Inqlings: It'll be a mob scene in Society Hill
Character actor Vinny Vella (name a mob-type film or TV show, and he has probably been in it) will be in front of cameras Tuesday at the historic Morris House near Washington Square.

Character actor
Vinny Vella
(name a mob-type film or TV show, and he has probably been in it) will be in front of cameras Tuesday at the historic Morris House near Washington Square.
He'll be working on - why, yes - another mob movie.
A Sicilian Tale
, by
Frank Lisi
, is about a religious farmer in Sicily (played by Southwest Philly-raised
Joe Polito
) who is being forced to kill for the local Mafia chief because he seems to be the least likely assassin. Vella's character is the farmer's brother, who lives in New York. He suggests that the farmer send his son to America.
Elaine del Valle
(
Donnie Brasco
,
The Sopranos
) plays Polito's wife, and other locals include
Joey Eye
and
Tisha Tinsman
.
The film's trailer, linked via Polito's MySpace page, can be seen at
» READ MORE: http://go.philly.com/sicilian
.
More from movie land
Indie-film queen
Parker Posey
, in a gray top and sparkly shoes, brightened up Friday's lunch rush at Di Bruno's near Rittenhouse Square simply by ordering from the counter and chatting up the clerk. Posey and
Demi Moore
, seen seemingly everywhere around the square, are here through the end of May with
Rip Torn
to shoot
Happy Tears
, a family drama from writer/director
Mitchell Lichtenstein
and producer
Joyce Pierpoline
. Posey and Moore, playing sisters, are rooming on the same floor of a hotel; each is here with a small dog. Shooting started Thursday, much of it at a house in Prospect Park, which serves as the home of Torn's character, the father, who has a rare form of dementia.
Friday marked the wrap of
The Dream of the Romans
, a romantic comedy starring
Jeff Daniels
as a reclusive author and
Lauren Graham
as the woman who gets him back out there. Casting agent
Diane Heery
says she had a swell time fielding offers from local actors who wanted to work as extras - though they showed up in sandals, a la
Ben-Hur
. Next up before cameras locally:
Marley & Me
(May 9), which will put
Owen Wilson
and
Jennifer Aniston
not only in West Chester but also on a Philly street for a scene or two (plus one day in The Inquirer's newsroom).
Transformers 2
is up for June.
Signs are pointing to a sale of the Gladwyne mansion of filmmaker
M. Night Shyamalan
, who put the pile up a year ago for $8 million and then cut the tag to $7.25 million and then to $6.25 million. I hear that the selling price will be in the high fives. Montgomery County records show he paid $4.5 million when it was built in 2000 on nearly two acres. The Shyamalans now live on a 123-acre compound in the western reaches of the Main Line. Shyamalan's latest,
The Happening
, is scheduled to open wide June 13, and he's in early preparation for
The Last Airbender
, a live-action adventure.
Hair, hair
On his way to the Flyers' flight to Montreal last week,
Scott Hartnell
popped into Chroma Hair Gallery in Old City - where
Joffrey Lupul
goes - to have his signature curls straightened. Stylist
Natalie Guercio
, who says she spent 25 minutes blowing it dry and flat-ironing it, says Hartnell did it as a joke to amuse teammates.
Edmondo Blando
, owner of Salon Vanity (1126 Walnut St.), was named a 2008 rising star by Allure magazine - dubbed "up-and-coming stylist and colorist to book now."
Two Philly women are part of the touring company of
Hairspray
, starting Friday at the Academy of Music:
Vedra Chandler
, who understudies five roles, was born in Philadelphia and raised in Camden, attended Haddonfield High, and graduated from Harvard. Also, there's
Ms. Gnomiagre
, who plays Cindy Watkins. She was born
Lauren Brown
and graduated from Frankford High.
Power of the press
KYW Newsradio reporter
Mark Abrams
may have saved face for sister station CBS3. Abrams and other newsies were waiting in Conshohocken Tuesday for
Hillary Rodham Clinton
when a Clinton aide began bellowing about CBS3's chopper, hovering above. Fearing that CBS3 reporter
Dick Sheeran
would face a scolding when he arrived, Abrams called CBS3's assignment desk. Within 25 seconds, the chopper left. Impressed,
David Greene
, National Public Radio's White House correspondent, turned to Abrams and asked: "Can you order me a milkshake?"