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Cimino Family History & Genealogy

2,202 biographies and 11 photos with the Cimino last name. Discover the family history, nationality, origin and common names of Cimino family members.

Cimino Last Name History & Origin

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Early Ciminos

These are the earliest records we have of the Cimino family.

Maria Cimino of Punxsutawney, Jefferson County, PA was born on December 12, 1867, and died at age 105 years old in December 1972.
Rosalia Cimino of Brooklyn, Kings County, NY was born on November 2, 1872, and died at age 95 years old in August 1968.
Rose Cimino of Stratford, Fairfield County, CT was born on March 9, 1874, and died at age 94 years old in July 1968.
Josephine Cimino of Bronx, Bronx County, NY was born on January 7, 1874, and died at age 94 years old in November 1968.
Annie Cimino of Mascoutah, Saint Clair County, Illinois was born on November 3, 1875, and died at age 94 years old in August 1970.
Louis Cimino of Pennsylvania was born on October 16, 1876, and died at age 89 years old in November 1965.
Marietta Cimino of Rosedale, Queens County, NY was born on January 11, 1877, and died at age 95 years old in December 1972.
Santa Cimino of Utica, Oneida County, NY was born on March 28, 1877, and died at age 96 years old in June 1973.
Giuseppe Cimino of Daly City, San Mateo County, California was born on August 6, 1878, and died at age 92 years old in September 1970.
Paul Cimino of Scranton, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania was born on November 27, 1878, and died at age 93 years old in January 1972.
Frank Cimino of Bronx, Bronx County, NY was born on December 20, 1879, and died at age 86 years old in May 1966.
Joseph Cimino of Rochester, Monroe County, NY was born on April 10, 1879, and died at age 92 years old in May 1971.

