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Lucy Mancini

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Created by
  
Mario Puzo

Gender
  
Female

Played by
  
Jeannie Linero

First appearance
  
The Godfather

Last appearance
  
The Godfather Part III

Portrayed by
  
Jeannie Linero

Spouse(s)
  
Dr. Jules Segal

Creator
  
Mario Puzo

Children
  
Vincent Corleone


Movies
  
The Godfather, The Godfather Part III

Similar
  
Sonny Corleone, Sandra Corleone, Don Tommasino, Anthony Corleone, Cardinal Lamberto

Lucy Mancini is a fictional character in Mario Puzo's The Godfather. She was portrayed by Jeannie Linero in The Godfather and The Godfather Part III.

Contents

Lucy Mancini The Godfatherquot novel39s strange vagina subplot revisited

She is one of the childhood friends of Vito Corleone's children, particularly his daughter, Connie. She is the maid of honor at Connie's wedding. Lucy has sex with Vito's son Sonny at the wedding and has a brief extramarital affair with him. The novel and the films diverge in their treatments of Lucy's fate after Sonny's death.

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In the novel

Lucy Mancini Lucy Mancini Address Phone Number Public Records Radaris

In the novel, Lucy is a fairly important supporting character, with several chapters dedicated to her story. After Sonny's death, Vito's consigliere, Tom Hagen sends Lucy to Las Vegas. She is given a small interest (five and later ten "points") in one of the family's hotels, primarily so that she can keep an eye on Vito's middle son, Fredo, who is learning the hotel and casino business. She also serves as a shareholder-of-record who has no criminal record: several such owners are necessary for a valid gaming license. On paper she is a millionaire, although she does not vote her shares in the casinos.

Eventually, Lucy establishes a new life in Las Vegas, and becomes largely independent of the Corleone clan. She is lonely, however, and occasionally pines for Sonny: while never having loved him or even truly known him, she misses him as a lover, and cannot achieve sexual satisfaction with anyone else. That changes when she meets, falls in love with, and eventually marries, surgeon Jules Segal. He explains that her difficulty in reaching orgasm is caused by a loose vagina, which commonly results from multiple childbirths. In Lucy's case, this appears to be congenital and can be remedied with simple vaginal surgery. After Segal's colleague in Los Angeles performs the surgery, Lucy is able to enjoy sex again, and she and Jules presumably are happily married.

In the film

In Francis Ford Coppola's film adaptations, Lucy's role is minimal. She is seen as a young woman in The Godfather, but her character is not featured after Sonny's death. She makes no appearance in The Godfather Part II, and in The Godfather Part III, she is present in a manner inconsistent with her fate as described in The Godfather novel. Lucy is the mother of Sonny's illegitimate son, Vincent, who eventually succeeds Michael Corleone as the head of the Corleone crime family. She appears briefly as a guest in the party scene at the beginning of the film when Michael invites Vincent to join the family for a group photo. In Puzo's novel, Sonny does not impregnate her.

References

Lucy Mancini Wikipedia