Age, Biography and Wiki
Anna Genovese was born on 28 October, 1905 in Oman, is an Italian-American businesswoman in the Italian mob. Discover Anna Genovese's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is she in this year and how she spends money? Also learn how she earned most of networth at the age of 77 years old?
Popular As |
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Age |
77 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Scorpio |
Born |
28 October, 1905 |
Birthday |
28 October |
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Date of death |
1982 |
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Nationality |
Oman
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 28 October.
She is a member of famous businesswoman with the age 77 years old group.
Anna Genovese Height, Weight & Measurements
At 77 years old, Anna Genovese height not available right now. We will update Anna Genovese's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Not Available |
Dating & Relationship status
She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.
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Anna Genovese Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Anna Genovese worth at the age of 77 years old? Anna Genovese’s income source is mostly from being a successful businesswoman. She is from Oman. We have estimated Anna Genovese's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2024 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2024 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2023 |
Pending |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
House |
Not Available |
Cars |
Not Available |
Source of Income |
businesswoman |
Anna Genovese Social Network
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Timeline
Anna Genovese (formerly Vernotico, née Giovaninna Petillo; 28 October 1905 – January 1982) was an Italian-American businesswoman in the Italian mob and the second wife of mobster Vito Genovese of the Genovese crime family and the Costello crime syndicate.
She played a key role in Manhattan's drag bar scene in the middle of the 20th century.
The couple's first luxury apartment was located at 43 Fifth Avenue, a decadent Beaux Arts building, completed in 1905, with limestone pillars, a marble lobby, and wrought-iron balconies.
The building would later be a place of residence for Marlon Brando.
Two years into their marriage, Vito killed gangster Ferdinand "The Shadow" Boccia.
Genovese was born Giovaninna "Anna" Petillo, the eldest child of Italian-Catholic immigrants, Aniello Vincenzo Petillo from Risigliano, Naples, and Concetta y Cassini Genovese, a cousin of Vito's. His brother Carmine lived with the Petillos after immigrating in 1910.
Her siblings were Nicolas, Peitra, Ferdinand, and Mario Petillo.
She has been erroneously listed as a sibling to mobster David Petillo; they were cousins.
In the spring of 1924, at age 19, Genovese married her first husband, Gerard "Gerry" Vernotico.
According to Kate Harmon, Genovese's great niece, to whom the Mob Queens researchers spoke and have on record at 10:55 in Chapter 1 of their podcast, Anna's marriage "was not looked upon kindly" by her family as Vernotico was considered a man of little means; a census record notes that he was a carpenter, though in reality he was a baker in New York City's Little Italy.
In 1927, Genovese and Vernotico had a daughter, Marie, and moved a few blocks north of Anna's West Houston Street home to a tenement apartment next to an elevated train on Sixth Avenue in Greenwich Village.
In a 1930 census, she is listed as a housewife, and Gerard as a carpenter, though grand-niece Harmon states that Gerard was in fact a baker at a bakery in Little Italy and "had nothing."
Court records show that at the same time, Anna had been working evenings in one of the clubs in the Washington Square Park neighborhood, near or in Greenwich Village.
It is thought that Vito Genovese, a fourth cousin of Anna's, was responsible for or involved with the murder of Gerard Vernotico in March 1932.
Two weeks later, Anna and Vito, whose first wife had also just died, were married.
Anna was six months pregnant.
A year later, in 1935, Vito bought Deep Cut, a 1928 mansion on a 40 acres property in Middletown Township, New Jersey.
Around the same time, New York Special Prosecutor Thomas E. Dewey started cracking down on organized crime, which bode poorly for Vito once Boccia's body was pulled from the Hudson River in 1937, as one of the hit men he hired for the job admitted to police that the commission had come from Vito.
Standing accused of the Boccia murder and other crimes, such as racketeering, Vito decided to flee the U.S., leaving the bulk of his business up to Anna.
She was left to help formulate a source of revenue for the crime family at a time when most in the nation were struggling severely, as it was mid-Great Depression.
At this vital time, Anna's path intersected with an unexpected set of social phenomena: the repeal of Prohibition, but the institutionalization of "Gay Prohibition," during which it became common practice for law enforcement officers to stalk, harass, entrap, and arrest people in—or suspected to be in—the LGBTQ+ community.
It was not uncommon for queer people or those suspected as such to be removed from bars, and, moreover, for bars to be raided when suspected homosexual activity was being condoned.
Bars could even lose their liquor licenses for serving gay patrons.
It was all the more risky and rebellious for Anna to create havens for queer people, but she took on the effort, ultimately effectively blocking police efforts to persecute the LGBTQ+ community, her means being the power and influence of the mob.
While raising three children (her biological daughter with Gerard, Marie; Nancy, Vito's daughter with the late Donata Ragone; and Phillip, her son with Vito), Anna also ran nightclubs and gay and drag bars in Lower Manhattan, whose profits she siphoned to the crime syndicate and Vito, exiled in Italy, who invested in Benito Mussolinin's fascist party and cocaine for Mussolini's son.
Anna's first club, Club Caravan, opened in 1939 at 578 West Broadway.
While Vito was in hiding abroad, Anna became hostess of Club 82, a gay bar located at 82 E. 4th St., between Second Avenue and the Bowery in Manhattan, which started in October 1950.
There, Anna cultivated a vibrant gay scene.
The club's tagline was "Who's No Lady," and its drag revues featured both male and female impersonators.
Kitt Russell, dubbed "America's top femme mimic" by Walter Winchell, hosted many of the shows, and countless acts performed in them, such as female impersonators Sonne Teal, Kim Christy, and Mel Michaels.
Anna later testified against her own club when she appeared in Freehold, New Jersey's Superior Court in 1953.
She also named Club Savannah and Moroccan Village, run by other mobsters, but the latter as one of her husband's hang-outs.
Revues were long and elaborate, replete with sets and costumes, and with titles like Sincapades of 1954, A Vacation in Color, Fun-Fair for '57, and Time Out for Fun.
According to Anna's eldest grandson, Frank, at 4:38 in Chapter 12 of Mob Queens, Anna supported show biz acts in their nascence, such as Barbra Streisand.
The venue would later come under investigation with a potential loss of its liquor license, allegedly orchestrated by vindictive Vito to spite Anna.
In testifying against her own clubs, Anna stated that the Club 82 was gang-owned.
Her testimony ostensibly served to shift the blame from solely herself to her husband Vito's associates who had presided over, and allegedly monitored her activities running the club, while Vito was in exile in Italy.
The State Liquor Authority had previously revoked Club 82's liquor license on account of "disorderly conduct," which was code at the time for infractions involving things like serving alcohol to gay people, or people suspected of being gay.
Anna left the club in the late 1960s in order to focus more on her family, but the venue lasted into the 1970s.
Singers and other kinds of performers provided the entertainment, individuals like drag king Malvina Schwartz, also known as Buddy "Bubbles" Kent, whose 1983 Lesbian Herstory Archives oral history chronicles her time spent there.