Dill from “To Kill a Mockingbird” Was (Almost) in “The Godfather, Part II”

hyman roth

One of the most memorable childhood characters from film (and novels) is Dill from Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird (1962). In the movie version, John Megna portrayed Dill, who Lee had based upon her friend Truman Capote. Megna also almost appeared in The Godfather, Part II (1974), in a scene deleted from the movie before it was released.

Megna was born in Queens, New York on November 9, 1952. He had several roles as a child and young man in film and television, notably appearing near the beginning of another classic film, Hush. . . Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964), a few years after Mockingbird.

Fans of the original Star Trek series may remember him as one of the Onlies from the “Miri” episode. Yet, his most memorable role remains his portrayal of Dill in To Kill a Mockingbird.

Megna nearly appeared in another all-time great movie. Director Francis Ford Coppola filmed a scene featuring Robert DeNiro as the young Vito Corleone meeting a young man played by Megna. As the young man’s name is discussed, Corleone bestows a new name on him. The scene connects to the modern story with Micheal Corleone (Al Pacino) and his conflicts with Hyman Roth.

Ultimately, though, Coppola cut the scene. Perhaps the backstory was so convenient it might not be believable for viewers. But either way, it was unfortunate Megna lost his scene.  [2020 Update: Unfortunately, the scene seems to no longer be available on YouTube.]

In the cut scene, the young man names Arnold Rothstein as a man he admires. Rothstein was famous for allegedly fixing the 1919 World Series featuring the Chicago White Sox (“Black Sox”) and the Cincinnati Reds.

As for Megna, he eventually left acting. For a while he directed plays, and then he taught high school English in California. He died on September 4, 1995 at the age of 42 from AIDs-related complications. Despite his young death, he left his mark on movie history as one of our most beloved childhood characters.

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    New Footage of 1919 “Black Sox Scandal” World Series

    Black Sox
    The Library and Archives Canada and the Dawson City Museum in Yukon, Canada has made available newly discovered film of the famous 1919 World Series. As featured in Eight Men Out (1988), many of the White Sox players, including Shoeless Joe Jackson, were banned from baseball for allegedly throwing the series to the Cincinnati Reds.

    The more than four minutes of baseball footage is probably the best quality video of the most infamous World Series in baseball history. British Canadian Pathé News filmed the scenes, and the film was stored in an old swimming pool-hockey rink before being found again in the Canadian archive in January.

    The segment includes scenes from the first and third games of the series (starting with some clips of the third game). Among the scenes, at around the 3:06 mark there is a short clip of what legend reports as a bungled double-play ball by Swede Risberg after Eddie Cicotte made a great play in stopping the ball. For more descriptions of what is on the film, check out the story from the Society for American Baseball Research. To watch the film, check it out below.

    Thanks to Sonja for telling me about the fascinating video.

    Do you think the White Sox players should have been banned forever? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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