Charlie Picerni was born in Corona Queens, New York. The fourth of five
children to Italian parents. After high school, he worked different
jobs, one being construction work on high-rise buildings in Manhattan.
He married, at a young age, his childhood girlfriend, Marie. He had a
son after one year of marriage and decided he didn't want to work in
construction, anymore. So, he headed west to try his luck in the movie
business!
His brother,
Paul Picerni, was an actor on
a hit TV show at that time called
The Untouchables (1959).
Charlie worked as a stand-in, an extra and started doing stunt double
work. Charlie immediately fell in love with this work and moved his
family to California. Charlie excelled as a stuntman and then moved up
to stunt-coordinating TV shows. He got his big break on
Starsky and Hutch (1975),
he was the stunt coordinator and
Paul Michael Glaser's stunt double.
Aaron Spelling and
Duke Vincent saw what direction Charlie was
heading in - Directing"!
He started second unit-directing
Starsky and Hutch (1975)
and then moved up to directing episodes of "Starsky". He continued
stunt-coordinating and second unit-directing such shows as
Kojak (1973) and
Magnum, P.I. (1980). He then
started directing television for producers
Aaron Spelling,
Leonard Goldberg and
Stephen J. Cannell, for such shows as
T.J. Hooker (1982),
Matt Houston (1982),
Vega$ (1978),
Hardcastle and McCormick (1983),
Hunter (1984),
Stingray (1986),
Finder of Lost Loves (1984),
The A-Team (1983),
J.J. Starbuck (1987),
Spenser: For Hire (1985),
Blue Thunder (1984),
Gavilan (1982) and HBO's
Tales from the Crypt (1989).
At that time, Charlie caught Warner Brothers producer
Joel Silver's eye. Joel hired
Charlie to stunt-coordinate
Die Hard (1988). This led to second
unit-directing and stunt-coordinating on the films,
Die Hard 2 (1990),
Road House (1989),
Lethal Weapon 2 (1989) &
Lethal Weapon 3 (1992),
Hudson Hawk (1991),
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation (1989),
The Last Boy Scout (1991),
Demolition Man (1993),
Ghost (1990),
Ricochet (1991),
Basic Instinct (1992),
A Low Down Dirty Shame (1994),
True Romance (1993),
2 Days in the Valley (1996),
15 Minutes (2001) and many more.
Charlie also, during this time, directed multiple episodes on a TV
series, called
Seven Days (1998),
for Paramount studios.
Charlie also worked as an actor in many TV and film projects throughout
his career. Realizing he wanted to further his career as a director, he
studied at the "Beverly Hills Playhouse" in the Master class for two
years. In 2007, he directed, produced and co-wrote a feature film
entitled
Three Days to Vegas (2007),
starring
Peter Falk,
Rip Torn and
George Segal. In 2010, Charlie
directed
Ayn Rand's play, "Night of January
16th", at the Odyssey Theatre to rave reviews! While continuing to work
in all avenues of the motion picture business, he is developing and
writing his own project called "Spaghetti Park", which he will produce
and direct.
Charlie is a proud member of "The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and
Sciences".