11 Actors Who Almost Played The Godfather’s Don Corleone Before Marlon Brando

It’s hard to imagine anyone other than Marlon Brando playing crime boss Vito Corleone in The Godfather. Brando’s Oscar-winning portrayal of Don Corleone has become the stuff of legend. His physical adaptation to the role, perfecting a unique vocal delivery and detailed facial movements and mannerisms, made him almost unrecognizable from the actor written off by most in the film industry as an unprofessional troublemaker. Yet the casting of Brando as the mafia don very nearly didn’t happen. The Godfather’s originator, Mario Puzo and director Francis Ford Coppola had to push back against enormous pressure from Paramount Studios to cast someone else in the role.

Even after production on the movie had begun, various other high-profile names were bandied about as possible options to play Corleone, with some of those suggested not even professional actors. Meanwhile, famous fans of Puzo’s Godfather novel lobbied Puzo, Coppola and the studio to be cast in the part. In the end, though, the two creative visionaries behind the film got their way. After executives were bowled over by his screen tests, Paramount simply couldn’t refuse to cast Brando in The Godfather. No fewer than 11 other potential Don Corleones were left disappointed.

11

Ernest Borgnine

An Italian-American Oscar Winner

Marty talking to Clara in Marty

Paramount executive Robert Evans, who oversaw the production of The Godfather alongside a string of other New Hollywood classics, strongly believed that the part of Vito Corleone should go to someone with an Italian background. Ernest Borgnine was the first name he put forward with this belief in mind (via Vanity Fair).

Marlon-Brando as Vito Corleone in The Godfather

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Although not widely remembered today, Borgnine certainly had the acting pedigree to take on the role. He started out in Hollywood acting in a string of noir and Western movies, before winning the Academy Award for Best Actor in 1956, for playing the title role in the acclaimed romantic drama Marty. At the age of 54, Borgnine was much closer to Vito Corleone’s age than the 47-year-old Brando. But Coppola and Puzo knew what they wanted, and Brando’s performance saw him transform into a much older Italian-American character seemingly at will.

10

Charles Bronson

The Preferred Choice Of Paramount Studios CEO

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At the time The Godfather was made, Paramount Studios was under the control of CEO, Chairman and President Charles George Bluhdorn, a metals and auto parts magnate with absolutely no background in cinema. Bluhdorn liked to be personally involved in casting decisions concerning his studio’s major productions, and The Godfather was no exception. He was incensed at the idea that Marlon Brando should be cast as Don Corleone, labeling the actor “box-office poison”, and instead proposed Charles Bronson for the role (via Vanity Fair).

The Godfather Marlon Brando Francis Ford Coppola

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Bronson was one of Hollywood’s biggest stars at the time, off the back of a string of commercial and critical successes that included The Magnificent Seven, The Great Escape, The Dirty Dozen, Once Upon a Time in the West, and the French films Adieu l’ami and Rider on the Rain. Bluhdorn’s suggestion wasn’t completely out of left field, as Bronson had proven himself to be a specialist at fronting star-studded casts in sprawling epics, and was a considerable box office draw. In retrospect, however, it’s clear that his acting style wouldn’t have suited The Godfather’s understated, simmering intensity.

9

Richard Conte

He Still Made It Into The Godfather As Emilio Barzini

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Richard Conte was, in many ways, a sensible choice to play Don Corleone. He was an experienced actor from an Italian-American background, who transitioned from being typecast in noir films to big-budget movies with broader scopes in the 1960s. He’d have been quite at home in The Godfather, and so it proved, after he was cast as Vito Corleone’s rival mafia don Emilio Barzini.

Conte played Don Barzini to perfection, as the man who covertly undermines Corleone’s position in New York’s Five Families.

Conte was likely never seriously considered for the role of Vito Corleone, though (via Chicago Tribune). He was just one of several names that Paramount executives threw at Coppola to try and counter his insistence on Brando for the part. In any case, Conte played Don Barzini to perfection, as the man who covertly undermines Corleone’s position in New York’s Five Families.

