Chucky Pancamo

Last updated
Charles Pancamo
Oz character
First appearance"Ancient Tribes" (season 2, episode 2)
Last appearance"Exeunt Omnes" (season 6, episode 8)
Created by Tom Fontana
Portrayed by Chuck Zito
In-universe information
NicknameChucky the Enforcer, Chucky
Religion Roman Catholicism

Charles "Chucky The Enforcer" Pancamo is a fictional character, played by Chuck Zito, on the HBO series Oz . [1] Pancamo is a member of the "Wiseguys", a collection of Sicilian-American inmates connected to the Mafia.

Contents

Character overview

"Prisoner #97P468: Charles Pancamo, a.k.a. "Chucky the Enforcer." Convicted June 4, 1997. Sentence: 35 years, up for parole in 15."

Pancamo is introduced in the show's second season. His grandfather worked for Al Capone in the 1920's and was given a medallion by Capone that he used when betting, later bestowed on Pancamo. He is fluent in Italian and English. He is from Little Italy, Manhattan, a Sicilian-American mobster serving time for tying a woman in a body bag and throwing her into the ocean. Unlike other prisoners with flashbacks showing their crimes, it's not mentioned what crime he was convicted of (presumably some degree of murder), nor is any context given for why he committed the crime. Extremely strong and physically imposing, he is primarily the muscle of the Wiseguys until he is later asked to take over by Antonio Nappa. Pancamo runs the gambling and drug businesses in Oz. He is generally regarded as one of the most feared and respected inmates, but makes several mistakes as a leader of the Sicilians. He is shown to be less cunning than other gang leaders such as Morales and Adebisi, however, unlike Morales and Adebisi, Pancamo usually finds a way to come out of each situation on top and is the only leader in Oz to survive the entire duration of the show.

Development

Tom Fontana, who hired Chuck Zito to play Pancamo, said, "I'm going to push you and your character. I'm going to take you to places you've never been." Zito replied, "That's fine. But there's one thing you should know. I don't do rapes, and I don't get raped. And I do my own wardrobe." [2] Zito is one of the few actors on the show that has spent time in prison. [3] When Zito auditioned for the role, the characters first name was "Sam", but was changed to Chucky after Zito received the part. [4]

Fictional history

Season 2

Pancamo acts as second-in-command to Peter Schibetta. Pancamo does not really like the black inmates who work in the kitchen and calls them "moolies". He helps Schibetta try to kill Simon Adebisi, leader of the Homeboys, the prison's black gangsters. Adebisi is able to defeat both of his attackers and knocks Pancamo out with a can of peaches. Adebisi rapes Schibetta, but Pancamo will not confirm that it has happened since he was unconscious. Things look up for Pancamo and the Sicilians when Pancamo’s mentor and former boss, Antonio Nappa arrives in Oz and quickly brings the Sicilians back into power. After taking Adebisi off of heroin for the time being with the help of Sicilian staff member Lenny Burrano, Nappa steals Adebisi's drugs and then makes Wangler an offer he can’t refuse - If he whacks Kipekemie Jara, an elderly, African man who has Adebisi under control, then Wangler and his paisans can work together with the Wiseguys and they will all call a truce. Wangler kills Jara and the Sicilians accept the Homeboys as their business partners.

Season 3

The season starts with Adebisi being released from the psych ward and coming back to work in the Sicilians kitchen. When Nappa gets infected with HIV, he makes Pancamo acting leader of the Sicilians. Afterwards, Pancamo finds out that Nappa is publishing a biography detailing all the criminal acts he has committed with the Mob. With the okay from Nappa's superiors in the Family outside of Oz, Pancamo has the book destroyed and has Nappa’s cellmate, Nat Ginzburg murder Nappa.

Adebisi comes to Pancamo, asking to be partners in the drug trade. Adebisi asks him that if he kills the other Homeboys, can he be their new partner. Pancamo agrees. Adebisi, with help from the Latinos, burns Poet and Pierce in the kitchen with hot soup and then Wangler is left without any help and at Adebisi's mercy. As a result, Pancamo, Adebisi and Hernandez now are three way partners in the drug trade in Oz. Pancamo represents the Sicilians in the Oz boxing tournament. After easily knocking out a Biker in round 1 of his first match, in Pancamo’s next bout in the tournament, Pancamo somehow loses to Cyril O'Reily, the mentally handicapped brother of Ryan O'Reily. Wondering how he lost to an inmate who he had over 60 lbs. on, he is told by Russian prisoner, Nikolai Stanislofsky that the fight was fixed by Russian mobster, Yuri Kosygin. With advice from O'Reily, Pancamo gets Kosygin placed in isolation by tricking him into trying to kill Stanislofsky.

