Joe Negri, jazz guitar virtuoso and Mr. Rogers’ ‘Handyman,’ dies at nearly 100
‘Joe Negri radiates life as an art form’
He was on the list.
Joe Negri, one of America’s best jazz guitarists and a key
part of “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood,” died Saturday, just days short of
turning 100.
Lisa Negri, his oldest daughter, said that her father died
of natural causes. He and his family, along with many in Pittsburgh’s music
world, were preparing to celebrate his legacy for his 100th birthday, June 10.
Negri, a Pittsburgh native, was a musician from childhood.
He began to play guitar at age 8 and was touring nationally with swing bands by
16. Except for a brief stint in New York City, Negri spent his life in
Pittsburgh, as a musician, educator and TV performer.
On “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood,” he was Handyman Negri, the
fix-it man in the Land of Make-Believe, as well as proprietor of Negri’s Music
Shop, where he’d perform and showcase music. Negri was on the show for its
entire three-decade run.
As an adjunct professor at the University of Pittsburgh and
Duquesne University for decades, Negri instructed generations of musicians in
the art of jazz guitar. At Duquesne, he founded the jazz guitar program and
taught there until 2022. He retired from Pitt in 2019, after nearly 50 years of
teaching.
“Joe Negri radiates life as an art form,” said Pitt
professor of music Deane Root, then chair of the department. “He crosses
generations and he brings out the best in the musicians he plays with.”
A 2016 TribLive article previewed a performance of “Mass of
Hope: The Mass in the Jazz Idiom,” a composition by Negri. “My love and my
passion for music continues to dominate my daily life,” he said.
As a performer, he played widely, from the Manchester
Craftsmen’s Guild and Pittsburgh Symphony to jazz clubs large and small.
In 2019, Negri received a Lifetime Achievement in the Arts
award from the state of Pennsylvania, part of the Governor’s Awards for the
Arts.
He appeared as himself and as "Handyman Negri" in
the Neighborhood of Make-Believe segments on Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. He
appeared on the 1959 children's television program Adventure Time with Paul
Shannon and with Johnny Costa on the 1954 TV series 67 Melody Lane hosted by
Ken Griffin.
Negri taught jazz guitar for 49 years at the University of
Pittsburgh, where jazz guitar was first offered as a discipline in higher
education. He taught for 46 years at Duquesne University, as well as at
Carnegie Mellon University.
At the age of three, Negri began performing on radio,
playing the ukulele and singing. He joined the local musicians' union and began
playing professional engagements. In the 1940s, he toured nationally and was a
member of the Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm Orchestra from 1943 until
1944, when he served in the U.S. Army for two years.
After returning home, he performed in Pittsburgh with his
brother, pianist Bobby Negri. In the 1950s, he enrolled at Carnegie Mellon
University, concentrated on music composition, spent the majority of his time
playing locally around the Pittsburgh area and often worked with pianist Johnny
Costa on KDKA television. His trio, with accordionlist Dom Trimarkie and
bassist Lou Mauro, were the regular band on the live KDKA variety show Buzz and
Bill, hosted by the team of Buzz Aston and Bill Hinds. Around 1960, WTAE,
Pittsburgh's ABC television outlet, hired him as its music director, assuming
the role for over 20 years. Negri played on various live programs and composed
theme music. He met Fred Rogers at WTAE, when Rogers hosted a short-lived
children's show. In 1968, Negri began appearing as Handyman Negri on the
children's program Mister Rogers' Neighborhood until Rogers ceased production
of new episodes in 2000. Though many assume Negri was part of the musical
ensemble on the show, in fact he only occasionally joined the show's band on
special occasions. Most of his work on the program involved his Handyman Negri
character or portraying himself as owner of "Negri's Music Shop" when
Rogers presented musical guests.
Negri taught guitar and later helped Duquesne University
establish a jazz guitar program. Over the years he taught many students
including Ralph Patt, the inventor of major-thirds tuning. Negri and Patt
recorded together in 1989.
