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Sardi Family History & Genealogy

143 biographies and 29 photos with the Sardi last name. Discover the family history, nationality, origin and common names of Sardi family members.

Sardi Last Name History & Origin

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History

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Name Origin

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Spellings & Pronunciations

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Nationality & Ethnicity

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Famous People named Sardi

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Early Sardis

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

Thomas George Peter Paul Sardi of Australia was born in 1798, and died at age 56 years old in 1854.
Annunziata Sardi of San Francisco, San Francisco County, California was born on July 2, 1874, and died at age 98 years old in January 1973.
Andrea Sardi of San Francisco, San Francisco County, California was born on December 21, 1881, and died at age 92 years old in April 1974.
Maria Sardi of West Milford, Passaic County, NJ was born on May 14, 1882, and died at age 98 years old in October 1980.
Mary Sardi of Denver, Denver County, Colorado was born on July 18, 1884, and died at age 86 years old in February 1971.
Vincent Sardi of New York, New York County, NY was born on December 23, 1885, and died at age 83 years old in November 1969.
Giuseppe Sardi of Europe was born on August 4, 1885, and died at age 86 years old in August 1971.
Vincenza Sardi of San Francisco, San Francisco County, California was born on July 7, 1885, and died at age 91 years old in August 1976.
Guiseppe Sardi of Massachusetts was born on February 2, 1885, and died at age 78 years old in March 1963.
Philomena Sardi of Fort Lee, Bergen County, NJ was born on May 2, 1885, and died at age 93 years old in March 1979.
Franco Sardi of Washington was born on May 11, 1887, and died at age 76 years old in March 1964.
James Sardi of Worcester, Worcester County, MA was born on March 1, 1888, and died at age 78 years old in April 1966.