Later, racial tension brews in Oz, and Pancamo tells Adebisi to cool the rhetoric or else they will be unable to sell drugs if Oz is locked down, 24/7. Adebisi refuses and Hernandez points out to Pancamo that Adebisi is in an insane state of mind again. Vern Schillinger talks to Pancamo and all the other white inmates in the cafeteria, claiming that they must all stick together because they are bound by the color of their skin. Warden Glynn however locks Oz down going into the new millennium.

Season 4 Part I

Oz is no longer locked down and things for the time being go back to normal until a mass shooting takes place in Emerald City. In Em City, Pancamo sponsors a new Italian-American prisoner named Ralph Galino, a contractor who is imprisoned for his alleged part in a building collapse. Galino then reveals that he has no criminal connections, worked an honest job and despises the Guido gangster stereotype that Pancamo and others like him give to law-abiding Italians and Sicilians. This causes the Wiseguys to ignore Galino as he is unable to provide any use to their operations. Hernandez reports Adebisi to the Warden for getting the gun inside Oz. In the meantime, a new Latino inmate Enrique Morales arrives in Oz. Because Morales comes in with credibility and Pancamo and Adebisi think Hernandez is on the verge of a mental breakdown, they prefer that Morales run the Latinos in the drug trade, giving him Hernandez's third if Hernandez is eliminated. Morales agrees and has senior-citizen inmate, Bob Rebadow kill him. In the meantime, another new prisoner Desmond Mobay, a Jamaican inmate needs into the drug game. Unknowing to Morales, Adebisi and Pancamo, Mobay is actually an African-American narcotics detective named Johnny Basil. They all ask Mobay to do a variety of tests to prove that he can be a reliable gangster such as taking repeated punches from Pancamo and snorting heroin (which undercover police officers are forbidden to do) among other things. A straw poll is then taken to determine if Mobay is worthy where Pancamo votes yes, Adebisi votes no and Morales abstains. To break this tie, they resolve that he will be a worthy ally under the condition that he kills an inmate, far from Em City. Mobay does so and for the time being has Pancamo's support.

Things get even better in the drug trade when new unit manager, an African American named Martin Querns replaces Tim McManus. Querns tells Adebisi that he, Pancamo and Morales can have unrestricted drug dealing if they prevent any violence from happening in Em City. He enforces this by making Pancamo, Morales and Adebisi trustees. In the meantime, Hank Schillinger, son of Aryan Brotherhood leader Vernon Schillinger, beats a murder charge for killing the son of Tobias Beecher. Beecher comes to Pancamo and hires him to arrange a hit on Hank, which he does after Beecher promptly pays him. Things get complicated, however, when several of the white inmates and guards are transferred out. All the new guards are black and all the new inmates are black and allied with Adebisi. When Pancamo's cellmate Don Zanghi is thrown into solitary confinement for getting into a racially charged fight with Mondo Browne, Pancamo is assaulted by a black guard named Officer Johnson with a billy club for protesting. Pancamo and Morales both talk to Adebisi about how they are disappointed with the way things are set up as a result. Adebisi tells them that he is cutting them out of the drug trade completely and when Morales threatens to go to war, Adebisi says that they will both lose since Em City is now overwhelmingly black and then tells them that he and Querns have arranged for the Sicilian and Latino inmates to be transferred to general population. In Unit B, Schillinger suggests to Pancamo and Hoyt that an all-white unit should be created which Unit B manager, McManus ardently rejects.

Season 4 Part II

After Adebisi has been killed by Kareem Said, Em City is running back to normal. With no leader the Homeboys are out of the drug trade so Pancamo and Morales are both cruising comfortably. Things get complicated when the Homeboys are brought back into the fold by new inmate Burr Redding. Pancamo and Morales offer a partnership that Redding rejects. As a result, Pancamo and Morales tell ex-communicated Homeboy Supreme Allah, whom Redding despises, that he can be their partner if he kills Redding. Supreme says yes with time so that he can get the approval of other Homeboys. In the meantime, Morales frames Redding for murdering a Chinese refugee and as a result Redding plans his own attack on the Latino and Sicilian inmates. The Sicilians and Latinos are playing basketball in the gym when the Homeboys are ready to ambush them. A deadly fight would have occurred had Augustus Hill not tipped off the COs. Supreme Allah is then killed and Redding is back in full swing.

