What we know about the new ‘The Sopranos’ documentary
We’re all getting emotional, Tony.
Get out the gabagool: After 25 years of topping lists of the best television shows of all time, The Sopranos is getting another spotlight. Premiering on HBO on Sept. 7, Wise Guy: David Chase and The Sopranos is a new two-part documentary directed by renowned filmmaker Alex Gibney.
The film puts showrunner and writer David Chase in the hot seat while Gibney acts as his therapist on a replica set of Tony Soprano’s (James Gandolfini) psychiatrist’s office. An Italian American born in New York and raised in New Jersey, Chase infused the series with the personalities of people from his family and community. He’s even admitted that Livia Soprano, the sharp, abusive mother to Tony played by Nancy Marchand, was based on his own mom — and that was how the mob show first began.
“For years, everybody told me you should write a show about your mother and yourself,” Chase says in the Wise Guy trailer. “She was so out there. I thought, who’s gonna watch that? Then I realized, maybe if he was like a really badass guy.”
Turns out that was exactly what audiences wanted. Decades later, The Sopranos remains iconic, from its addictive soundtrack to its widely debated ending. Wise Guy includes interviews with Lorraine Bracco (Dr. Melfi), Edie Falco (Carmela Soprano), and Michael Imperioli (Christopher Moltisanti) as well as behind-the-scenes footage of the creative process.
Chase and the cast members also discuss the toll the show had on star James Gandolfini, who died from a heart attack at 51 more than a decade ago. His time as Tony Soprano made him a New Jersey legend worthy of then-Gov. Chris Christie ordering all flags in the state to fly at half-staff.
“He probably quit the show every other day,” Steve Van Zandt (Silvio Dante) says about Gandolfini in the trailer. (The E Street Band guitarist has lately been on tour with Bruce Springsteen.)
Wise Guy also digs into the show’s rocky start, when Chase’s idea was rejected by major networks before finding a home at HBO. The Sopranos went on to win 21 Primetime Emmy Awards (out of a total of 111 nominations) and five Golden Globe Awards.