Sardi Family Members

Adalbert Sardi (May 4, 1919 - Jul 4, 1989) Adelle Sardi (Oct 12, 1920 - Mar 29, 2010) Alfred Sardi (Jan 24, 1916 - Jun 1983) Alvaro Sardi (Sep 8, 1929 - Mar 1, 2006) Amedeo Sardi (1901 - 1977) Amedio Sardi Ana Sardi (Dec 22, 1923 - Dec 4, 1992) Andrea Sardi Andrew Sardi (Feb 20, 1929 - Mar 15, 2004) Angela Sardi (Jun 5, 1913 - Dec 29, 1991) Angelis Sebastian Sardi Angelo Sardi Angiolino Sardi Anna Sardi Annunziata Sardi (Jul 2, 1874 - Jan 1973) Antal Sardi (Jun 13, 1906 - Nov 1975) Antonio Sardi Arbina Sardi (Mar 1, 1910 - Aug 1989) Barbara Sardi (Oct 2, 1927 - Jun 1984) Carl Sardi Carlo Sardi (Jun 23, 1909 - Apr 2, 1990) Casimiro Sardi Catherine Sardi Charles Sardi (Feb 17, 1907 - Aug 28, 1990) Claire Sardi Costantino Sardi (May 6, 1899 - Mar 1983) Dawn Sardi (Nov 11, 1958 - Sep 15, 1993) Dino Sardi Diva Sardi (May 16, 1912 - Feb 14, 1993) Domonick Sardi (Mar 20, 1934 - Jan 17, 2010) Donabel Sardi (May 10, 1928 - Mar 23, 2006) Donna Sardi (Oct 20, 1941 - Feb 17, 1996) Dorothy Sardi (Apr 15, 1902 - Aug 1991) Edith Sardi (Jan 29, 1919 - Feb 27, 1988) Elbana Sardi Emmaline Sardi (Nov 30, 1909 - May 10, 2003) Eraldo Sardi (Mar 2, 1905 - Dec 1978) Ernest Sardi (Born circa 1928) Ethel Sardi (Apr 9, 1889 - Dec 1978) Eugenia Sardi (Jul 14, 1889 - Nov 1978) Eulalia Sardi (Born circa 1961) Evelyn Sardi (Dec 28, 1914 - Aug 1, 2010) Filis Sardi (1901 - 1975) Franco Sardi (May 11, 1887 - Mar 1964) Frank Sardi Gaston Sardi Rosales (Sep 3, 1934 - Jul 12, 2009) George Sardi Geri Sardi Gerome Sardi (Feb 28, 1948 - Sep 1980) Ginevra Sardi (Jun 16, 1904 - Dec 1986) Giuseppe Sardi (Aug 4, 1885 - Aug 1971) Guiseppe Sardi (Feb 2, 1885 - Mar 1963) Helen Sardi Hoa Sardi (Oct 9, 1946 - Oct 11, 2009) Ida Sardi Isabella Sardi (1904 - 1981)
James Sardi Jane Sardi Janet Sardi (Feb 25, 1942 - Jun 28, 1995) Jenifer Sardi (Oct 26, 1958 - Feb 4, 2005) Joe Sardi (Aug 22, 1912 - Apr 1, 2000) John Sardi José Miranda Sardi (1899 - 1936) Joseph Sardi Judith Sardi (Sep 27, 1929 - Sep 9, 2001) Kristen Sardi Lea Sardi (Jun 21, 1908 - Dec 23, 1999) Leo Sardi (Mar 1, 1918 - May 1984) Lorenzina Sardi (Jul 16, 1898 - Aug 1983) Louise Sardi (Jul 19, 1931 - Apr 5, 2008) Mae Sardi (May 1, 1890 - Feb 1983) Malerbi Sardi Manlio Sardi (1903 - 1969) Margaret Sardi Margherita Sardi Maria Sardi Martorella Sardi Mary Sardi Matilda Sardi (Mar 26, 1916 - Oct 1983) Miklos Sardi (Mar 11, 1912 - Apr 1987) Nick Sardi (Mar 17, 1937 - Feb 19, 2011) Nina Sardi (Nov 4, 1916 - Feb 7, 2009) Olga Sardi (Mar 3, 1942 - Jun 20, 2010) Olive Sardi (Jan 3, 1907 - Sep 7, 1998) Onorato Sardi (Jan 26, 1898 - Aug 1970) Onorina Sardi (1909 - 1936) Otto Sardi (Sep 4, 1932 - Feb 26, 2004) Partenope Sardi (Apr 4, 1921 - Jun 15, 1996) Patricia Sardi Paul Sardi Penelope Sardi Philip Sardi (Born circa 1909) Philomena Sardi (May 2, 1885 - Mar 1979) Pietro Sardi Richard Sardi Rosa Sardi (Mar 27, 1926 - Mar 11, 2011) Rose Sardi (Apr 17, 1909 - Dec 14, 1999) Rosemary Sardi (Jun 26, 1930 - Apr 1996) Rozalia Sardi (Aug 4, 1904 - Feb 1972) Samuel Sardi (Jun 25, 1910 - Nov 23, 1993) Sarah Sardi (Sep 23, 1909 - Jan 2, 1998) Signorino Sardi (Oct 13, 1931 - Mar 3, 2002) Steve Sardi (Oct 27, 1924 - Feb 1976) Thomas Sardi (1798 - 1854) Tozzi Sardi Vasto Sardi (Nov 11, 1921 - Mar 22, 2004) Vienna Sardi Vincent Sardi Vincenza Sardi (Jul 7, 1885 - Aug 1976) Vincenzo Sardi Vivian Sardi (Aug 23, 1914 - Jan 7, 2007) William Sardi (Born circa 1919)

Sardi Family Photos

Discover Sardi family photos shared by the community. These photos contain people and places related to the Sardi last name.

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Sardi Family Tree

Discover the most common names, oldest records and life expectancy of people with the last name Sardi.