Cimino Family Photos

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Cimino Family Tree

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Most Common First Names

Updated Cimino Biographies

Eugenia Cimino of Independence, Cuyahoga County, Ohio was born on January 14, 1883. Eugenia was baptized at Italy. Eugenia Cimino died at age 90 years old in September 1973.
Michael Cimino
Michael Cimino Born February 3, 1939 New York City, New York, U.S. Died July 2, 2016 (aged 77) Beverly Hills, California, U.S. Education Michigan State University, (BA Graphic Arts, 1959) Yale University, (BFA Painting, 1961; MFA Painting, 1963) Occupation Film director · Producer and Screenwriter · Author Years active 1974–1996 Michael Cimino (/tʃɪˈmiːnoʊ/ chi-MEE-noh;[1] February 3, 1939 – July 2, 2016) was an American film director, screenwriter, producer, and author. He gained fame as the director of The Deer Hunter (1978), which won the Academy Award for Best Picture and earned him Best Director. Born in New York City, he graduated with a BA in graphic arts from Michigan State University in 1959 and a BFA and MFA from Yale University in 1961 and 1963. Cimino began his career filming commercials and moved to Los Angeles to take up screenwriting in 1971. After co-writing the scripts of Silent Running (1972) and Magnum Force (1973), he wrote the preliminary script Thunderbolt and Lightfoot. Clint Eastwood read the script and sent it to his personal production company Malpaso Productions, which allowed Cimino to direct the film in 1974. After its success, Cimino co-wrote, directed, and produced The Deer Hunter in 1978, which won five Oscars at the 51st Academy Awards. Early life Cimino was born in New York City on February 3, 1939. A third-generation Italian-American, Cimino and his brothers grew up with their parents in Westbury, Long Island. He was regarded as a prodigy at the private schools his parents sent him to, but rebelled as an adolescent by consorting with delinquents. His father was a music publisher. Cimino says his father was responsible for marching bands and organs playing pop music at football games. "When my father found out I went into the movie business, he didn't talk to me for a year," Cimino said. "He was very tall and thin ... His weight never changed his whole life and he didn't have a gray hair on his head. He was a bit like a Vanderbilt or a Whitney, one of those guys. He was the life of the party, women loved him, a real womanizer. He smoked like a fiend. He loved his martinis. He died really young. He was away a lot, but he was fun. I was just a tiny kid." His mother was a costume designer. After he made The Deer Hunter, she said that she knew he had become famous because his name was in The New York Times crossword puzzle. Commercials After graduating from Yale, Cimino moved to Manhattan to work in Madison Avenue advertising and became a star director of television commercials. He shot ads for L'eggs hosiery, Kool cigarettes, Eastman Kodak, United Airlines, and Pepsi, among others. "I met some people who were doing fashion stuff – commercials and stills. And there were all these incredibly beautiful girls," Cimino said. "And then, zoom – the next thing I know, overnight, I was directing commercials."[9] For example, Cimino directed the 1967 United Airlines commercial "Take Me Along", a musical extravaganza in which a group of ladies sing Take Me Along (adapted from a short-lived Broadway musical) to a group of men, presumably their husbands, to take them on a flight. The commercial is filled with the dynamic visuals, American symbolism and elaborate set design that would become Cimino's trademark. "The clients of the agencies liked Cimino," remarked Charles Okun, his production manager from 1964 to 1978. "His visuals were fabulous, but the amount of time it took was just astronomical. Because he was so meticulous and took so long. Nothing was easy with Michael." Through his commercial work, Cimino met Joann Carelli, then a commercial director representative. They began a 30-year on-again-off-again relationship. Screenwriting In 1971, Cimino moved to Los Angeles to start a career as a screenwriter. According to Cimino, it was Carelli that got him into screenwriting: "[Joann] actually talked me into it. I'd never really written anything ever before. I still don't regard myself as a writer. I've probably written thirteen to fourteen screenplays by [1978] and I still don't think of myself that way. Yet, that's how I make a living." Cimino added, "I started writing screenplays principally because I didn't have the money to buy books or to option properties. At that time you only had a chance to direct if you owned a screenplay which some star wanted to do, and that's precisely what happened with Thunderbolt and Lightfoot." Cimino gained representation from Stan Kamen of William Morris Agency.