to be an athlete. We never had
lights in our fields. The facilities were different than here. You
have to be 100% devoted and I actually wasn’t. You find out later on
that it’s got to be your life. So I probably regret not focusing more
on trying to be a baseball player and going to college play ball, but
I was having too much fun in Vegas to pursue that.
What profession other than yours would you like to have tried?
Well, priest or baseball player. Growing up in New York, I wanted
to be a baseball player. But you have to have talent and you need
desire. I played the accordion for five years when I was growing up
-- you had to do that in an Italian family. But I don’t think that I
wanted to be a musician. I was semicreative in school. I did TV
shows. I was good at writing skits and comedy but I never pursued
that. Maybe working around animals at the zoo.
What are some differences between a typical day in your life now
versus a day in your life 20 years ago?
Besides being older by 20 years, not to much because I was in the
restaurant business 20 years ago but I was younger and I really
didn’t care too much about things like I do now. I find myself being
too serious now. I use to be pretty much carefree like everyone else
when you’re young. Now, I have certain goals that I want to do in the
next few years. When you’re 20 years younger, you just want to live
and enjoy yourself.
What is the greatest lesson you’ve learned in your life?
A couple of months ago, I was walking past the other restaurant
down the block. I noticed a woman, she was probably in a group of
five or six people, very pretty, very vibrant. She just happened to
catch my eye. Later, I was sitting outside my restaurant, Ciao, and I
just glance up and I see the woman I’d seen in the restaurant. As she
gets close to me, I see that she is in a wheelchair and she has no
arms or legs. I’d seen her sitting down at the restaurant and she was
so vibrant you couldn’t tell that she had no arms or legs. When I’d
seen her I said, “Wow, this lady here is acting like she is perfectly
normal.” And God gave her this to deal with, she ended up like this
in some accident or something. So that really hit me. How could I
complain about having a bad back or my foot bothering me when this
woman here is enjoying her life. She is just one of those people that
just had a lot of life in her and here she was with no arms or legs.
It really stuck in my mind. It really got to me. So I learned to deal
with what you have. There’s no reason to complain. Life is what it
is. And I am very happy with what God gave me.
What do you treasure most?
That’s another hard question because I have a lot of things that I
enjoy and treasure including going back to New York and spending time
with my family and friends. And I treasure every day of being in
business and just living my life. I treasure my family and friends
that I grew up with, but otherwise I’m very content with living my
life. I’m not a selfish person, so I don’t have too many things that
I want to hold on to. But I just treasure those things right now. I
enjoy spending time with my Siberian husky, Sarge. I’m single and
being in this business, I never got married, so I have a dog that was
put into my life at the right time.
What would you like people to always remember about you?
I never really want to grow up. I still want to be a kid, to hang
out and play sports, to be around kids and animals. I’m still a big
kid, and I never matured as an adult.
What was one of the best of the unexpected things that happened in
your life?
In 1977, I was in Studio 54 -- probably the world’s most famous
nightclub. As I was walking in, I bumped into Mick Jagger. He was
leaving. He was a little drunk or whatever. And it was Bianca
Jagger’s birthday party and I ended up hanging out and having a party
with her. There was Bianca Jagger, Holston, Jacqueline Bisset -- I
don’t want to drop names. It was pretty interesting that night.
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