Most Common First Names

Updated Sardi Biographies

Paul Sardi
Paul was a fun person with an amazing personality. He enjoyed living life fully, and was a great brother and friend to many of his classmates and acquaintances.
Kristen Lee (Sardi) Kenny was born to Paul Sardi. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Kristen Lee Kenny.
Kristen Lee (Sardi) Kenny was born on September 19, 1978. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Kristen Lee Kenny.
George G Sardi of Fort Lee, Bergen County, NJ was born on January 5, 1914, and died at age 90 years old on March 24, 2004.
Vasto Sardi of Redwood City, San Mateo County, CA was born on November 11, 1921, and died at age 82 years old on March 22, 2004.
Maria Maria (Bazzano) Sardi of Preston Australia, was married to Vincenzo Sardi, and has children Sebastiano Sardo and Antonio Sardi. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Maria Sardi.
Vincenzo Sardi of Preston Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Vincenzo Sardi.
Margherita Margherita (Sardi) Cardenti of Surr Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Margherita Sardi Cardenti.
Amedio Sardi of Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Amedio Sardi.
Catherine Mary Sardi of Victoria Australia was married to Joseph Anty Costa in 1898. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Catherine Mary Sardi.
Angelo B Sardi of Park Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Angelo B Sardi.
Vincent Sardi, Jr.
Vincent Sardi Jr., who owned and managed Sardi’s restaurant, his father’s theater-district landmark, for more than half a century and became, by wide agreement, the unofficial mayor of Broadway, died yesterday at a hospital in Berlin, Vt.. He was 91 and had lived in Warren, Vt., since retiring in 1997. The cause was complications of a urinary tract infection, said Sean Ricketts, a grandson and manager at the restaurant. Mr. Sardi ran one of the world’s most famous restaurants, a Broadway institution as central to the life of the theater as actors, agents and critics. It was, the press agent Richard Maney once wrote, “the club, mess hall, lounge, post office, saloon and marketplace of the people of the theater.” Mr. Sardi understood theater people, loved them and was loved in return. He carried out-of-work actors, letting them run up a tab until their ship came in. (At one point, Sardi’s maintained 600 such accounts.) He attended every show and made sure his headwaiters did the same, so that they could recognize even bit players and make a fuss over them. At times, he exercised what he called “a fine Italian hand,” seating a hungry actor near a producer with a suitable part to cast. He commiserated with his patrons when a show failed, and rejoiced with them when the critics were kind. He distributed favors, theater tickets and food, rode on horseback with the local police, and acted as a spokesman, official and unofficial, for the theater district. Mr. Sardi was born on July 23, 1915, in Manhattan and spent his early childhood in a railroad flat on West 56th Street, where his parents took in show-business boarders. In 1921, his father took over a basement restaurant in a brownstone at 246 West 44th Street. He named it the Little Restaurant, but theater people called it Sardi’s, and so it became. The family lived upstairs. When the building was razed in 1927 to make way for the St. James Theater, Sardi’s moved to its current location, at 234 West 44th. Vincent Jr., whom his father called Cino, attended Holy Cross Academy on 43rd Street. He got a taste of the theater at an early age, appearing as Pietro, an Italian urchin, in “The Master of the Inn” at the Little Theater when he was 10. The play closed quickly, but not before Vincent learned about the subtleties of the actor-director relationship. When he pointed out that an Italian would say “addio,” not “adios,” he was told to keep his opinions to himself and read the line as written. In 1926, the Sardis moved to Flushing, Queens, where Vincent graduated from Flushing High School. He entered Columbia University intending to become a doctor, but failed the chemistry examination, in part because, short of pocket money, he had sold his textbook at Barnes & Noble so he could attend a dance. He transferred to Columbia Business School and earned a degree in 1937. In the meantime, he began working in the family business on weekends, earning $14 a week. “My duties included stints at the cigarette counter, shifts at the cash register and a few attempts at being a Saturday headwaiter in the upstairs second-floor level,” he recalled in Playbill. He also learned how to cater to Sardi’s unusual clientele. When Broderick Crawford was appearing in “Of Mice and Men,” Vincent was volunteered to take the actor’s Doberman for its nightly walk. Mr. Sardi spent two years learning the food-service business at the Ritz-Carlton before rejoining Sardi’s in 1939 