8

Laurence Olivier

The Actor’s Agent Turned It Down

Laurence Olivier and creep clown in Sleuth

Laurence Olivier was the only actor that Francis Ford Coppola considered suitable for the role of Vito Corleone in The Godfather aside from Marlon Brando. Olivier was offered the part, but his agent refused it on his behalf, falsely claiming that the actor was too ill to perform.

Marlon-Brando-as-Don-Vito-Corleone-from-The-Godfather

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It could be that Olivier was already booked to star in Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s mystery thriller Sleuth (via The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences), and there would have been a scheduling clash if he signed on for both movies. Either way, the legendary thespian went head-to-head with Brando for the Best Actor Oscar, after being nominated for his role in Sleuth as Andrew Wyke. Brando had the last laugh, winning the Oscar and walking away with a cool $1.6 million from The Godfather’s massive box office takings, while Sleuth barely made enough to cover its budget.

7

Carlo Ponti

He Was A Personal Friend Of Paramount Executives

Carlo Ponti and Sophia Loren in Copenhagen, 1958

Carlo Ponti was arguably the most peculiar suggestion for the role of Don Corleone, since he wasn’t even an actor. He was actually a movie producer revered in the industry for making Federico Fellini’s La strada and David Lean’s Doctor Zhivago, and launching the career of his wife Sofia Loren. Robert Evans put his name forward on the sole basis that Ponti was Italian, and he happened to know him personally following their work together on some previous Paramount productions (via Vanity Fair).

He apparently reminded Evans of the Vito Corleone he saw in Puzo’s Godfather novel.

Ponti’s paternalistic disposition and mild manners contrasted with his ruthless determination to see through his cinematic vision, which apparently reminded Evans of the Vito Corleone he saw in Puzo’s Godfather novel (via Los Angeles Times). Ponti really wasn’t meant to be in front of the camera, however, and his name was soon crossed off the list of prospective Godfathers.

6

Elvis Presley

The King Wanted To Be The Don

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Elvis Presley might have already been the King of Rock and Roll with a string of hits and musical comedies under his belt, but in 1971 there was one career aim he still wanted to fulfill. Presley wanted to be taken seriously as an actor, by starring as the titular character in a movie adaptation of his favorite gangster novel, The Godfather.

Actors considered for The Godfather - featured image

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He pressured Paramount to give him an audition for a role in the film, with every intention of playing Vito Corleone himself (via The Guardian). In the end, Presley was offered the chance to audition for the part of Tom Hagen, Corleone’s consigliere, instead. Allegedly, Elvis was thrilled with the opportunity, but it’s not clear whether he ever showed up to his screen test for the role.

5

Anthony Quinn

A Double Oscar Winner Who Often Portrayed Italians

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Anthony Quinn is another actor whose consideration for the role of Vito Corleone made a certain amount of sense. At 56, he was the ideal age to play the part, and although he was Mexican-American, he had a lot of experience playing Italian characters. An imposing screen presence, Quinn won two Oscars, for his performances in Viva Zapata! and Lust for Life, and was nominated by the Academy twice more, including for his titular role in Zorba the Greek.

He did end up playing another mob boss a year after The Godfather’s release, in Richard Fleischer’s crime film The Don Is Dead.

If Brando wasn’t the firm favorite of both Puzo and Coppola, it seems that Quinn would have been in with a good chance of getting the part of Don Corleone (via Chicago Tribune). He did end up playing another mob boss a year after The Godfather’s release, in Richard Fleischer’s far less successful crime film The Don Is Dead.

4

George C. Scott

Scott Had Declined His Oscar Like Brando Did For The Godfather

George C. Scott doing a salute in Patton

Fresh from his Best Actor Oscar for playing the title role in the 1970 biopic Patton, George C. Scott was considered at the top of his game when casting for The Godfather was taking place. Scott was undoubtedly one of the finest actors of his generation and deserved to be in the conversation, but it’s hard to see how this all-American actor with his brusque vocal delivery would have captured the nuances of Don Corleone.

