Nana’s Rumpus Room

Story by Doug Greco  Photos by Nate Greco

My dad says my grandparents “ran with the big dogs” at the Copacabana in New York.  The best evidence for this was the plush and festive rumpus room in their basement designed by Ruben Bogenhorn, the same man who designed the Copacabana’s Brazilian-themed interior in the 1940’s.   A Bogenhorn rumpus room might seem odd in a coal-mining town of less than 10,000 in the middle of Eastern Pennsylvania.  Though my grandfather was one of the town doctors, he had been one of 10 children from a working class, coal-mining family.  And money alone likely couldn’t have gotten this well-known designer to come to this remote little town.

Photo by Nate Greco

The real connection my grandparents (aka Nana and Papap) had to Ruben Bogenhorn goes back to Atlas, Pennsylvania, and a man named Felix Bocchicchio.  My last post dealt with another Felix from Atlas, Felix “Screendoorface” Mangeletto.  He, like Felix Bocchicchio, was in and out of trouble with the law and rumored to be “connected” to a certain Italian-American business syndicate.   Atlas, the much smaller, adjoining coal-patch town to Mt. Carmel (probably less than 2,500 people) was where both my maternal grandmothers started their families after immigrating from Italy, and raised both my parents.  While my mom’s family knew  “Screendoorface” Felix, my dad’s family knew the other Felix, Bocchicchio, later known as Felix “Man-O’-War”.   He became my Papap’s friend.

In “The Godfather” film and book, the Bocchicchio family business was to provide one of their own family members as a third-party hostage during negotiations.   If you were hosting a negotiation at your house, as a sign of trust to the visiting party you would pay to have a Bocchicchio sent to the vising party’s home turf.  If you killed your counterpart in the negotiation, your counterpart’s family would kill the Bocchicchio hostage, and then the Bocchicchio’s would come after you, and almost certainly kill you in a very undignified manner.

It’s unlcear if Felix Bocchicchio was part of the Bocchicchio clan in the The Godfather (and if this clan actually existed in real life), but my dad thinks he was.  We do know that Felix eventually left the Mt. Carmel-Atlas area, moved to New Jersey, and engaged in number of legal and illegal business activities ranging from gambling, pinball machines, and liquor sales. Felix Man-O-War also faced series of criminal charges including theft and murder, but seems to have beaten the charges because his business activity continued unchecked until his death.

His shining accomplishment, however, and the one in which he made a mark on history, was as a boxing manager.  And he knew nothing about boxing.  According to a Camden sportswriter Felix “knew as much about boxing as the Mona Lisa did about swatting flies, but he decided to learn.  He was seldom seen without a fight promoter, trainer, or prizefighter in his company.”  In the early 1940’s Felix discovered a then little know boxer, named Jersey Joe Walcott, already in his 30’s, and about to retire from the sport.  Felix provided him financial support, trainers, an income, and connections to steadily fight his way up the ranks during the late 1940’s and eventually beat Ezzard Charles to win the heavyweight title, a fight my grandfather and his brother attended as Felix’s guest.

Walcott reigned for nearly a year before Bocchecchio booked him to defend his title against Rocky Marciano in 1953 at Madison Square Garden.  My grandparents attended this fight with ringside seats courtesy of Felix, and witnessed Marciano’s decisive knockout punch which at the time was called the most brutal strike in the history of boxing.   Nana Greco recounted that during this fight she and Papap held newspapers over their head for much of the fight to protect themselves against all the spraying blood.   After losing the title, Walcott fought Marciano 4 months later in a rematch, which he also lost, and afterwards retired from boxing. 

My dad remembers Jersey Joe Wolcott and Rocky Marciano both visiting his house at different times when he was a kid.   Wolcott was brought by Felix, and years later Marciano was brought to town by the Gaglier Diesel company, which threw him a parade. 