as dining-room captain. That year he married Carolyn Euiller. The marriage ended in 1946. In 1946, he married Adelle Rasey, an actress. That marriage, too, ended in divorce. In 1947 Vincent Sr. retired, and Vincent Jr. took over the restaurant, buying it from his father. Sardi’s was already renowned as a place where deals were made, gossip circulated and actors and producers made it their business to see and be seen. “The restaurant had a central place in the theater,” said Gerald Schoenfeld, the president of the Shubert Organization. “You could walk in at lunch and do a day’s business, see people you hadn’t seen in a long time. You didn’t think of going anywhere else.” Mr. Sardi, a tall, affable man with a military bearing, perfected the art of seating enemies far apart and putting friends and potential allies near one another. “He was always the soul of politesse, but where he seated you could be crucial to making a deal,” said the producer Arthur Cantor. Mr. Sardi also knew how to keep temperamental actors happy. “You’ve got to be awfully careful with actors out of work,” he told an interviewer. “They’re very sensitive about their fading prestige, and I know darn well they scrimp to come in here, on the chance that they’ll be considered for a part. Boosting an actor’s ego with a table in a good location is simply my way of giving him a pat on the back.” When he was not running the restaurant, Mr. Sardi raced cars, played polo and skied. He was also president of the Greater Times Square Committee in the 1960s and the Restaurant League of New York in the 1970s. If Sardi’s was a club, its rules were mysterious. Only Mr. Sardi knew them, and only he could explain why, for many years, one of the best tables was held for Mr. and Mrs. Ira Katzenberg. The Katzenbergs, who by the early 1950s had attended virtually every Broadway opening for 30 years, took their seats at Sardi’s at 7:15 and ordered, without fail, a brandy and a bottle of Saratoga water. Mr. Sardi called them his favorite customers. “People like them keep the theater alive, and the theater is their life,” he said. “The least we can do is give them the best table in the house.” Mr. Sardi could do nothing about the autograph hounds and the photographers who crowded around the entrance. But inside the front doors, his word was law. Diners were not to be disturbed. Sardi’s shone brightest on the opening night of a Broadway show, and in the 1960s, a show opened nearly every night. The ritual never varied. In a line that stretched down 44th Street, theatergoers, theater insiders and celebrity watchers clamored for a table, hoping against hope to be seated on the first floor, where they could see cast members, producers and the playwright of the moment entering the restaurant after the curtain rang down. As the actors made their way to their tables, the diners would stand and applaud. Once seated, the actors, producers and playwright would put on a brave face waiting for the reviews. The first 25 copies of The New York Times and The New York Herald Tribune were rushed over to Sardi’s from the printing presses at midnight, with the review pages marked. Mr. Sardi would man the telephone, taking calls from friends of the cast, ticket brokers and newspaper columnists eager to get a read on the fate of the new play. If the reviews were poor, a pall descended over the dining room, and diners would slink out the door. If the reviews were good, it was Champagne all around and a celebration until the wee hours.
Joseph A Sardi of New York, New York County, NY was born on June 27, 1923, and died at age 54 years old on January 6, 1978. Joseph Sardi was buried at Long Island National Cemetery Section E Site 345 2040 Wellwood Avenue, in Farmingdale.
Joseph R Sardi of West Islip, Suffolk County, NY was born on December 9, 1929, and died at age 73 years old on February 4, 2003. Joseph Sardi was buried at Calverton National Cemetery Section 28 Site 1973 210 Princeton Boulevard - Rt 25, in Calverton.
Signorino L Sardi of North Babylon, Suffolk County, NY was born on October 13, 1931, and died at age 70 years old on March 3, 2002. Signorino Sardi was buried at Calverton National Cemetery Section 23 Site 141 210 Princeton Boulevard - Rt 25, in Calverton.
Angelis Sebastian Angelis Sebastian (De) Sardi of Rese Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Angelis Sebastian De Sardi.
Penelope Penelope (Ballerini) Sardi of Rese Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Penelope Ballerini Sardi.
Maria Maria (Malerba) Sardi of Fitzroy Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Maria Malerba Sardi.
Ida Ida (Durante) Sardi of Park Australia, was married to Angelo B Sardi, and has a child Paul Vincenzo Sardi. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Ida Durante Sardi.
Angiolino Angiolino (Berton) Sardi of Chiltern Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Angiolino Berton Sardi.