Marlon Brando as Don Corleone in The Godfather

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Scott may have been in the conversation, but he was never close to getting the part of Corleone, by all accounts (via Chicago Tribune). Coppola was almost certainly against the idea, and justifiably so. Still, Brando did take after Scott in declining the Academy Award for Best Actor he won for his portrayal or Corleone, just as Scott had done two years earlier.

3

Frank Sinatra

Sinatra Lobbied Paramount To Be Given The Role

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Before production started on The Godfather, the movie’s director bumped into Frank Sinatra, who suggested he play the role of Don Corleone (via USA Today). Given his reputation as an Italian-American with some very powerful friends, both in the entertainment industry and in the mob, Sinatra had reason to believe he’d be a good fit for the part. However, Coppola wasn’t going to be swayed from his conviction that Corleone needed to be played by a serious dramatic actor.

Marlon Brando as Don Vito Corleone leaning in The Godfather

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The “Chairman of the Board”, as he was nicknamed, had credentials as a big star who happened to be Italian-American, but these didn’t make him more qualified for the role than Brando or Laurence Olivier. Sinatra did end up being acknowledged in the movie, though, in the shape of Johnny Fontaine, a character based on the singer, who’s seen performing at Connie Corleone’s wedding. Viewing Fontaine as a parodic slight against him, Sinatra famously hated The Godfather when he saw it, and refused to appear in The Godfather Part III when he was asked.

2

Raf Vallone

He Ended Up In The Godfather Part III

Raf Vallon in Il Cammino Della Speranza

Raf Vallone was the only Italian-born actor considered for the role of Vito Corleone (via Chicago Tribune), a character who was born in Sicily and traveled to New York’s Ellis Island when he was a young boy. American audiences became acquainted with Vallone during his transition to Hollywood cinema during the 1960s, and he played an Italian mafia boss in the 1969 British gangster movie The Italian Job, immediately before casting for The Godfather began.

Andy Garcia as Vincent and Al Pacino as Michael in The Godfather 3.

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Nevertheless, Vallone’s lack of lead roles in English-language movies probably counted against him. He was eventually cast by Coppola in The Godfather Part III 18 years later, but in the minor role of Pope John Paul I, a native Italian speaker.

1

Orson Welles

Welles Tried To Talk Godfather Author Mario Puzo Into Giving Him The Part

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It wasn’t just stars from the music world who tried to force their way into The Godfather. Iconic cinematic auteur Orson Welles was convinced that he should be the one to play Don Corleone, and told Mario Puzo as much (via NPR). Welles certainly had the presence and acting chops to play such a significant and dramatic role, but could he have immersed himself in the character of Vito Corleone the way Brando did?

It’s highly doubtful that any of the illustrious names above could have done half the things Marlon Brando did to bring Don Corleone to life. His performance made The Godfather what it is, transforming the history of both modern cinema and film acting in the process.

Sources: Vanity Fair; Chicago Tribune; The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences; Los Angeles Times; The Guardian; USA Today; NPR.

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The Godfather

R

Drama

Crime

ScreenRant logo

9/10

104

9.3/10

Release Date

March 24, 1972

Runtime

175 minutes

Director

Francis Ford Coppola

Writers

Mario Puzo, Francis Ford Coppola

Sequel(s)

The Godfather Part II, The Godfather Part III

Cast

See All

  • Marlon Brando

    Marlon Brando

    Don Vito Corleone

  • Headshot of Al Pacino

    Al Pacino

    Michael Corleone

The Godfather chronicles the Italian-American Corleone crime family from 1945 to 1955. Following an assassination attempt on family patriarch Vito Corleone, his youngest son Michael emerges to orchestrate a brutal campaign of retribution, cementing his role in the family’s illicit empire.

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