[Mobster Tony
Soprano has returned to his sessions with psychiatrist Jennifer Melfi, who has
brought the discussion around to existentialism and the meaning of “dread.”]
Dr.
Jennifer Melfi [played
by Lorraine Bracco]: "Carlos
Castaneda said, “‘Live every moment as if it were your last dance on
earth.’"
Tony
Soprano [played by
James Gandolfini] "Who the ****
listens to prizefighters? Ali, maybe—he had a little wisdom."—The Sopranos, Season 2, Episode 6, “The Happy Wanderer,” teleplay by Frank
Renzulli, directed by John Patterson
I had only seen about a half dozen or so episodes of
The Sopranos during its original run,
and for a long time after it left the air in 2007 I had no interest in revisiting
it.
But with the recent upsurge of attention for the 20th
anniversary of the groundbreaking HBO series—and especially with my brothers’
increased interest in the show—I became curious about what I had missed.
My memories of the show stemmed largely from its
heavy violence and its focus on family dysfunction. When I started watching the
second season on DVD, those impressions not only remained but intensified.
But what I hadn’t grasped the first time around was
the show’s offbeat—sometimes laugh-out-lough—sense of humor. Much of that came
from Miami Steve Van Zandt’s Silvio Dante, with his impersonations of Michael
Corleone and his sputtering over cleaning up after cheese droppings on the
floor while he’s in the midst of a high-stakes card game. Some of it came from
Tony’s nephew Christopher and his preposterous desire to become a screenwriter.
Some of it came from Tony Soprano himself, and this
particular exchange made me guffaw. In his aggressive befuddlement over popular
culture, I hadn’t seen anything like it since the heyday of Carroll O’Connor’s
Archie Bunker on All in the Family in
the Seventies.
But much of the show’s humor stems from its
overarching sense of the absurd, something I associate with a genre originating
in a couple of Sixties sitcoms I watched as a kid: The Munsters and The Addams
Family. In these shows, a figure who inspires fear tries to live like a
regular guy in a neighborhood, only to see his interactions with “normal people”
who enter his sphere producing only chaos and damage. It’s an inversion of the
Nuclear Family so in vogue at the time.
You’d soon regret getting close to a paterfamilias
on one of these shows. A backslap from Herman Munster guffawing at a joke could
send you flying across the room or break your ribs. Guests are alarmed not only
by Gomez Addams’ favorite hobby (blowing up toy trains) but by his pet (a lion
named Kitty Cat).
As for Tony Soprano: Sure, he might agree to let you
in on a friendly card game, but you’d have to be prepared to have him beat you
to a pulp when you ended up thousands of dollars in debt and unable to pay up.
Even then, you’d count yourself lucky to come out
alive.
The
Sopranos proved, as surely as those other shows did, that
monsters could indeed live among us.
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