Popular Sardi Biographies

Paul Sardi
Paul was a fun person with an amazing personality. He enjoyed living life fully, and was a great brother and friend to many of his classmates and acquaintances.
Kristen Lee (Sardi) Kenny was born on September 19, 1978. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Kristen Lee Kenny.
Vincent Sardi, Jr.
Vincent Sardi Jr., who owned and managed Sardi’s restaurant, his father’s theater-district landmark, for more than half a century and became, by wide agreement, the unofficial mayor of Broadway, died yesterday at a hospital in Berlin, Vt.. He was 91 and had lived in Warren, Vt., since retiring in 1997. The cause was complications of a urinary tract infection, said Sean Ricketts, a grandson and manager at the restaurant. Mr. Sardi ran one of the world’s most famous restaurants, a Broadway institution as central to the life of the theater as actors, agents and critics. It was, the press agent Richard Maney once wrote, “the club, mess hall, lounge, post office, saloon and marketplace of the people of the theater.” Mr. Sardi understood theater people, loved them and was loved in return. He carried out-of-work actors, letting them run up a tab until their ship came in. (At one point, Sardi’s maintained 600 such accounts.) He attended every show and made sure his headwaiters did the same, so that they could recognize even bit players and make a fuss over them. At times, he exercised what he called “a fine Italian hand,” seating a hungry actor near a producer with a suitable part to cast. He commiserated with his patrons when a show failed, and rejoiced with them when the critics were kind. He distributed favors, theater tickets and food, rode on horseback with the local police, and acted as a spokesman, official and unofficial, for the theater district. Mr. Sardi was born on July 23, 1915, in Manhattan and spent his early childhood in a railroad flat on West 56th Street, where his parents took in show-business boarders. In 1921, his father took over a basement restaurant in a brownstone at 246 West 44th Street. He named it the Little Restaurant, but theater people called it Sardi’s, and so it became. The family lived upstairs. When the building was razed in 1927 to make way for the St. James Theater, Sardi’s moved to its current location, at 234 West 44th. Vincent Jr., whom his father called Cino, attended Holy Cross Academy on 43rd Street. He got a taste of the theater at an early age, appearing as Pietro, an Italian urchin, in “The Master of the Inn” at the Little Theater when he was 10. The play closed quickly, but not before Vincent learned about the subtleties of the actor-director relationship. When he pointed out that an Italian would say “addio,” not “adios,” he was told to keep his opinions to himself and read the line as written. In 1926, the Sardis moved to Flushing, Queens, where Vincent graduated from Flushing High School. He entered Columbia University intending to become a doctor, but failed the chemistry examination, in part because, short of pocket money, he had sold his textbook at Barnes & Noble so he could attend a dance. He transferred to Columbia Business School and earned a degree in 1937. In the meantime, he began working in the family business on weekends, earning $14 a week. “My duties included stints at the cigarette counter, shifts at the cash register and a few attempts at being a Saturday headwaiter in the upstairs second-floor level,” he recalled in Playbill. He also learned how to cater to Sardi’s unusual clientele. When Broderick Crawford was appearing in “Of Mice and Men,” Vincent was volunteered to take the actor’s Doberman for its nightly walk. Mr. Sardi spent two years learning the food-service business at the Ritz-Carlton before rejoining Sardi’s in 1939 as dining-room captain. That year he married Carolyn Euiller. The marriage ended in 1946. In 1946, he married Adelle Rasey, an actress. That marriage, too, ended in divorce. In 1947 Vincent Sr. retired, and Vincent Jr. took over the restaurant, buying it from his father. Sardi’s was already renowned as a place where deals were made, gossip circulated and actors and producers made it their business to see and be seen. “The restaurant had a central place in the theater,” said Gerald Schoenfeld, the president of the Shubert Organization. “You could walk in at lunch and do a day’s business, see people you hadn’t seen in a long time. You didn’t think of going anywhere else.” Mr. Sardi, a tall, affable man with a military bearing, perfected the art of seating enemies far apart and putting friends and potential allies near one another. “He was always the soul of politesse, but where he seated you could be crucial to making a deal,” said the producer Arthur Cantor. Mr. Sardi also knew how to keep temperamental actors happy. “You’ve