In 2010 he recorded the album Fly Me to the Moon with
Michael Feinstein and performed with him during the following year at the
Newport Jazz Festival. Negri was the subject of a profile in the September 2010
issue of Vintage Guitar magazine written by Rich Kienzle.
Joe Negri died on May 30, 2026, at the age of 99, 11 days
before his 100th birthday.
Discography
As leader
Guitar, With Love (True Image Recordings, 1960)
Afternoon in Rio (MCG Jazz, 1998)
Guitars for Christmas (MCG Jazz, 2003)
Uptown Elegance (MCG Jazz, 2004) with Buddy DeFranco
Dream Dancing (Noteworthy Jazz, 2010)
As sideman
Michael Feinstein, Fly Me to the Moon (DuckHole, 2010)
Other works
A Common Sense Approach to Improvisation for Guitar (Mel
Bay, 2002)
Actor
Lenny Meledandri and Fred Rogers in Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood (1968)
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
8.8
TV Series
Handyman NegriJoe NegriFather Elephant ...
1968–2001
331 episodes
Kismet (1967)
Kismet
7.6
TV Movie
Courtier (uncredited)
1967
Fred Rogers in MisteRogers (1961)
MisteRogers
8.9
TV Series
Handyman NegriJoe NegriMr. Negri
1964–1966
9 episodes
Music Department
Lenny Meledandri and Fred Rogers in Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood (1968)
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
8.8
TV Series
musician
1998
1 episode
Old Friends... New Friends (1978)
Old Friends... New Friends
8.2
TV Series
musician
1980
1 episode
Morgan Freeman in Drink, Drank, Drunk (1974)
Drink, Drank, Drunk
TV Special
arranger (segment "There's a Tavern in the Town")
1974
Summer Sounds
TV Movie
musician: guitar
1966
Composer
Summer Sounds
TV Movie
Composer
1966
Soundtrack
Official Alongside Night Movie Poster
Alongside Night
2.9
Soundtrack ("Gypsy Jam")
2014
Lenny Meledandri and Fred Rogers in Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood (1968)
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
8.8
TV Series
performer: "Let's Think of Something to Do While We're
Waiting", "A Man Who Manufactures"performer: "Let's Think
of Something to Do While We're Waiting", "I'm a Man Who
Manufactures"performer: "Once Upon Each Lovely Day" (uncredited)
...
1970–2000
22 episodes
Summer Sounds
TV Movie
Soundtrackmusic: "Pittsburgh, Pa.}performer:
"Pittsburgh, Pa.}, "The River is Wide", "Lazy
Afternoon", "The Things We Did Last Summer" ("Got a Lot of
Living to Do", "Once in a Lifetime", "Cruisin' Down the
River", "Take Me Out to the Ball Game", "(You Gotta Have)
Heart", "On a Picnic We Will Go")
1966
Self
Fred Rogers in Mister Rogers' Neighborhood (1968)
Mister Rogers: It's You I Like
8.3
Self
2018
We Knew What We Had: The Greatest Jazz Story Never Told
(2018)
We Knew What We Had: The Greatest Jazz Story Never Told
Self
2018
Fred Rogers in Won't You Be My Neighbor? (2018)
Won't You Be My Neighbor?
8.3
Self - 'Handyman Negri'
2018
Speedy Delivery (2008)
Speedy Delivery
8.6
Self
2008
Christmastime with Mister Rogers
8.8
TV Special
Self - Handyman Negri
1977
Summer Sounds
TV Movie
Self - Host, performer
1966
Fred Rogers in MisteRogers (1961)
MisteRogers
8.9
TV Series
SelfSelf - Handyman Negri
1965
2 episodes
Archive Footage
Lenny Meledandri and Fred Rogers in Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood (1968)
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
8.8
TV Series
Joe Negri (archive footage)
1976
1 episode