[18] The spec script Thunderbolt and Lightfoot was shown to Clint Eastwood, who bought it for his production company, Malpaso and allowed Cimino a chance to direct the film. Cimino co-wrote two scripts (the science fiction film Silent Running and Eastwood's second Dirty Harry film, Magnum Force) before moving to directing. Cimino's work on Thunderbolt and Lightfoot impressed Eastwood enough to ask him to work on the script for Magnum Force before Thunderbolt and Lightfoot began production. Cimino moved up to directing on the feature Thunderbolt and Lightfoot (1974) The film stars Clint Eastwood as a Korean War veteran named "Thunderbolt" who takes a young drifter named "Lightfoot", played by Jeff Bridges, under his wing. When Thunderbolt's old partners try to find him, he and Lightfoot make a pact with them to pull one last big heist. Eastwood was originally slated to direct it himself, but Cimino impressed Eastwood enough to change his mind. The film became a solid box office success at the time, making $25,000,000 at the box office with a budget of $4,000,000 and earned Bridges an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. With the success of Thunderbolt and Lightfoot, Cimino said that he "got a lot of offers, but decided to take a gamble. I would only get involved with projects I really wanted to do." He rejected several offers before pitching an ambitious Vietnam War film to EMI executives in November 1976. To Cimino's surprise, EMI accepted the film. Cimino went on to direct, co-write, and co-produce The Deer Hunter (1978). The film stars Robert De Niro, Christopher Walken, and John Savage as three buddies in a Pennsylvania steel mill town who fight in the Vietnam War and rebuild their lives in the aftermath. The film went over-schedule and over-budget, but it became a massive critical and commercial success, and won five Oscars, including Best Director and Best Picture for Cimino. Heaven's Gate was such a devastating critical and commercial bomb that public perception of Cimino's work was tainted in its wake; the majority of his subsequent films achieved neither popular nor critical success. Many critics who had originally praised The Deer Hunter became far more reserved about the picture and about Cimino after Heaven's Gate. The story of the making of the movie, and UA's subsequent downfall, was documented in Steven Bach's book Final Cut. Cimino's film was somewhat rehabilitated by an unlikely source: the Z Channel, a cable pay TV channel that at its peak in the mid-1980s served 100,000 of Los Angeles's most influential film professionals. After the unsuccessful release of the reedited and shortened Heaven's Gate, Jerry Harvey, the channel's programmer, decided to play Cimino's original 219-minute cut on Christmas Eve 1982. The reassembled movie received admiring reviews. The full length, director approved version, was released on LaserDisc by MGM/UA, and later reissued on DVD and Blu-ray by the Criterion Collection. In 1990, Cimino directed a remake of the film The Desperate Hours starring Anthony Hopkins and Mickey Rourke. The film was another box-office disappointment, grossing less than $3 million. His last feature-length film was 1996's Sunchaser with Woody Harrelson and Jon Seda. While nominated for the Palme d'Or at that year's Cannes Film Festival, the film was released straight to video. In later years, Heaven's Gate was re-assessed by film critics, and re-edited versions were met with critical acclaim. In 2012, Cimino attended the premiere of a new edit at the Venice Film Festival, which was met with a standing ovation.
Frank W Cimino of Cranston, Providence County, RI was born on March 15, 1927, and died at age 77 years old on November 2, 2004.
Frank R Cimino of Rome, Oneida County, NY was born on November 4, 1927, and died at age 70 years old on October 30, 1998.
Frank Cimino of Wilkes Barre, Luzerne County, PA was born on January 2, 1913, and died at age 65 years old in June 1978.
Frank J Cimino of Bel Air, Harford County, MD was born on August 7, 1918, and died at age 81 years old on March 11, 2000.
Frank Cimino of Staten Island, Richmond County, NY was born on August 1, 1924, and died at age 78 years old on July 22, 2003.
Dominic Cimino of Hamden, New Haven County, CT was born on October 17, 1916, and died at age 87 years old on March 28, 2004.
Dominic F Cimino of Pottsville, Schuylkill County, PA was born on August 15, 1915, and died at age 72 years old on May 11, 1988.
Dominic D Cimino of Langhorne, Bucks County, PA was born on August 6, 1922, and died at age 82 years old on December 17, 2004.
Charles S Cimino of El Macero, Yolo County, California was born on May 22, 1919, and died at age 65 years old in September 1984.
Charles J Cimino of Lexington, Middlesex County, MA was born on April 28, 1921, and died at age 78 years old on January 8, 2000.
Charles F Cimino of Toms River, Ocean County, NJ was born on March 7, 1915, and died at age 56 years old in December 1971.
Charles V Cimino of Webster, Monroe County, NY was born on October 8, 1918, and died at age 79 years old on December 15, 1997.
Charles J Cimino of Elmont, Nassau County, NY was born on July 10, 1914, and died at age 78 years old on May 17, 1993.
Dominick A Cimino of Chelmsford, Middlesex County, MA was born on January 23, 1917, and died at age 85 years old on June 24, 2002.
Dominick J Cimino of Scranton, Lackawanna County, PA was born on October 27, 1927, and died at age 66 years old on September 22, 1994.
Jimmie J Cimino of Omaha, Douglas County, NE was born on September 6, 1921, and died at age 84 years old on December 15, 2005.
Nicola J Cimino of Brooklyn, Kings County, NY was born on August 2, 1913, and died at age 79 years old on March 26, 1993.
Rocco S Cimino of Brooklyn, Kings County, NY was born on February 13, 1924, and died at age 86 years old on October 13, 2010.