got to be awfully careful with actors out of work,” he told an interviewer. “They’re very sensitive about their fading prestige, and I know darn well they scrimp to come in here, on the chance that they’ll be considered for a part. Boosting an actor’s ego with a table in a good location is simply my way of giving him a pat on the back.” When he was not running the restaurant, Mr. Sardi raced cars, played polo and skied. He was also president of the Greater Times Square Committee in the 1960s and the Restaurant League of New York in the 1970s. If Sardi’s was a club, its rules were mysterious. Only Mr. Sardi knew them, and only he could explain why, for many years, one of the best tables was held for Mr. and Mrs. Ira Katzenberg. The Katzenbergs, who by the early 1950s had attended virtually every Broadway opening for 30 years, took their seats at Sardi’s at 7:15 and ordered, without fail, a brandy and a bottle of Saratoga water. Mr. Sardi called them his favorite customers. “People like them keep the theater alive, and the theater is their life,” he said. “The least we can do is give them the best table in the house.” Mr. Sardi could do nothing about the autograph hounds and the photographers who crowded around the entrance. But inside the front doors, his word was law. Diners were not to be disturbed. Sardi’s shone brightest on the opening night of a Broadway show, and in the 1960s, a show opened nearly every night. The ritual never varied. In a line that stretched down 44th Street, theatergoers, theater insiders and celebrity watchers clamored for a table, hoping against hope to be seated on the first floor, where they could see cast members, producers and the playwright of the moment entering the restaurant after the curtain rang down. As the actors made their way to their tables, the diners would stand and applaud. Once seated, the actors, producers and playwright would put on a brave face waiting for the reviews. The first 25 copies of The New York Times and The New York Herald Tribune were rushed over to Sardi’s from the printing presses at midnight, with the review pages marked. Mr. Sardi would man the telephone, taking calls from friends of the cast, ticket brokers and newspaper columnists eager to get a read on the fate of the new play. If the reviews were poor, a pall descended over the dining room, and diners would slink out the door. If the reviews were good, it was Champagne all around and a celebration until the wee hours.
Tozzi Maurimo Sardi of Chiltern Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Tozzi Maurimo Sardi.
Kristen Lee (Sardi) Kenny was born to Paul Sardi. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Kristen Lee Kenny.
Onorina Sardi of Chiltern Australia was born in 1909, and died at age 27 years old in 1936 in Chiltern.
“José Miranda de Sardi, religión ateo, de 35 años de edad, nacido en Chipiona (Cádiz), de estado casado, de profesión periodista obrero; domicilio Pósito Pescador de Barbate. Trabaja en la Secretaría de dicho Pósito.” "Jose Miranda de Sardi, atheist religion, age 35, born in Chipiona (Cádiz), married status, labor journalist by profession; Pósito home Barbate fisherman. Works at the Secretariat of the Granary. "
Antonio Sardi was born on October 19, 1893, and died at age 83 years old in June 1977.
Angelo Sardi of Torrington, Litchfield County, CT was born on March 30, 1911, and died at age 76 years old in January 1988.
Lorenzina Sardi of Springfield, Hampden County, MA was born on July 16, 1898, and died at age 85 years old in August 1983.
Evelyn I Sardi of Torrington, Litchfield County, CT was born on December 28, 1914, and died at age 95 years old on August 1, 2010.
Dawn E Sardi of Coventry, Tolland County, CT was born on November 11, 1958, and died at age 34 years old on September 15, 1993.
Judith Sardi of Fairfield, Fairfield County, CT was born on September 27, 1929, and died at age 71 years old on September 9, 2001.
Andrew Sardi of Bridgeport, Fairfield County, CT was born on February 20, 1929, and died at age 75 years old on March 15, 2004.
Richard A Sardi of Pollock Pines, El Dorado County, CA was born on July 21, 1938, and died at age 67 years old on January 2, 2006.
Margherita Sardi of Grafton, Worcester County, MA was born on April 25, 1895, and died at age 97 years old on March 15, 1993.
Anna Sardi of Woodside, Queens County, NY was born on July 28, 1894, and died at age 79 years old in July 1973.
Antal Sardi of Lorain, Lorain County, OH was born on June 13, 1906, and died at age 69 years old in November 1975.
Dino Sardi was born on March 3, 1912, and died at age 78 years old on April 14, 1990. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Dino Sardi.
Olga A Sardi of North Babylon, Suffolk County, NY was born on March 3, 1942, and died at age 68 years old on June 20, 2010.

