Not many birthdays today (one-fourth the norm one assumes).
Alex Rocco is 72 (1936). You know, Moe Greene in The Godfather. Got it right in the eye. Actually Rocco has nearly 150 credits listed at IMDb; much TV and voice-over work.
Update: Functional Ambivalent has a great Alex Rocco Story.
Dennis Farina is 64 (1944). Among his many roles, Farina was Ray “Bones” Barboni in Get Shorty.
Two famous entertainers were leap day babies.
Bandleader Jimmy Dorsey (1904) had 12 number one hits with his own band, and two before that with his brother, Tommy. (The two brothers split in 1935, but reunited in 1953.) Jimmy played saxaphone. He died in 1957.
And singer, radio-TV star Dinah Shore (1916). Miss Shore had four number one hits in the 1940s, including Buttons and Bows, which was at the top for 10 weeks. She had a popular TV variety show and then a talk show, and a fling with Burt Reynolds, 19 years her junior. Dinah Shore died in 1994. Throw us a kiss, Dinah.
And two famous athletes.
Al Rosen (1924), four-time American League All-star and 1953 MVP with the Cleveland Indians (and someone NewMexiKen chatted with once upon a time). Rosen lead the AL in home runs (43), RBIs (145) and was second in batting (.336) in ’53. He lost the triple crown by one point (Mickey Vernon batted .337).
And Henri Richard (1936), the Pocket Rocket, brother of the even greater NHL player Maurice “The Rocket” Richard. Henri hated the nickname Pocket Rocket (he was 5-foot-7). One supposes that helped drive him to be part of 11 Stanley Cup champion teams, more than any other player.