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This list includes Italian American mobsters and organized crime figures that operate in the United ... Gaspare D'Amico, "Gaspar" (1886–1975) Marco D'Amico, "The ...
Georgia: E. 48th Street Market. Dunwoody . Grab some fancy Italian olive oil, pick up a few bottles of vino, and pull up to a counter seat at E. 48th Street Market, which sings with New York ...
Andrea D'Amico (football agent) (born 1964), Italian legal representative; Antonio D'Amico (1959–2022), Italian model and fashion designer; Carlos Alfredo D'Amico (1839–1917), Argentine lawyer, politician, and writer; Fernando D'Amico (born 1975), Argentine retired footballer; Hank D'Amico (1915–1965), American jazz clarinetist
D'Amico, who was self-taught as a teenager in drawing and painting, burst onto the filmmaking scene in Rome when an art director asked him to do a perspective of a set design. Soon other moviemakers were calling him. [2] D'Amico was an art director on 75 films including two by Orson Welles.
Some women worked in the market gardens and farms around Boston, and in the factories and shops in town. Others were seamstresses. Some families made money by pooling their resources to rent an entire tenement and then subletting the apartments at a profit. [66] The Italian Chamber of Commerce of Boston and New England was established in 1906. [67]
Manganaro's Grosseria Italiana, commonly referred to as Manganaro's, was an Italian market and deli on Ninth Avenue in the Hell's Kitchen neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. It opened in 1893 and operated for 119 years, helping to introduce the hero sandwich to Americans. The family closed the business and put the property up for sale in ...
The Encyclopedia of Performing Arts (Italian: Enciclopedia dello Spettacolo; sometimes cited as Enciclopedio dello Spettacolo) [1] was an Italian language specialty encyclopedia of performing arts, published between 1954 and 1965. [2] Its first editor was the Italian theatre critic and journalist, Silvio D'Amico. [3]
The Italian Market is the popular name for the South 9th Street Curb Market, an area of South Philadelphia featuring awning covered sidewalks, curb carts, grocery shops, cafes, restaurants, bakeries, cheese shops, butcher shops, etc., many with an Italian influence.