Popular Cimino Biographies

Bonnie (Rhodes) Cimino
Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Bonnie (Rhodes) Cimino.
Michael Cimino
Michael Cimino Born February 3, 1939 New York City, New York, U.S. Died July 2, 2016 (aged 77) Beverly Hills, California, U.S. Education Michigan State University, (BA Graphic Arts, 1959) Yale University, (BFA Painting, 1961; MFA Painting, 1963) Occupation Film director · Producer and Screenwriter · Author Years active 1974–1996 Michael Cimino (/tʃɪˈmiːnoʊ/ chi-MEE-noh;[1] February 3, 1939 – July 2, 2016) was an American film director, screenwriter, producer, and author. He gained fame as the director of The Deer Hunter (1978), which won the Academy Award for Best Picture and earned him Best Director. Born in New York City, he graduated with a BA in graphic arts from Michigan State University in 1959 and a BFA and MFA from Yale University in 1961 and 1963. Cimino began his career filming commercials and moved to Los Angeles to take up screenwriting in 1971. After co-writing the scripts of Silent Running (1972) and Magnum Force (1973), he wrote the preliminary script Thunderbolt and Lightfoot. Clint Eastwood read the script and sent it to his personal production company Malpaso Productions, which allowed Cimino to direct the film in 1974. After its success, Cimino co-wrote, directed, and produced The Deer Hunter in 1978, which won five Oscars at the 51st Academy Awards. Early life Cimino was born in New York City on February 3, 1939. A third-generation Italian-American, Cimino and his brothers grew up with their parents in Westbury, Long Island. He was regarded as a prodigy at the private schools his parents sent him to, but rebelled as an adolescent by consorting with delinquents. His father was a music publisher. Cimino says his father was responsible for marching bands and organs playing pop music at football games. "When my father found out I went into the movie business, he didn't talk to me for a year," Cimino said. "He was very tall and thin ... His weight never changed his whole life and he didn't have a gray hair on his head. He was a bit like a Vanderbilt or a Whitney, one of those guys. He was the life of the party, women loved him, a real womanizer. He smoked like a fiend. He loved his martinis. He died really young. He was away a lot, but he was fun. I was just a tiny kid." His mother was a costume designer. After he made The Deer Hunter, she said that she knew he had become famous because his name was in The New York Times crossword puzzle. Commercials After graduating from Yale, Cimino moved to Manhattan to work in Madison Avenue advertising and became a star director of television commercials. He shot ads for L'eggs hosiery, Kool cigarettes, Eastman Kodak, United Airlines, and Pepsi, among others. "I met some people who were doing fashion stuff – commercials and stills. And there were all these incredibly beautiful girls," Cimino said. "And then, zoom – the next thing I know, overnight, I was directing commercials."[9] For example, Cimino directed the 1967 United Airlines commercial "Take Me Along", a musical extravaganza in which a group of ladies sing Take Me Along (adapted from a short-lived Broadway musical) to a group of men, presumably their husbands, to take them on a flight. The commercial is filled with the dynamic visuals, American symbolism and elaborate set design that would become Cimino's trademark. "The clients of the agencies liked Cimino," remarked Charles Okun, his production manager from 1964 to 1978. "His visuals were fabulous, but the amount of time it took was just astronomical. Because he was so meticulous and took so long. Nothing was easy with Michael." Through his commercial work, Cimino met Joann Carelli, then a commercial director representative. They began a 30-year on-again-off-again relationship. Screenwriting In 1971, Cimino moved to Los Angeles to start a career as a screenwriter. According to Cimino, it was Carelli that got him into screenwriting: "[Joann] actually talked me into it. I'd never really written anything ever before. I still don't regard myself as a writer. I've probably written thirteen to fourteen screenplays by [1978] and I still don't think of myself that way. Yet, that's how I make a living." Cimino added, "I started writing screenplays principally because I didn't have the money to buy books or to option properties. At that time you only had a chance to direct if you owned a screenplay which some star wanted to do, and that's precisely what happened with Thunderbolt and Lightfoot." Cimino gained representation from Stan Kamen of William Morris Agency.