Nana and Papap Greco frequented the Copacabana during this this time, which was the place to see and be seen, especially among those entertainment, professional sports, and organized crime.  Their entre was Bocchecchio, and they got to hang out with Walcott and other boxers.   But they were also introduced to the Copacabana’s famous interior designer, Ruben Bogenhorn.  Bogenhorn had decorated the club in brash Brazilian tropical décor, with feaux palm trees, art deco backdrops, an elaborate bandstand featuring Latin Music, and swanky bar.  With a menu of Chinese food to boot, the Copa was the epitome of mid-century cool.

Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz photographed at the Copacabana Restaurant in New York City. (1940s)
Picture of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz at the Copacabana in the 1940’s 

My grandparents secured the talents of Bogenhorn to travel the 3 ½ hours due east of Manhattan into the Anthracite Coal region to Pennsylvania to design their rumpus room and kitchen.  At the end of a block of row homes with rain pipes jutting over the sidewalk above passersby, my grandparents home was a freestanding large corner house standing four stories with several cupolas, a small front yard, and a wraparound porch.  The interior was already tastefully designed with plush drapes in the living room, a French themed sitting room with period furniture, and a dining room with floor-to-ceiling mirrors, a light-wood dining table and side tables, and hutch with delicate china.

You entered the basement through a door in the kitchen, which emptied onto a set of plush red-carpeted descending stairs, bookended by a stylish gray and black vertically textured wall.  As you reached the bottom of the stairs, to the right was a cement-floored laundry room with utility sink and indoor clotheslines.  But to the left lived the rumpus room.

On he right ran a bright red bar with a smoked glass base, and high red patent leather stools with black wood frames.   Behind the bar were three rows of glass shelves upon which sat scores of miniature liquor bottles, and on the counter below were crammed countless designer ceramic liquor bottles including the Louisiana Superdome, the Empire State Building, the Sphynx, a sexy round hipped-lady in evening dress, and a minuteman.   Mirrors flanked both ends of the bar.

The room’s furniture was 1950’s swanky “birth of cool”, with white patent leather chairs and curved chaises, low-lying wood tables with ceramic black and white diamond tops, and wrought iron lounge tables and chairs to the side.   Light red, green and yellow tiles made the floor, bleached to give a soft, faded facade.  Strange, festive light fixtures jutted out of the ceiling, each with six to eight pieces of crystal reminiscent of Superman’s Fortress of Solitude.  Some were colored, some were clear, and some flashed.  Deep, red walls surrounded the room on three sides.   It looked like a lounge scene from MadMen.  Most curious was a raised garden planter that ran along the back wall, stocked with thick, jungle-like vegetation and scary gnomes.  A causeway into yet another world.

I grew up in the tail end of the rumpus room’s heyday.   I remember one New Year’s Eve when I was around 8 years old.  It was getting late, and I tugged at my dad on a barstool to usher him home.  My parents, my two brothers and I lived in the house next door.  My dad was dressed in jeans and a white button down shirt.  I had never seen him tipsy before, but he was having a good time. He looked down towards me, tilted is head as if to confide, and said smiling, “I’m drunk!”.

Photo by Nate Greco

Another story, retold by my grandmother, had Pennsylvania’s Governor Milton Shapp, who reigned from 1971-79, having drinks in the basement with my grandparents and some of Shapp’s men.  Since my grandfather was friends with many key politicians in the coal region, both Republican and Democrat, I have no reason to doubt this tale.  Shapp evidently  offended my grandfather by leaning back in his chair and resting his feet up on one of the red patent leather bar stools.  As Nana recounts the story she channels my grandfather’s meanface: “Get your feet off my barstool right now!”, and slaps Shapp’s imaginary feet off the chair. Then she laughs scandalously.

My grandparents downstairs in the Rumpus Room and at Atlantic City

The kicker to the tale is that Bogenhorn also designed Nana’s kitchen, reportedly in resplendent  yellow.  She hated it.  You could see the visceral distaste on her face when she described it.  Then she kicked her head back like FDR, as if in triumph, and laughed heartily again.  “I had  whole thing torn out.”

Photo by Nate Greco

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“Screendoorface” – A news article

Click here for audio recording of “‘Screendoorface”

The Mt. Carmel Item

August 6th, 1952

ATLAS, PA – A traveling salesman learned a hard lesson this past Sunday in Atlas, Pennsylvania.  Jeb Jarvis, the Eastern PA sales representative from the appliance manufacturer Maytag, Inc. (of Newtown Iowa) outfitted the Costello family of Saylor Street in Atlas with a free washer-dryer machine set.  Though it appears the gift may have been given under a bit of duress.

