Bobby
"Bacala" Baccalieri [played by Steve Schirripa]: “Mom started going downhill after the
World Trade Center. You know Quasimodo predicted all this.”
Anthony
'Tony' Soprano Sr. [played
by James Gandolfini]: “Who did what?”
Bobby:
“All these problems—the Middle East, the end of the world.”
Tony
[shaking his head, like a teacher
correcting a very errant student]: “Nostradamus.
Quasimodo's the Hunchback of Notre Dame.”
Bobby:
“Oh right. Notre Damus.”
Tony:
“Nostradamus, and Notre Dame. Two
different things completely.”
Bobby:
“It's interesting, though, they'd be so similar, isn't it? And I always thought,
okay, Hunchback of Notre Dame. You also got your quarterback and halfback of
Notre Dame.”
Tony
[exasperated]: “One's a f-g cathedral.”
Bobby:
“Obviously. I know, I'm just saying. It's interesting, the coincidence. What,
you're gonna tell me you never pondered that? The back thing with Notre Dame?”
Tony:
“No!”— The Sopranos,
Season 4, Episode 1, “For All Debts Public and Private,” original air date Sept. 15, 2002, teleplay by David
Chase, directed by Allen Coulter
Over the last several months, I’ve been catching up
on nearly two decades of TV shows on DVD—series like Foyle’s War, Monk, Game of Thrones. Last night, I started Season 4
of The Sopranos.
In the past, watching prior seasons sometimes made
me burst out laughing at its moments of dark humor, but nothing prepared me for
this segment quoted here. Years ago, on a radio show, I recall Goodfellas screenwriter Nick Pileggi
saying that Mafia kids in school were the type of guys who tripped other students
walking toward the front of the class.
Perhaps Tony Soprano was like this growing up, too.
In fact, I’d say it was very likely.
Who said television serves no educational purpose?
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