Season 5

Pancamo is called to an interrogation by FBI agent Pierce Taylor, who tells him that a Sicilian hitman named Gaetano Cincetta has implicated him in the murder of Hank Schillinger. Pancamo denies everything to Agent Taylor, who tells Pancamo his next meeting is with Hank's father and Aryan Brotherhood leader Vernon Schillinger hinting that he'll tell Schillinger that Pancamo had Schillinger's son murdered. Pancamo informs Tobias Beecher after his meeting with Agent Taylor and promises Beecher because it was his mistake, he’ll cover for him. Later the Aryan Brotherhood attacks Pancamo and the Sicilians and James Robson approaches Pancamo from behind and stabs him in the side, putting him in the hospital. At the end of the season, Pancamo nearly dies in the hospital from a staph infection brought on by poor medical treatment, but he survives thanks to Oz's chief physician, Dr. Gloria Nathan. While Pancamo is in the hospital, the Sicilians fall apart: Schibetta is hospitalized after being gang raped by the Aryans, Redding convinces Warden Glynn to let him run the kitchen and kicks the Sicilians out, and Morales and Redding muscles them out of the drug trade. However, new inmate Frank Urbano takes over for Pancamo and helps them regain their standing. The Sicilians fight back against the Aryans and Urbano negotiates a favorable deal to take back their share of the drug trade.

Season 6

At the beginning of season 6, Pancamo is released from the hospital ward and his partnership in the drug trade with Morales is running smoothly. Ryan O'Reily lies to Pancamo about Peter Schibetta wishing to curse Pancamo with the evil eye, but Pancamo believes him and he and the Sicilians kill Schibetta and remove his eye. Pancamo then attacks James Robson in the prison library, but Robson is saved by a C.O. From there, Robson seeks protection from Wolfgang Cutler, who makes him his sex slave. Pancamo later tries to assault Robson in the cafeteria, but Cutler steps in and fights him off. When Redding takes the Homeboys to work as telemarketers, Glynn gives back control of the kitchen to Pancamo and the Sicilians under the condition that they stay away from the Aryans. In the gym, Pancamo and the other Sicilians approach Robson with an offer he can’t refuse. They tell him that if he whacks Cutler, they will forgive him. Robson has sex with Cutler one last time then hangs Cutler, making it look like a suicide. Pancamo is then approached by Redding, who asks him to stop any attempt by the Homeboys to deal drugs so they will be forced back to work as telemarketers. Pancamo gladly does so and has one of Poet's drug connections outside of prison killed. Pancamo then sees a new inmate selling hash brownies in the cafeteria. The Sicilians corner him and kill him with hot steam from a pipe inside the storage room. In the end, the Sicilians have a monopoly over the drug trade, with the Homeboys working as telemarketers and the Latinos leaderless after Morales is killed in the infirmary. In the meantime, a gay nightclub owner named Alonzo Torquemada is sent to Oz and sells designer drugs called D-Tabs. Torquemada approaches Pancamo with an offer he can't refuse - A partnership using his connection through Pancamo's nephew, Angelo as a reference. Pancamo accepts and to celebrate their new partnership, Torquemada gives Pancamo some free D-Tabs for him to pass among the Sicilians.

Related Research Articles

<i>Oz</i> (TV series) American drama television series

Oz is an American prison drama television series set at a fictional men's prison created and principally written by Tom Fontana. It was the first one-hour dramatic television series to be produced by the premium cable network HBO. Oz premiered on July 12, 1997, and ran for six seasons. The series finale aired on February 23, 2003.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aryan Brotherhood</span> Neo-Nazi prison gang and organized crime syndicate

The Aryan Brotherhood is a neo-Nazi prison gang and an organized crime syndicate that is based in the United States and has an estimated 15,000–20,000 members both inside and outside prisons. The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) has characterized it as "the nation's oldest major white supremacist prison gang and a national crime syndicate" while the Anti-Defamation League calls it the "oldest and most notorious racist prison gang in the United States". According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Aryan Brotherhood makes up an extremely low percentage of the entire US prison population, but it is responsible for a disproportionately large number of prison murders.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chuck Zito</span> American actor

Charles Carmine Zito Jr. is an American actor and boxer who is the former president of the New York chapter of the Hells Angels, and later became an actor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Simon Adebisi</span> Fictional character

Simon Adebisi is a fictional character played by Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje on the HBO dramatic series Oz. Initially a side character, Adebisi later serves as one of the main characters in the first four seasons, beginning with the fourth episode of the first season where he is eventually promoted to leader of the Homeboys gang. After the first half of season four, his character was killed off the show so Akinnuoye-Agbaje could film the movie The Mummy Returns.