[18] The spec script Thunderbolt and Lightfoot was shown to Clint Eastwood, who bought it for his production company, Malpaso and allowed Cimino a chance to direct the film. Cimino co-wrote two scripts (the science fiction film Silent Running and Eastwood's second Dirty Harry film, Magnum Force) before moving to directing. Cimino's work on Thunderbolt and Lightfoot impressed Eastwood enough to ask him to work on the script for Magnum Force before Thunderbolt and Lightfoot began production. Cimino moved up to directing on the feature Thunderbolt and Lightfoot (1974) The film stars Clint Eastwood as a Korean War veteran named "Thunderbolt" who takes a young drifter named "Lightfoot", played by Jeff Bridges, under his wing. When Thunderbolt's old partners try to find him, he and Lightfoot make a pact with them to pull one last big heist. Eastwood was originally slated to direct it himself, but Cimino impressed Eastwood enough to change his mind. The film became a solid box office success at the time, making $25,000,000 at the box office with a budget of $4,000,000 and earned Bridges an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. With the success of Thunderbolt and Lightfoot, Cimino said that he "got a lot of offers, but decided to take a gamble. I would only get involved with projects I really wanted to do." He rejected several offers before pitching an ambitious Vietnam War film to EMI executives in November 1976. To Cimino's surprise, EMI accepted the film. Cimino went on to direct, co-write, and co-produce The Deer Hunter (1978). The film stars Robert De Niro, Christopher Walken, and John Savage as three buddies in a Pennsylvania steel mill town who fight in the Vietnam War and rebuild their lives in the aftermath. The film went over-schedule and over-budget, but it became a massive critical and commercial success, and won five Oscars, including Best Director and Best Picture for Cimino. Heaven's Gate was such a devastating critical and commercial bomb that public perception of Cimino's work was tainted in its wake; the majority of his subsequent films achieved neither popular nor critical success. Many critics who had originally praised The Deer Hunter became far more reserved about the picture and about Cimino after Heaven's Gate. The story of the making of the movie, and UA's subsequent downfall, was documented in Steven Bach's book Final Cut. Cimino's film was somewhat rehabilitated by an unlikely source: the Z Channel, a cable pay TV channel that at its peak in the mid-1980s served 100,000 of Los Angeles's most influential film professionals. After the unsuccessful release of the reedited and shortened Heaven's Gate, Jerry Harvey, the channel's programmer, decided to play Cimino's original 219-minute cut on Christmas Eve 1982. The reassembled movie received admiring reviews. The full length, director approved version, was released on LaserDisc by MGM/UA, and later reissued on DVD and Blu-ray by the Criterion Collection. In 1990, Cimino directed a remake of the film The Desperate Hours starring Anthony Hopkins and Mickey Rourke. The film was another box-office disappointment, grossing less than $3 million. His last feature-length film was 1996's Sunchaser with Woody Harrelson and Jon Seda. While nominated for the Palme d'Or at that year's Cannes Film Festival, the film was released straight to video. In later years, Heaven's Gate was re-assessed by film critics, and re-edited versions were met with critical acclaim. In 2012, Cimino attended the premiere of a new edit at the Venice Film Festival, which was met with a standing ovation.
Francis A Cimino of Vero Beach, Indian River County, FL was born on October 6, 1914, and died at age 93 years old on April 14, 2008.
Jo Ann H Cimino of Tampa, Hillsborough County, FL was born on December 28, 1929, and died at age 68 years old on December 7, 1998.
Eugenia Cimino of Independence, Cuyahoga County, Ohio was born on January 14, 1883. Eugenia was baptized at Italy. Eugenia Cimino died at age 90 years old in September 1973.
Pasquale Cimino of Sarasota, Manatee County, FL was born on May 11, 1921, and died at age 89 years old on September 20, 2010.
Patricia A Cimino of Stratford, Fairfield County, CT was born on October 19, 1950, and died at age 42 years old in July 1993.
Pasquale Cimino of East Haven, New Haven County, CT was born on November 19, 1915, and died at age 78 years old on March 26, 1994.
Pasquale Cimino of Milford, New Haven County, CT was born on January 27, 1915, and died at age 62 years old in August 1977.
Joseph Cimino of Hamden, New Haven County, CT was born on November 6, 1905, and died at age 66 years old in December 1971.
Eva Cimino of Derby, New Haven County, CT was born on December 20, 1922, and died at age 85 years old on November 6, 2008.
Fred J Cimino of Guilford, New Haven County, CT was born on May 24, 1924, and died at age 80 years old on February 1, 2005.
Mary H Cimino of Torrance, Los Angeles County, CA was born on November 27, 1923, and died at age 74 years old on May 26, 1998.
Kimberlee G Cimino of Ellington, Tolland County, CT was born on November 11, 1974, and died at age 35 years old on April 13, 2010.
George J Cimino was born on January 27, 1914, and died at age 77 years old on June 17, 1991. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember George J Cimino.
Joseph L Cimino of Palm Beach Gardens, Palm Beach County, FL was born on February 18, 1918, and died at age 81 years old on September 7, 1999.
Carole L Cimino of Waterbury, New Haven County, CT was born on November 6, 1945, and died at age 55 years old on January 12, 2001.
Rose Cimino of Stratford, Fairfield County, CT was born on March 9, 1874, and died at age 94 years old in July 1968.
Stephen A Cimino of New Haven, New Haven County, CT was born on August 24, 1921, and died at age 85 years old on July 25, 2007.
Frank Cimino of Bridgeport, Fairfield County, CT was born on May 24, 1911, and died at age 71 years old in March 1983.

