George DiCaprio
George Paul DiCaprio is an American comic book author and actor who has collaborated with Timothy Leary and Laurie Anderson. He is the father of actor Leonardo DiCaprio.
Early life
DiCaprio was born George Paul DiCaprio on October 2, 1943 in New York City to George Leon DiCaprio and Olga Anne Jacobs. His father was the son of Italian immigrants, Salvatore Di Caprio and Rosina Cassella, and his mother was of German descent.Career
DiCaprio was active in underground comix throughout the 1970s, as a writer, editor, publisher, and distributor. He is known for such titles as Greaser Comics, Forbidden Knowledge, and Cocaine Comix, collaborating with artists such as Laurie Anderson, Pete von Sholly, and Rich Chidlaw.DiCaprio's first foray into comix came in 1970 with Baloney Moccasins Comics: A Magazine for the Medieval Mind, a politically themed one-shot densely illustrated by Laurie Anderson. The book was released by DiCaprio's short-lived self-publishing imprint, Half-Ass Press.
In 1979, Last Gasp published the one-shot comic Neurocomics: Timothy Leary. "Evolved from transmissions of Dr. Timothy Leary as filtered through Pete Von Sholly & George DiCaprio", "Neurocomics was written by DiCaprio based on Timothy Leary's extensive ruminations on" life, the brain, and intelligence. As M. Steven Fox of ComixJoint wrote of the project, "though a 32-page book cannot possibly convey the full complexity of an elaborate concept like the eight-circuit model of consciousness, Neurocomics provides a concise primer on the subject."
As a distributor in the 1970s and 1980s, DiCaprio supplied West Coast retailers with underground and independent comics.
DiCaprio was also a performance artist. Comics writer Harvey Pekar details a performance in Los Angeles in February 1988 where DiCaprio claimed that he did "a light show using brine shrimp and worms. I'd hit 'em with cold water and they'd move around and I'd project 'em on a wall magnified. It blew people's minds."
DiCaprio played an important role in his son's early career as an actor. He used to screen scripts for him, and was instrumental in getting Leo to portray Arthur Rimbaud in the 1995 film Total Eclipse.
Since 2008, DiCaprio has worked as an executive producer in the film industry, mainly for documentaries and short films; one of his first assignments was as a co-executive producer of the TV series Greensburg,
In 2021, he made his film acting debut, portraying Mr. Jack in Paul Thomas Anderson's film Licorice Pizza. DiCaprio's son, Leonardo, would play the lead role in Anderson's subsequent film, One Battle After Another.
Personal life
DiCaprio met Irmelin Indenbirken, a German immigrant, in college; the two later married and moved to Los Angeles. The couple had one son, Leonardo DiCaprio, and divorced shortly after, when Leonardo was a year old, so DiCaprio could begin a relationship with another woman named Peggy Farrar. He has a stepson, Adam Farrar, through his marriage to Peggy Farrar. While Leonardo lived mostly with his mother, his parents agreed to live next door to each other so as not to deprive him of his father's presence in his life. He credits his father for providing motivation and guidance on filmmaking.DiCaprio has an interest in pursuing politics in July 2025.
Comics
Publisher
- Baloney Moccasins Comics: A Magazine for the Medieval Mind — also writer
- Greaser Comics #1 — also writer
- Yama Yama/The Ugly Head – flip book made in response to the work of Gary Panter and the burgeoning punk art scene; Robert Williams illustrated "Yama Yama" while S. Clay Wilson illustrated "The Ugly Head"
- Hoo-Bee-Boo #1 — features the work of Rick Potts, Christopher Lissner, Tit & Tat, James Cotner, RxCx, Eddii Ruscha, Tomata du Plenty, Kent Moorman, Vincent-Michael Edwards, and the Fuk Boys ; edited by Will Amato
Editor
- Baloney Moccasins Comics: A Magazine for the Medieval Mind
- Greaser Comics #1–2
- Forbidden Knowledge #1–2 – edited by DiCaprio & Pete von Sholly, with contributions from Robert Williams, Rich Chidlaw, Matt Golden, Brent Boates, Art Vitello, Milt Gray, Jean Paul Laurens, Jim Himes, Icelandic Codpiece Comics Studio, Dennis Ellis, Chris Lane, Warren Greenwood, Doug Hansen, Pete Von X, and Johnny Edgar
- Bicentennial Gross-Outs #1 — co-edited with William Stout
- Cocaine Comix #1-4 – co-edited with Rich Chidlaw
Writer
- Baloney Moccasins Comics: A Magazine for the Medieval Mind — wrote entire issue; illustrated by Laurie Anderson
- "Don't Bite the Bullit!", "El Hypno-Bandito," "Great Moments of the 50's," "Great Balls of Fire!", and "Sexism is Out!", Greaser Comics #1 – stories and art; inks by R. Jaccoma
- Greaser Comics #2 – wrote entire issue; stories illustrated by Jim Janes
- "On The Road to Babylon", Pure Joy Comix #1
- "Computer Date", Snarf #6
- * Translated and republished in El Víbora #39
- "Anthony and the Temptations", Arcade: The Comics Revue #5
- "Roscoe Pitts - The Man who Changed his Fingerprints!!", Bicentennial Gross-Outs #1
- "Great American Assassins: Dr. Frank Holt", Bicentennial Gross-Outs #1
- "Wildroot: A Year Passes Like Nothing When You Spend Spring On The Floor Part One," "Wildroot: Part Two: House Of Divino," "Wildroot: Godzilla vs. the Cocaine Monster!!", and "Wildroot: Shoot-out at the Hollywood Ranch Market", Cocaine Comix #1
- "Atomic Follies" with Pete von Sholly and Quinn, Forbidden Knowledge #2
- "The Man They Couldn't Hang!", Forbidden Knowledge #2
- "Dr. Leary's Evolutionary Deli" and "S.M.I².L.E." with Timothy Leary, Tim Kummero, and Pete von Sholly; illustrated by Pete Von Sholly, Neurocomics
- "The Asbestos Workers' Revenge!!", Slow Death #10
- "Wildroot: Night of the Nearly Dead", Cocaine Comix #2
- "Taste the Base of Nostrilachoo!", Cocaine Comix #3 — art by DiCaprio
- * Translated and republished in U-Comix #54
- "Citizen Caine", Cocaine Comix #4