





Delectable Italian food, passed down through the generations, is at the heart of Nonnas: Zeppole, capuzzelle, generations-old red sauce, the list goes on. So it makes sense that the actors and creatives behind the new comedy film have strong opinions about how these ancestral dishes should be prepared.

Nonnas, directed by Stephen Chbosky, centers on Joe Scaravella (Vince Vaughn), a born-and-bred Brooklynite who, after the loss of both his mother and his grandmother, turns to what has brought him comfort his entire life: Italian dishes home-cooked by family, shared by many. With his mom’s insurance money and some help from his best friend Bruno (Joe Manganiello), he opens Enoteca Maria — a restaurant in Staten Island serving food cooked by four nonnas, or grandmothers: Antonella (Brenda Vaccaro), Teresa (Talia Shire), Gia (Susan Sarandon), and Roberta (Lorraine Bracco). “I enjoy food and spending time with friends and family — that connection, sharing an experience with people you enjoy,” says Vaughn about what drew him to the project, which is based on the real Staten Island restaurant Enoteca Maria. Adds Chbosky: “We were interested in what the food revealed about the characters and culture more than just the food itself.”

Food has guided Chbosky’s understanding of his family’s history: “What I found most profound about the story of the food itself is something that I actually recognized in my own family, having an Eastern European background. When they got here, they wanted to be Americans. And so a lot of the customs went away,” says the director, who helmed The Perks of Being a Wallflower (2012) and Wonder (2017). “But what stayed was the food, and I always think: That’s the last thing to go in any immigrant story. And since I see Nonnas partly as a story of the descendants of immigrants, that was a very profound linchpin for me.”

Here, Nonnas actors Vaccaro, Manganiello, and Sarandon, as well as the film’s writer Liz Maccie (Siren), share their own cherished family recipes. Head to the grocery story and invite your loved ones over for an Italian feast — and maybe afterwards, turn on Nonnas, out on Netflix now. As Chbosky puts it, “Life, for all of its complications, is about the love of family, traditions, food, and the wonderful eccentric characters that come with it. That’s really what makes life worth living.”







































