Cimino Death Records & Life Expectancy

The average age of a Cimino family member is 74.0 years old according to our database of 1,921 people with the last name Cimino that have a birth and death date listed.

Life Expectancy

74.0 years

Oldest Ciminos

These are the longest-lived members of the Cimino family on AncientFaces.

Maria Cimino of Punxsutawney, Jefferson County, PA was born on December 12, 1867, and died at age 105 years old in December 1972.
104 years
Martha Cimino of Penfield, Monroe County, NY was born on December 11, 1905, and died at age 102 years old on February 21, 2008.
102 years
Frank Cimino of Dayton, Montgomery County, OH was born on August 4, 1891, and died at age 102 years old on April 18, 1994.
102 years
Carlo Cimino of Bangor, Northampton County, PA was born on May 19, 1888, and died at age 102 years old on December 23, 1990.
102 years
Diamante Cimino was born on March 2, 1907, and died at age 102 years old on October 22, 2009. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Diamante Cimino.
102 years
Anna Cimino of Coram, Suffolk County, NY was born on March 15, 1896, and died at age 102 years old on December 29, 1998.
102 years
Giuseppe Cimino of Brooklyn, Kings County, NY was born on April 15, 1889, and died at age 101 years old on September 30, 1990.
101 years
Frances Cimino of Saint James, Suffolk County, NY was born on February 4, 1909, and died at age 101 years old on April 11, 2010.
101 years
Chiarina Cimino was born on October 12, 1902, and died at age 101 years old on October 26, 2003. Chiarina Cimino was buried at Long Island National Cemetery Section X Site 2168 2040 Wellwood Avenue, in Farmingdale, Ny. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Chiarina Cimino.
101 years
Concetta Cimino of Bayside, Queens County, NY was born on March 23, 1907, and died at age 99 years old on January 17, 2007.
99 years
Vincenzo Cimino of Lindenhurst, Suffolk County, NY was born on May 2, 1895, and died at age 100 years old in June 1995.
100 years
Loretta Cimino of Park Ridge, Bergen County, NJ was born on December 29, 1905, and died at age 98 years old on February 11, 2004.
98 years
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