Sardi Death Records & Life Expectancy

The average age of a Sardi family member is 75.0 years old according to our database of 113 people with the last name Sardi that have a birth and death date listed.

Life Expectancy

75.0 years

Oldest Sardis

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

Mary L Sardi of Saddle River, Bergen County, NJ was born on October 28, 1895, and died at age 99 years old on July 31, 1995.
99 years
Annunziata Sardi of San Francisco, San Francisco County, California was born on July 2, 1874, and died at age 98 years old in January 1973.
98 years
Margherita Sardi of Grafton, Worcester County, MA was born on April 25, 1895, and died at age 97 years old on March 15, 1993.
97 years
Maria Sardi of West Milford, Passaic County, NJ was born on May 14, 1882, and died at age 98 years old in October 1980.
98 years
Evelyn I Sardi of Torrington, Litchfield County, CT was born on December 28, 1914, and died at age 95 years old on August 1, 2010.
95 years
Emmaline Sardi of Jamestown, Chautauqua County, NY was born on November 30, 1909, and died at age 93 years old on May 10, 2003.
93 years
Philomena Sardi of Fort Lee, Bergen County, NJ was born on May 2, 1885, and died at age 93 years old in March 1979.
93 years
Nina L Sardi of Jamestown, Chautauqua County, NY was born on November 4, 1916, and died at age 92 years old on February 7, 2009.
92 years
Vivian D Sardi of Metairie, Jefferson County, LA was born on August 23, 1914, and died at age 92 years old on January 7, 2007.
92 years
Andrea Sardi of San Francisco, San Francisco County, California was born on December 21, 1881, and died at age 92 years old in April 1974.
92 years
Mae Sardi of Bronxville, Westchester County, NY was born on May 1, 1890, and died at age 92 years old in February 1983.
92 years
Vincent Sardi, Jr.
Vincent Sardi Jr., who owned and managed Sardi’s restaurant, his father’s theater-district landmark, for more than half a century and became, by wide agreement, the unofficial mayor of Broadway, died yesterday at a hospital in Berlin, Vt.. He was 91 and had lived in Warren, Vt., since retiring in 1997. The cause was complications of a urinary tract infection, said Sean Ricketts, a grandson and manager at the restaurant. Mr. Sardi ran one of the world’s most famous restaurants, a Broadway institution as central to the life of the theater as actors, agents and critics. It was, the press agent Richard Maney once wrote, “the club, mess hall, lounge, post office, saloon and marketplace of the people of the theater.” Mr. Sardi understood theater people, loved them and was loved in return. He carried out-of-work actors, letting them run up a tab until their ship came in. (At one point, Sardi’s maintained 600 such accounts.) He attended every show and made sure his headwaiters did the same, so that they could recognize even bit players and make a fuss over them. At times, he exercised what he called “a fine Italian hand,” seating a hungry actor near a producer with a suitable part to cast. He commiserated with his patrons when a show failed, and rejoiced with them when the critics were kind. He distributed favors, theater tickets and food, rode on horseback with the local police, and acted as a spokesman, official and unofficial, for the theater district. Mr. Sardi was born on July 23, 1915, in Manhattan and spent his early childhood in a railroad flat on West 56th Street, where his parents took in show-business boarders. In 1921, his father took over a basement restaurant in a brownstone at 246 West 44th Street. He named it the Little Restaurant, but theater people called it Sardi’s, and so it became. The family lived upstairs. When the building was razed in 1927 to make way for the St. James Theater, Sardi’s moved to its current location, at 234 West 44th. Vincent Jr., whom his father called Cino, attended Holy Cross Academy on 43rd Street. He got a taste of the theater at an early age, appearing as Pietro, an Italian urchin, in “The Master of the Inn” at the Little Theater when he was 10. The play closed quickly, but not before Vincent learned about the subtleties of the actor-director relationship. When he pointed out that an Italian would say “addio,” not “adios,” he was told to keep his opinions to himself and read the line as written. In 1926, the Sardis moved to Flushing, Queens, where Vincent graduated from Flushing High School. He entered Columbia University