Officer Diane Whittlesey is a fictional character played by Edie Falco on the television program Oz. According to an article in The New York Times, Whittlesey was modeled after a female unit manager whom series creator Tom Fontana met at a prison in southern New Jersey.

James Robson is a fictional character in the television series Oz, portrayed by R.E. Rodgers. Originally, Robson was supposed to be on for one episode and then never to be seen again. However, series creator Tom Fontana was impressed by Rodgers, so Robson became a regular from the third season to the final episode.

<i>Blood In Blood Out</i> 1993 film directed by Taylor Hackford

Blood In Blood Out is a 1993 American epic crime drama film directed by Taylor Hackford that has become a cult-classic film among the Mexican-American community. It follows the intertwining lives of three Chicano relatives from 1972 to 1984. They start out as members of a street gang in East Los Angeles, and as dramatic incidents occur, their lives and friendships are forever changed. Blood In Blood Out was filmed in 1991 throughout Los Angeles and inside California's San Quentin State Prison.

Ryan O'Reily is a main character in the television series Oz. He was portrayed by Dean Winters from 1997 to 2003.

Augustus Hill is a fictional character, played by Harold Perrineau on the American television show Oz, serving as the show's narrator.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tobias Beecher</span> Fictional character

Tobias Beecher is a main character on the television show Oz, played by Lee Tergesen. He is one of only nine regular characters to survive the entire run of the show. The others are Bob Rebadow, Ryan O'Reily, Miguel Alvarez, Arnold "Poet" Jackson, Sister Peter Marie Reimondo, Tim McManus, Father Ray Mukada, and Dr. Gloria Nathan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vernon Schillinger</span> Fictional character

Vernon Schillinger is a fictional character played by American actor J. K. Simmons on the HBO series Oz as a major antagonist.

Cyril O'Reily is a fictional character, played by American actor Scott William Winters, on the HBO drama Oz. He is also mentioned in the companion book Oz: Behind These Walls: The Journal of Augustus Hill.

Kenny "Bricks" Wangler is a fictional character in the HBO drama series Oz, portrayed by J. D. Williams.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dino Ortolani</span> Fictional character

Dino Ortolani, played by Jon Seda, is a fictional character who appeared in three episodes of the HBO series Oz. Although he dies in the first episode of the series, which is more or less centered on his character, his death has a strong impact on the rest of the first season.

Shirley Bellinger, played by Kathryn Erbe in the HBO series Oz, is a fictional character who was first presented in the related book OZ: Behind These Walls: The Journal of Augustus Hill. She is based on child murderer Susan Smith.

Governor James Devlin is a fictional character on the HBO drama Oz, played by Željko Ivanek.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Routine</span> 1st episode of the 1st season of Oz

"The Routine" is the pilot and first episode of the HBO prison drama television series Oz. Written by Tom Fontana and directed by Darnell Martin, it aired originally on July 12, 1997.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Green Goblin (Ultimate Marvel character)</span> Comics character

The Green Goblin is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character is the Ultimate Marvel version of Norman Osborn, and was rendered by artist Mark Bagley to resemble actor Brian Dennehy, as per writer Brian Michael Bendis's instructions.

References

  1. Bianculli, David (July 11, 2000). "'OZ' PEN IS MIGHTIER Prison drama continues to be one of TV's best". Daily News Archives. Retrieved 6 July 2017.
  2. Joe Layden, Sean Penn, and Chuck Zito, Street Justice (Macmillan, 2003), 274.
  3. Rubin, Mike (July 1999). "Lost in Oz". SPIN. Retrieved July 6, 2017.
  4. Kurson, Ken (July 13, 2000). "Hell's real-life angel". Bankrate. Retrieved 6 July 2017.