Michael Rossi

Michael Rossi is a fictional character in the novel Peyton Place by Grace Metalious. Michael Rossi is a teacher and high school principal who had replaced Abner Firth, the preceding teacher and principal who had died of a heart attack. He becomes the love interest of Constance MacKenzie, a woman with a hidden past.

The character of Rossi was originally called Tomas Makris, bearing the name and description of a Laconia resident and co-worker of Metalious's school teacher husband. However, Makris sued for libel, winning an out-of-court settlement for $60,000. Makris was renamed Michael Rossi in later printings, and in the film and TV series which derived from the novel. In editions published in the United Kingdom, he was called Michael Kyros, although in Return to Peyton Place, he was named Michael Rossi.

In the 1957 movie Peyton Place, Michael Rossi is played by Lee Philips.

In the TV series Peyton Place, which ran from 1964–1969, the character of Dr. Rossi was played by Ed Nelson. Rossi's profession was changed from high school principal to doctor. The former doctor, Matthew Swain, becomes the editor of the Peyton Place Clarion.


Peyton Place
Characters
  • Constance MacKenzie
  • Allison MacKenzie
  • Michael Rossi
  • Matthew Swain
  • Rodney Harrington
  • Betty Anderson
  • Selena Cross
  • Lucas Cross
  • Leslie Harrington
Related topics
  • Grace Metalious
  • Return to Peyton Place
  • Peyton Place (film)
  • Return to Peyton Place (film)
  • Peyton Place (TV series)
  • Return to Peyton Place (TV series)
  • Murder in Peyton Place
  • Peyton Place: The Next Generation

Famous quotes containing the words michael and/or rossi:

    I stick my neck out for nobody. I’m the only cause I’m interested in.
    Julius J. Epstein, screenwriter, Philip Epstein, screenwriter, and Howard Koch, screenwriter. Michael Curtiz. Rick Blaine (Humphrey Bogart)

    Nothing is so threatening to conventional values as a man who does not want to work or does not want to work at a challenging job, and most people are disturbed if a man in a well- paying job indicates ambivalence or dislike toward it.
    —Alice S. Rossi (b. 1922)