Over the past month Jarvis had been canvassing the small coal-patch towns in his territory including Mt. Carmel, Shamokin, Marion Heights, Kulpmont, and Atlas, formerly known as the “Exchange”.  Early last week he knocked on the back door of the Costello house (the Costello’s front gate is always locked, and they only take visitors from the alley and driveway in the back.)   The family’s matriarch, Lena Dallago, 65, lives there with her adult daughter, son-in-law, and grandchildren.

According to the Costello family, Mrs. Dallago, who moved to Atlas from Italy as a child and speaks broken English, answered the door.  Salesman Jarvis evidently convinced Mrs. Dallago that she needed Maytag’s new premium washer-dryer set called “The General”, which sells for $200.   She gave him $200 cash, which represented all the family’s savings.  “I gaves him my money from here,” Mrs. Dallago said, as she pulled out a sock filled with cash from her brazier underneath her housecoat.

Mrs. Dallago’s daughter learned of the purchase a few days later when the Maytag units arrived, and the family became frantic at losing their savings.  They called salesman Jarvis, who told them the machines had a strict “no return policy.”   At this point, the Costello’s turned to a family friend, Felix Mangialetto.

F. Mangialetto, who is also known by locals as “Screendoorface”, owing to his visibly pockmarked cheeks, is employed by Pietro Rodeccio, head of a prominent Italian-American extended family known for their business in liquor and gaming across Northeastern and Central Pennsylvania.  His family and associates are very popular in coal region towns as they act as a buffer between the working class Italian families of the coal region and government and outside business interests.     Nearby Hazelton, PA has long been known as a satellite city for the New York Italian-American syndicate sometimes referred to as “La Cosa Nostra”, as well as a few derogatory names.   According to Susquehanna University Professor Joseph Hopkins, an expert on the connection of immigration patterns to the Pennsylvania economy, the Rodeccio family employs a local representative or “family member” in each of the coal patch towns across the region, including Atlas.

Hopkins says “These local syndicate reps get embedded in a community, and sometimes even grew up in these towns.  They develop quite close relationships with the Italian families there.   They act as a kind of  ‘protector’ in exchange for close relationships with locally owned businesses…especially bars, restaurants, and ethnic civic clubs and churches, all of which in turn buy the liquor, food, goods, and take advantage of gambling opportunities made available by the syndicate.  It really is a pretty neat system,” said Hopkins. 

Like a ton of bricks, the weight of this system came down on salesman Jarvis this past Sunday.  Evidently Screendoorface Mangialetto advised the Costello family to invite salesman Jarvis and himself over to their house for dinner last Sunday afternoon.

“I make lasagna, meatballs, chicken cuttles (sic), and polenta with veal, and we eat.” reported Mrs. Dallago, who also mentioned that the polenta dish was served with the brown gravy, and not the red.

According to the family, after they served coffee and dessert, Screendoorface asked the family to clear the room so he could speak to the salesman alone.  The family retired to the living room for less than ten minutes before they were summoned back by Screendoorface, who now sat by himself at the dinner table, with $200 cash in front of his plate.

He reportedly told the family that salesman Jarvis apologized for all the confusion, and had been unexpectedly called away to another appointment.   Screendoorface added: “He wants to give you your money back.  Here it is,” pointing to the $200 left on the dining room table.  “And by the way, you can keep the Maytag too.”

It may never be known what Screendoorface Mangialetto said to salesman Jarvis during those ten minutes.   However, according to the president of the local chapter of UNICO, the nation’s largest Italian-American service organization, a substantial contribution was made to their Pennsylvania chapter early this week by Maytag, Inc. Additionally, the local Knights of Columbus girls softball team will be outfitted with new uniforms this year, with Maytag, Inc. as the unnamed sponsor.

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(Below is an another article on Screendoorface from Mt. Carmel Item,  April 8, 1929)