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The Family Hour: An Oral History of The Sopranos #644988
04/24/12 05:50 PM
04/24/12 05:50 PM
Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 26
Europe
black_velvet Offline OP
Wiseguy
black_velvet  Offline OP
Wiseguy
Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 26
Europe
Since that controversial last episode of The Sopranos, in June 2007, the cast and crew have never spoken so candidly about the show that changed both their lives and the showbiz landscape. With creator David Chase leading the way, Sam Kashner gets a behind-the-scenes history of a national obsession as James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Michael Imperioli, and other Sopranos insiders talk about their years as a family, the trauma when someone got whacked, and making their peace with the finale.

There’s a marvelous moment in the second episode of The Sopranos, in which an actor portraying Martin Scorsese is whisked into a nightclub while Christopher Moltisanti, a member of Tony Soprano’s crew, recognizes the famous director and yells out, “Marty! Kundun. I liked it,” referring to the director’s 1997 film about the early life of the Dalai Lama. As a number of the series’s writers told Vanity Fair, a thread of Buddhism runs through several of these 86 tales of murder, betrayal, lust, ambition, and psychotherapy. In Tony’s symbol-laden, near-death dream as he fights for life after being shot in the gut by Uncle Junior, a Buddhist monk gives Tony a Zen-like slap, knocking him to the ground, challenging him to give up his arrogance. But Buddhism isn’t the only surprising element in this saga of a New Jersey crime family; the series creator, David Chase, and his writers were influenced as much by The Honeymooners and The Three Stooges as by Francis Ford Coppola or Martin Scorsese. The over-the-top violence, for instance, was inspired by the Stooges and also by William Wellman’s The Public Enemy, James Cagney’s 1931 tour-de-force gangster movie, and Cagney himself was a major influence on Chase and many of the writers and actors, such as Tony Sirico, who played Paulie Walnuts with such accuracy that people thought he was a made guy in real life. Tony Soprano (James Gandolfini) is even shown watching the scene of a murdered Cagney, trussed up like a mummy, falling facedown through his mother’s front door. (The depiction of violence on-screen has evolved since 1931, when, incredibly, real bullets were used in The Public Enemy.)

Following its debut, on January 10, 1999, The Sopranos became America’s magnificent obsession. The reviews were so ecstatic that they became the subject of a Saturday Night Live spoof (“The Sopranos is so good, if I had to choose between watching The Sopranos and breathing, I’d pause … think about it … then watch another episode”). The cast and crew were showered with praise. Journeyman New York actors such as Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Michael Imperioli, and Tony Sirico were suddenly rock stars. Their public appearances at hotels and casinos drew thousands of fans. The show hit every cultural marker: a parody in Mad magazine; the covers of Vanity Fair, Rolling Stone, TV Guide, even The New Yorker; appearances on The Simpsons; not to mention the inevitable academic treatise (“Coming Heavy: Intertextuality and Genre in The Sopranos”). It inspired a pinball machine and a video game (The Sopranos: Road to Respect).

It’s a delicious irony that David Chase—a man devoted to the films of Stanley Kubrick, Scorsese, and Roman Polanski—who had always wanted to direct and write for the movies, scored such a big hit on television. (Chase has finally written and directed his first feature film, Not Fade Away, about a rock band in 1960s New Jersey, starring James Gandolfini and John Magaro, to be released later this year.)

During the six seasons it was on the air, The Sopranos knocked over Emmys like so many bowling pins (112 nominations and 21 wins), and—as many testify here—changed the game. It was nominated for outstanding drama series throughout its entire run, and in 2004 it won, a first for cable television. It raised the bar not just for cable and network TV but for the movies as well. Allen Coulter, one of the show’s directors, was given his first feature film, Hollywoodland—based on Hollywood Kryptonite, a book I co-authored with Nancy Schoenberger—as a result of his work on The Sopranos. Other Sopranos alumni graduated to award-winning cable shows: executive producer Matthew Weiner created Mad Men, executive producer Terence Winter brought Boardwalk Empire into being (starring Steve Buscemi, who played Tony’s hapless, jailbird cousin Tony Blundetto on The Sopranos), Tim Van Patten directed episodes of Boardwalk Empire and Game of Thrones, the writing team of Robin Green and Mitchell Burgess created Blue Bloods, and writer Todd A. Kessler was one of the creators of Damages.

(............)

http://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2012/04/sopranos-oral-history

Just read this lengthy article about the Sopranos and thought you might like it. wink


Un giorno, e non arrivi mai quel giorno, ti chiederò di ricambiarmi il servizio, fino ad allora consideralo un regalo per le nozze di mia figlia.
(Don Corleone)

Once you're into this family, there's no getting out.
Re: The Family Hour: An Oral History of The Sopranos [Re: black_velvet] #645026
04/25/12 10:20 AM
04/25/12 10:20 AM
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 357
Amsterdam
C
Chopper2012 Offline
Capo
Chopper2012  Offline
C
Capo
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 357
Amsterdam
Great, great article. Think I saw parts of it already, but not the whole piece? Anyway, thanks for posting. Love the little background stories.

I'm one of the people who always thought Tony got darker as the seasons progresses, more of an asshole. The last nine episodes, for me, are really about Tony losing everybody he was close to or pushing them away himself. But this quote from Chase is dead on.

'Many people said as the show went on Tony got darker and darker. I never saw it that way. The man was ready to smother his mother to death with a pillow in Season One. Granted, she’d tried to kill him, but he went up there prepared to smother her, but he was deprived of the opportunity. In Season Two, he shot his best friend [Big Pussy] at point-blank range.'

Still, the first seasons Tony comes off as a more likeable guy.

Last edited by Chopper2012; 04/25/12 10:32 AM.
Re: The Family Hour: An Oral History of The Sopranos [Re: black_velvet] #645027
04/25/12 10:23 AM
04/25/12 10:23 AM
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 357
Amsterdam
C
Chopper2012 Offline
Capo
Chopper2012  Offline
C
Capo
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 357
Amsterdam
Yep, there it is...PB posted a part of it earlier on.

http://www.gangsterbb.net/threads/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=637671#Post637671

quote Steven van Zandt: 'The director said cut, the actors went home. That’s what happened.” It’s a TV show. It’s a fucking TV show, O.K.?' lol


Last edited by Chopper2012; 04/25/12 10:39 AM.
Re: The Family Hour: An Oral History of The Sopranos [Re: Chopper2012] #645080
04/25/12 10:24 PM
04/25/12 10:24 PM
Joined: May 2010
Posts: 3,568
Sonny_Black Offline
Underboss
Sonny_Black  Offline
Underboss
Joined: May 2010
Posts: 3,568
Originally Posted By: Chopper2012
I'm one of the people who always thought Tony got darker as the seasons progresses, more of an asshole. The last nine episodes, for me, are really about Tony losing everybody he was close to or pushing them away himself.


That's a Michael Corleone redux.


"It was between the brothers Kay -- I had nothing to do with it."

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