intending to become a doctor, but failed the chemistry examination, in part because, short of pocket money, he had sold his textbook at Barnes & Noble so he could attend a dance. He transferred to Columbia Business School and earned a degree in 1937. In the meantime, he began working in the family business on weekends, earning $14 a week. “My duties included stints at the cigarette counter, shifts at the cash register and a few attempts at being a Saturday headwaiter in the upstairs second-floor level,” he recalled in Playbill. He also learned how to cater to Sardi’s unusual clientele. When Broderick Crawford was appearing in “Of Mice and Men,” Vincent was volunteered to take the actor’s Doberman for its nightly walk. Mr. Sardi spent two years learning the food-service business at the Ritz-Carlton before rejoining Sardi’s in 1939 as dining-room captain. That year he married Carolyn Euiller. The marriage ended in 1946. In 1946, he married Adelle Rasey, an actress. That marriage, too, ended in divorce. In 1947 Vincent Sr. retired, and Vincent Jr. took over the restaurant, buying it from his father. Sardi’s was already renowned as a place where deals were made, gossip circulated and actors and producers made it their business to see and be seen. “The restaurant had a central place in the theater,” said Gerald Schoenfeld, the president of the Shubert Organization. “You could walk in at lunch and do a day’s business, see people you hadn’t seen in a long time. You didn’t think of going anywhere else.” Mr. Sardi, a tall, affable man with a military bearing, perfected the art of seating enemies far apart and putting friends and potential allies near one another. “He was always the soul of politesse, but where he seated you could be crucial to making a deal,” said the producer Arthur Cantor. Mr. Sardi also knew how to keep temperamental actors happy. “You’ve got to be awfully careful with actors out of work,” he told an interviewer. “They’re very sensitive about their fading prestige, and I know darn well they scrimp to come in here, on the chance that they’ll be considered for a part. Boosting an actor’s ego with a table in a good location is simply my way of giving him a pat on the back.” When he was not running the restaurant, Mr. Sardi raced cars, played polo and skied. He was also president of the Greater Times Square Committee in the 1960s and the Restaurant League of New York in the 1970s. If Sardi’s was a club, its rules were mysterious. Only Mr. Sardi knew them, and only he could explain why, for many years, one of the best tables was held for Mr. and Mrs. Ira Katzenberg. The Katzenbergs, who by the early 1950s had attended virtually every Broadway opening for 30 years, took their seats at Sardi’s at 7:15 and ordered, without fail, a brandy and a bottle of Saratoga water. Mr. Sardi called them his favorite customers. “People like them keep the theater alive, and the theater is their life,” he said. “The least we can do is give them the best table in the house.” Mr. Sardi could do nothing about the autograph hounds and the photographers who crowded around the entrance. But inside the front doors, his word was law. Diners were not to be disturbed. Sardi’s shone brightest on the opening night of a Broadway show, and in the 1960s, a show opened nearly every night. The ritual never varied. In a line that stretched down 44th Street, theatergoers, theater insiders and celebrity watchers clamored for a table, hoping against hope to be seated on the first floor, where they could see cast members, producers and the playwright of the moment entering the restaurant after the curtain rang down. As the actors made their way to their tables, the diners would stand and applaud. Once seated, the actors, producers and playwright would put on a brave face waiting for the reviews. The first 25 copies of The New York Times and The New York Herald Tribune were rushed over to Sardi’s from the printing presses at midnight, with the review pages marked. Mr. Sardi would man the telephone, taking calls from friends of the cast, ticket brokers and newspaper columnists eager to get a read on the fate of the new play. If the reviews were poor, a pall descended over the dining room, and diners would slink out the door. If the reviews were good, it was Champagne all around and a celebration until the wee hours.
91 years
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