Site icon BAMF Style

Goodfellas – Henry Hill’s Wedding Suit

Advertisements

Ray Liotta as Henry Hill in Goodfellas (1990).

Vitals

Ray Liotta as Henry Hill, New York mob associate and briefly-loyal husband

New York, Summer 1964

Film: Goodfellas
Release Date: September 19, 1990
Director: Martin Scorsese
Costume Designer: Richard Bruno

Background

After years of introspection and deep, deep soul-searching, I have determined that Goodfellas is my favorite film. Thus, when my inevitable wedding day is here, I’ll invite every Peter, Paul, and Marie I know and get a huge bag ready for envelopes that better be filled with cash. I’ll also invite Joe Pesci, just for good measure.

What’d He Wear?

Henry heads up to the chuppah in a slick black three-piece suit for his wedding to Karen. Given Karen’s heritage and her family’s staunch Judiasm, he had previously converted to her faith and thus wears a white yarmulke for the actual ceremony. Evidently, he had agreed on a Jewish ceremony if they could have an insanely Italian reception. Which, I can gladly tell you from experience, it is.

As this is a short scene and Henry is mostly covered by a table or his wife through most of it, we don’t see a lot of the suit, but it definitely consists of a double-breasted jacket, vest, and trousers with plain-hemmed bottoms.

The double-breasted jacket has a 4-on-2 button front. This pattern requires all four buttons to be aligned, creating a square if one were to play connect the dots using the buttons. This style was very popular in the mid-1960s.

The jacket also has slim peak lapels, 3-button cuffs, and a welted breast pocket, which houses the white silk handkerchief, folded into two display points. Henry also wears a large white carnation on his left lapel.

Henry’s white shirt has French cuffs and the very large “spearpoint” collar that have become informally known in fan circles as “Goodfellas collars” due to their popularity among the film’s gangsters. According to ShortList.com, Scorsese’s parents Charles and Catherine, who were on set every day, pressed all of the gangsters’ shirt collars in the film. Why? Scorsese says they were the only ones who “knew how to do it properly”.

I bet you couldn’t press this collar properly to save your life.

Underneath the large collar is an ivory-colored narrow silk necktie that has very thin spotted beige stripes from the right shoulder down to the left hip.

Henry’s footwear is best seen when he is breaking the glass with his right foot, a custom that traditionally symbolized the sorrow over destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem. His shoes are black horsebit slip-0n loafers with brass rings, rather than the usual snaffle bit, on either side of the strap. He wears black ribbed dress socks with the loafers. Horsebit loafers were introduced by Gucci in March 1953. They would be considered too flashy and informal for most weddings, but most weddings are not gangster weddings.

Mazel Tov!

Henry receives an additional piece of jewelry, his plain gold wedding band, on this day. He wears it throughout the film on his left ring finger. He also still wears his usual pinky ring on his right hand.

Go Big or Go Home – Wedding Edition

The Venue

Although the real Henry and Karen skipped down to North Carolina to exchange their vows in August 1965, the film has them married more conventionally, first with a small Jewish ceremony followed by a massive Italian reception in a banquet hall, probably somewhere in Long Island.

Oy vey!

We don’t see much of their wedding ceremony other than the guests and the ceremonial glass-breaking. The traditional Jewish wedding ceremony is known as chuppah, which is also the name of the canopy the bride and groom stand under when the groom places a ring on the bride’s finger.

The Refreshments

Henry is seen drinking red wine at the reception. We can assume that a fully-stocked open bar was available here, with the gang’s favorites – J&B Scotch (Henry), Crown Royal (Tommy), and Budweiser (Jimmy) – in abundance.

We don’t see the maker of Henry’s wine, but his family drinks Bolla later, during the frantic May 11, 1980 sequence, so offering Bolla at your wedding would be a fine choice. (My favorite moderately-priced Italian red, FYI, is Ruffino Chianti Classico.)

Notable Guests

Paulie and his brothers had lots of sons and nephews. And almost all of them were named Peter or Paul. It was unbelievable. There must have been two dozen Peters and Pauls at the wedding. Plus, they were all married to girls named Marie. And they named all their daughters Marie.

For a true Goodfellas style wedding, you’ll need to invite a bunch of wiseguys from the neighborhood. The kind of guys that would only name their kids Peter, Paul, and Marie. Ideally, you’ll be able to see your reflection in their suits as they’re walking in the door.

Henry and his guests: Jimmy, Paulie, Marty, and Tommy. You’d think Scorsese would’ve sprung for a suit in this picture.

The Music

The Harptones’ “Life is But a Dream”, a doo wop hit from 1955, plays as Henry and Karen dance. The Harptones was a very successful and influential doo wop group led by tenor Willie Winfield, who is still leading the group today, more than sixty years after it was formed. Pianist and baritone Raoul Cita is the only other band member who has been around since the group’s formation and has arranged most of their songs.

How to Get the Look

Aww…

The real Henry wore black tie for his wedding celebration, but the film’s Henry opts for a fashionable but low-key (for a gangster) suit that reflects the solemnity of the day without being too somber:

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Check out the movie.

The Quote

After Karen worries about the fate of their boost bag (which probably holds close to a million dollars in cash), Henry coolly laughs it off:

Don’t worry. Nobody’s going to steal that here.

The real Henry and Karen getting married, 1965. While the clothes may not be exactly the same, the pair definitely were well-resembled by Ray Liotta and Lorraine Bracco.

He didn’t tell her that if anyone did try and steal it, they would end up scattered inside the trunk of an Impala and dumped in the East River.

Footnotes

National Geographic, of all things, had a great little Q&A with the real Henry a few years ago before he died. During many of his later interviews, Henry tried to deconstruct the myth of him as a “goodfella” and admitted to taking part—at least as an accessory—in many more murders than the film showed. He also offers this advice to young people who aspire to be criminals:

Forget about it. Stay in school.

Exit mobile version